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IN 1891 we played “The Nautch Girl” at the Savoy, our first
departure from Gilbert and Sullivan opera. It was quite successful, though
no inferior vintage could really satisfy palates accustomed to the delightful
blend of wit and melody which had flowed from the Two, who
United had sung
As one individual.
In this year my contract with Carte was for thirty-five pounds a week, rising
to forty pounds under certain conditions, so you see I was getting on. That
contract also contained an interesting clause, which showed that the bonds
by which the Savoy held me were beginning to loosen, it entitled me to leave
of absence for three months, with option of another three to follow. I took
the first leave, then again Carte tightened his hold, and refused to let
me have the second.
My three months’ leave was spent, not in resting or in holiday-making,
but in hard work. Barrington and I, both great favourites with the public
(he speaks of me in his book as “My little comrade Jessie Bond, who
was gifted with a personality which made her a universal favourite”),
wished to try a provincial tour together, thinking that a change from years
of steady theatre work might be not only pleasant but profitable.
Barrington had written three little playlets for two characters, which his
friend Solomon set to pretty music; these were our répertoire; we
took a pianist with us, and that was all the company. We had an amusing,
but fairly hard time; we played in a different town every night; and, having
no understudies, it was sometimes a good deal of a strain. I remember being
ill once and going to the local doctor to be patched up. He said I was not
fit to act, but I said I must, the seats were all taken and we were not going
to return the money, so that I must go through with it, and I did.
It was a great success, that little tour, and my share of the profits was
never less than seventy-five pounds a week, more than ever I got from Gilbert
and Sullivan. But I returned to London and was caught again. Carte would
not release me for another three months. I am sure they missed me at the
theatre; they said I was a Mascot to them all, and when I went away with
Barrington, though it was only for three months, I was given a silver-mounted
scent bottle inscribed “With love from The Girls, Savoy Theatre,” and
the men of the chorus gave me a beautiful set of Shakespeare’s works,
with an inscription of which I am very proud:
“These volumes are presented to Miss Jessie Bond by a few Savoyards,
in token of the esteem and affection held by all for her, and as a mark
of regret at her leaving – even though for a short time – the
boards on which she has achieved such success and won so many friends,
January, 1892. (Signed) PARIS, LEON, LAIDLAW, RAMSEY, WILBRAHAM,
MONTELLI, PHILLIPS, BARRETT , HASWELL, LETTS, BARNARD, and FRASER.”
Both of these gifts are still among my treasures.
Following “The Nautch Girl,” Carte revived “The Vicar
of Bray” at the Savoy, an opera which had already been successful in
another theatre. Sydney Grundy wrote the words, and Edward Solomon the music,
but there was no part for me in it, as Grundy in the following note freely
admits.
WINTER LODGE
ADDISON ROAD, W.
30/12/91. |
| DEAR MISS BOND, |
| Between ourselves, you must abandon
all thoughts of playing Nelly Bly. She is, I find, absolutely nothing,
and as the piece is constructed, it is impossible to write her up.
I am not exaggerating. She is simply a speaking chorister, with a song.
I was hoping to be able to improve her, but I find I can’t. Every
speech I write for her reads so dragged in and superfluous that I destroy
them as soon as they’re
written. I cannot even get a second song in at all naturally. |
| My experience of writing up parts is, that the part is
seldom improved, and the piece is invariably injured. Audiences are very
quick to detect interpolated
matter. |
| This is, of course, my private tip to
you. I am much disappointed, for I had rather you had a good part than
anybody, but the production of “The Vicar” at the Savoy
is not my doing at all. It was practically settled before I knew anything
about it. |
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Sincerely yours, |
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SYDNEY GRUNDY. |
“The Vicar of Bray” ran for six months, after which the Savoy was
closed for three, the longest vacation in all its existence. At this time I was
on tour with Barrington, and Gilbert at the Lyric had produced an opera written
by himself and Alfred Cellier. It was charming, both words and music, and Gilbert
in writing it had Barrington and me in his mind. He offered me the part of Columbine,
but I refused. I really had no choice, I was bound to Carte by so many ties. He
had given me my first chance, we had worked together for years, I did not feel
then that I could leave him. Nevertheless refusal cut me to the heart, not only
because I hated disappointing Gilbert, but because I loved the part he had written
for me. All my life I have wanted to play a Columbine part; some of my earliest
recollections are of picturing myself in short fluffy skirts, dancing about on
the tips of my toes, with arms outspread, and little silver bells jingling. Barrington
would have been an ideal Clown, Gilbert measured him correctly also, he knew us
both inside out, and that we were made to play together. We understood each other
to the last shred; the fractional lift of an eyebrow, the least inflection of the
voice, was hint enough from one of us to the other. Gilbert, in a letter I shall
quote later, speaks of Barrington without me as being like a flint without steel.
