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Difference between revisions of "Gertrude Lawrence"

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[[Image:Entertainment.jpg|thumb|300px|She was a very naughty girl in her earlier years.]]'''Gertrude Lawrence''' ([[1898]] [[June 4]] - [[1952]] [[September 6]]) was an actress and musical performer popular in the [[1930s]] and [[1940s]], appearing on stage in [[West End Theatre|London]] and on [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]], and in several films. She is particularly associated with the light comedy of [[Noel Coward]].
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'''Gertrude Lawrence''' ([[1898]] [[June 4]] - [[1952]] [[September 6]]) was an actress and musical performer popular in the [[1930s]] and [[1940s]], appearing on stage in [[West End Theatre|London]] and on [[Broadway theatre|Broadway]], and in several films. She is particularly associated with the light comedy of [[Noel Coward]].
  
 
She was born '''Gertrude Alexandria Dagmar Lawrence-Klasen''', of English and Danish extraction, in [[London, England]], and was a professional performer by the age of ten. She was sent to Catholic convent schools and attended the [[Italia Conti Academy]], presumably to keep her out of trouble. She understudied [[Beatrice Lillie]] in the ''Andre Charlot'' London revues in the 1920s and in 1921, in the revue "A to Z", she co-introduced with [[Jack Buchanan]] Furber and Braham's "[[Limehouse]] Blues". She achieved stardom when the revues were brought to Broadway in 1924 and 1926.  She was one of the foremost  [[comedians|comediennes]] of her day, capable of playing both slapstick clowns and elegant ladies. Her great charisma is attested to by those who saw her on stage, but her films struggle to convey her charm.
 
She was born '''Gertrude Alexandria Dagmar Lawrence-Klasen''', of English and Danish extraction, in [[London, England]], and was a professional performer by the age of ten. She was sent to Catholic convent schools and attended the [[Italia Conti Academy]], presumably to keep her out of trouble. She understudied [[Beatrice Lillie]] in the ''Andre Charlot'' London revues in the 1920s and in 1921, in the revue "A to Z", she co-introduced with [[Jack Buchanan]] Furber and Braham's "[[Limehouse]] Blues". She achieved stardom when the revues were brought to Broadway in 1924 and 1926.  She was one of the foremost  [[comedians|comediennes]] of her day, capable of playing both slapstick clowns and elegant ladies. Her great charisma is attested to by those who saw her on stage, but her films struggle to convey her charm.

Latest revision as of 21:39, 24 October 2007

Gertrude Lawrence (1898 June 4 - 1952 September 6) was an actress and musical performer popular in the 1930s and 1940s, appearing on stage in London and on Broadway, and in several films. She is particularly associated with the light comedy of Noel Coward.

She was born Gertrude Alexandria Dagmar Lawrence-Klasen, of English and Danish extraction, in London, England, and was a professional performer by the age of ten. She was sent to Catholic convent schools and attended the Italia Conti Academy, presumably to keep her out of trouble. She understudied Beatrice Lillie in the Andre Charlot London revues in the 1920s and in 1921, in the revue "A to Z", she co-introduced with Jack Buchanan Furber and Braham's "Limehouse Blues". She achieved stardom when the revues were brought to Broadway in 1924 and 1926. She was one of the foremost comediennes of her day, capable of playing both slapstick clowns and elegant ladies. Her great charisma is attested to by those who saw her on stage, but her films struggle to convey her charm.

She married Francis Gordon-Howley, a director, during World War I, and they divorced in 1928, having had one daughter, Pamela (1918-2005). In 1928, she announced her engagement to Bertrand L. Taylor Jr., a New York stockbroker but the marriage was eventually called off. Lawrence then married Richard Aldrich, an American theatre owner from a blueblood family, on July 4, 1940, and they remained married until her death. In addition to an affair with film star Douglas Fairbanks Jr., she also had lesbian affairs, including a much-rumoured relationship with the British novelist Dame Daphne du Maurier, and apparently with Beatrice Lillie herself, who, when referring to Lawrence, said: "I knew her better than her husband". Passionate letters written between Lawrence and Du Maurier were published in a 1993 biography of Du Maurier, who long outlasted her one-time love interest. Lawrence also appears to have had a much earlier affair with du Maurier's own father, Sir Gerald du Maurier; in fact, Daphne du Maurier referred to Lawrence as "the last of Daddy's actress loves".

Lawrence's onstage persona inspired composers and writers. George and Ira Gershwin wrote the play Oh, Kay! for her, with the well-loved song "Someone to Watch Over Me". She was the first British actress to have a lead role on Broadway. Cole Porter wrote Nymph Errant for her to star in, and it opened in London in 1933. Noel Coward wrote Private Lives and Tonight at 8:30 (a cycle of nine one-act musicals and plays) for her. She starred as Liza Elliot in Moss Hart, Kurt Weill, and Ira Gershwin's psychoanalytical musical Lady in the Dark (played in the film version by Ginger Rogers), and was a popular entertainer of the troops in World War II.

In 1946 Lawrence saw the film version of the book Anna and the King of Siam, which she decided would make a perfect musical. She persuaded the American team of Rodgers and Hammerstein to write it for her. The result was The King and I, which introduced such memorable songs as: "Hello Young Lovers", "Getting to Know You", and "Shall We Dance".

The King and I opened on Broadway in 1951, with Lawrence in the role of Anna, and was her greatest success. Also that year she received the first of many prestigious "Woman of the Year" awards from Harvard University's famed performance troup, the Hasty Pudding Theatricals. In 1952, she won the Tony Award for Best Actress for her role as Anna Leonowens. Sadly, it was also her last.

Lawrence died of liver cancer, which caused her to suffer jaundice, in New York City at the age of only 54, and she was buried in her pink "Shall We Dance?" gown from the second act of The King and I, in Lakeview Cemetery, in Upton, Massachusetts.

In the biographical 1968 film, Star!, loosely based on her life, Lawrence was portrayed by Julie Andrews.

Lawrence's grandson is the jazz saxophonist Benn Clatworthy, who is the child of her daughter, Pamela Gordon-Howley, who was a painter, and her second husband, the British sculptor Robert Clatworthy.

Broadway[edit]


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This article is based on a GNU FDL LGBT Wikia article: Lawrence Gertrude Lawrence LGBT