But “The Mountebanks” was produced without us, and was only a moderate
success – I feel sure that we could have made it a great one. I reproduce
the letter in which Gilbert asks me to join him and one written by Sir Arthur Sullivan
when he heard of the offer.
GRIM'S DYKE
HARROW WEALD
7th Dec. 90 |
| MY DEAR JESSIE, |
Are you willing to entertain the question of an engagement to
play an excellent part in the piece I am writing for the Lyric (with Cellier)
to be produced next October? It would give me great pleasure to know that you
are open to an offer. |
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Yours always, |
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W. S. GILBERT. |
And this is Sullivan’s letter:
1 QUEEN'S MANSIONS
VICTORIA STREET, S.W.
Saturday |
| DEAR JESSIE, |
I am horrified to think that you are going to leave
me in the lurch, and not sing in my next Savoy piece, which I hope to have
ready towards the end of this year. Carte has told me all about the question
of terms, time, etc., and I really think that his proposal is a very fair one
and one that you might well accept. If for a few pounds a year more, you are
going to throw over your old friends and associates (and associations) and
join the Lyric Theatre, I shall feel peculiarly aggrieved and hurt, for reasons
which I can explain to you personally but do not care to put on paper. Do think
over this, and be reasonable, if only for the sake of your old friend |
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ARTHUR SULLIVAN. |
At that time I was drawing forty pounds a week from the treasury, and my salary
rose to forty-five pounds before I left, while outside the Savoy connection constant
inducements were held out to me by other managers. Henry Arthur Jones, writing
to me about this time, says: “When is comic opera going to restore you to
comedy? It’s a shameful robbery.”
Meanwhile, Sullivan in conjunction with Sydney Grundy was writing “Haddon
Hall,” and now I come to the story of my own break with the Savoy. Since
Gilbert left it, my kind and constant friend, it had not been the same place to
me. He had written my parts for me, he had upheld my cause many times against Sullivan
and Carte. Now Grundy – another G. – was writing with Sir Arthur, and
Grundy was my good friend too, and wished me to have a part worthy of my powers.
This he gave me in his first version of “Haddon Hall,” but when he
submitted the manuscript to Sir Arthur, the latter said:
“Why, this is all Jessie Bond. You must leave out this, and this, and this,” striking
his blue pencil through all the best parts.
Grundy was very much annoyed, both on my account and on his own, but he did not
hold the strong position with regard to Sullivan and the Savoy that Gilbert had
held, and he was obliged to submit. The opera was finished accordingly, but when
my abbreviated part was offered to me at the first reading I refused to take it.
“Sir Arthur,” I said, “there is nothing in this part for me – nothing
that a chorus girl at five pounds a week could not do quite well. It is not worthy
of my position in the Company or of my reputation as an actress, and I refuse to
accept it.”
He was very angry, and my refusal was no doubt an embarrassment for the moment,
but he would not depart from his position, nor would I depart from mine. This,
then, was my reason for leaving the Savoy Opera Company in which I had played continuously
for sixteen years, growing with its growth, sharing its triumphs and successes,
and making its welfare a part of my very life. I went back to it afterwards for
revivals, when Gilbert also had buried the hatchet and reunited himself to the
Triumvirate, but the old associations had been broken and the old enthusiasms had
evaporated. Nevertheless I am glad to remember that it was on the stage of the
Savoy Theatre, surrounded by old friends and in one of the most brilliant of the
Gilbert and Sullivan productions, that I made my last appearance as a professional
actress.
Sullivan wrote me the following letter a few days before “Haddon Hall” was
produced, and I give it without comment:
1 QUEEN'S MANSIONS
VICTORIA STREET, S.W.
Friday , 16 Sept. |
| MY DEAR JESSIE, |
I write a line to ask you not to press your
request to come to the first performance of my new opera on Saturday.
To
see you there would in the first place add very much to my disappointment
at not having you in the cast of my work, and secondly it would not be quite
fair to the girl who is trying her best to fill the gap caused by your leaving.
It would make her very nervous, and you are too kind-hearted to wish to do
any harm to a young beginner. If I could put you anywhere where you would
not be seen it would be different – but I can’t, and your presence
would become known instantly and lead to sure and certain embarrassment.
Come on Tuesday night (Monday is such a dull and depressing night, as you
know), and if you will let me know at once you shall have stalls or a box
(if there is one). Would you like to come to the Band rehearsals for the
Leeds Festival the week after next at St. James’s Hall? |
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Your affect. friend, |
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ARTHUR SULLIVAN. |
During the next few years I played in “His Excellency,” “Ma
Mie Rosette,” “Go Bang” “Green Bushes,” and “Wapping
Old Stairs” in different theatres. I went back to the Savoy for revivals,
and my last appearance on the stage was as Pitti Sing in “The Mikado.” Here
is the letter in which Gilbert expressed the pleasure it gave him to welcome me
back to the fold.
GRIM'S DYKE
HARROW WEALD
25th Oct. 95 |
| MY DEAR JESSIE, |
I’m delighted to hear that you’re to play in the
Mikado – for you were the life and soul of the piece. Barrington without
you is flint without steel (in that piece), as I told Carte three weeks since.
I don’t know what to say about the new song. Even if we could find a
place for it (very difficult), there is Sullivan to be reckoned with and I
doubt very much if he would care to put aside the new piece upon which he is
working night and day, in order to write a song for Mikado. He is like me in
one respect (only in one) – when he is in full swing of his work, as
he is now, he won’t stand interruption. However, I’ll speak to
him about it, for he’s one of those who think that, in comic opera, one
can’t well have too much of you. |
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Yours always, |
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W. S. GILBERT. |
As Pitti Sing in The Mikado
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Some of the commendation so freely bestowed when they thought they were losing
me would have sweetened my lot considerably in the early years of my stage life.
I don’t know why it was – perhaps they thought I was too cocky, too
sure of myself and my own value to them – but I used to be left severely
alone at rehearsals, and often wondered why no one took any trouble to coach me.
Gilbert used patiently to teach the others, sometimes word by word – with
Grossmith, for one, he took infinite pains – but never a word to me.
“Why do you never do anything to help me Mr. Gilbert?” I
asked him once.
“Oh, you’re all right, Jessie,” he said impatiently, with a
wave of his hand.
I suppose he thought my parts were easier and more natural to me as a woman than
Grossmith’s bizarre characterizations, but I often used to feel hurt by the
way I was ignored at rehearsals. Even they, however, were not as bad as first nights.
Then, the Three used to go round congratulating and patting everybody on the back – everybody
except poor little me. It was
One for thou and one for thee
One for you and one for ye
But never, oh never, a one for me!
Often I have gone home and cried myself to sleep, thinking. “Why don’t
they ever praise me? I can’t be as good as I thought I was.” But generally
the audience liked me so much that no doubt Gilbert and Sullivan and Carte thought
more praise would be superfluous and go to my head, and that on the contrary I
needed a little suppressing!
I must, however, mention one exception to the usual rule of leaving me to my own
devices at rehearsals. We were studying “Iolanthe,” and had hammered
at it until the unearthly hour of four in the morning. They made me sing my song “He
loves,” standing up and sitting down and kneeling and with every possible
variety of emphasis and shade of meaning, until I was perfectly exhausted.
“You’re singing flat, Jessie,” Sullivan snapped at me.
“Flat!” I said. “The wonder is that I can sing at all at this
hour – and
I’m not going to try again!”
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Page modified
19 November, 2008
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