Ivor Novello
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David Ivor Davies (January 15, 1893 – March 6, 1951), better known as Ivor Novello, was a Welsh composer, singer and actor who became one of the most popular British entertainers of the early 20th century.
He was born at Llwyn-yr-Eos (Grove of Nightingales), Cowbridge Road East, Cardiff, Wales, to the well-known singer and teacher, Dame Clara Novello Davies, and David Davies, a tax collector.
He first became well known as a result of the song, Keep the Home Fires Burning, which he composed during World War I. After the war, he appeared on stage in the West End, in musical shows of his own devising, the best known being The Dancing Years (1939). Novello starred in two early films directed by Alfred Hitchcock, The Lodger (1927) and Downhill (1927). He later went to Hollywood and appeared in numerous successful films, but the stage remained his first love and the medium for his major successes.
Novello wrote his musical shows in the style of operetta, and was one of the last major composers in this form. He generally composed his music to the librettos of Christopher Hassall.
During World War II, Novello was sentenced to eight weeks in prison (he served four) for misuse of petrol coupons, a serious offence in wartime Britain. This downfall from his luxurious lifestyle completely broke his spirit, and he was never the same man after his release. However, he continued to appear on stage until the day before his sudden death from a coronary thrombosis on March 6, 1951, aged 58.
Novello was homosexual, well known for some of his more glamorous gay affairs. For 35 years, he was the lover of the British actor Bobbie Andrews, and he had an affair with the British poet and writer Siegfried Sassoon. It was alleged by W. Somerset Maugham that Sir Winston Churchill confided in him that he had once been to bed with Novello. [citation needed]
The Ivor Novello Award, a prize awarded for songwriting, is awarded each year by the record industry to song writers and arrangers rather than the performing artistes.
Novello was portrayed in Robert Altman's fictional film Gosford Park (2001) by Jeremy Northam and several of his songs were used for the film's soundtrack. However, Novello's homosexuality was subtly underplayed in the film.
His memory continues to be promoted by The Ivor Novello Appreciation Bureau, who hold annual events around Britain, including an annual pilgrimage to Redroofs in Littlewick Green in June. In 2005 The Strand Theatre in London, above which Novello lived for many years, was renamed the Novello Theatre.
Contents |
[edit] Principal Shows
- Glamorous Night (1935)
- Careless Rapture (1936)
- Crest of the Wave (1937)
- The Dancing Years (1939)
- Arc de Triomphe (1943)
- Perchance to Dream (1945)
- King's Rhapsody (1949)
- Gay's the Word (1951) (lyrics by Alan Melville (writer)
[edit] Outstanding Songs
- Keep the Home Fires Burning
- Fold Your Wings
- Shine Through my Dreams
- Rose of England
- I Can Give you the Starlight
- My Dearest Dear
- When I Curtsied to the King
- We'll Gather Lilacs
- Someday my Heart will Awake
- Yesterday
- Waltz of my Heart
- My Life Belongs To You
[edit] Filmography
- The Call of the Blood (L'Appel du Sang) - 1919
- Miarka: The Daughter of the Bear (Miarka, Fille de L'Ourse) - 1920
- Carnival - 1922
- The Bohemian Girl - 1922
- The Man Without Desire - 1923
- The White Rose - 1923
- Bonnie Prince Charlie - 1923
- The Rat - 1925
- The Triumph of the Rat - 1926
- The Lodger: A Story of the London Fog - (1927)
- Downhill - 1927
- The Vortex - 1928
- The Constant Nymph - 1928
- The Gallant Hussar - 1928
- The South Sea Bubble - 1928
- The Return of the Rat - 1928
- Symphony in Two Flats - 1930
- Once a Lady - 1931
- The Phantom Fiend - 1932
- I Lived With You - 1933
- Sleeping Car - 1933
- Autumn Crocus - 1934
[edit] External links
Persondata | |
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NAME | Novello, Ivor |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Davies, David Ivor |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Welsh composer, singer and actor |
DATE OF BIRTH | January 15, 1893 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Cardiff |
DATE OF DEATH | March 6, 1951 |
PLACE OF DEATH | London |
Categories: Articles with unsourced statements | Welsh songwriters | Welsh film actors | Welsh silent film actors | Welsh musical theatre actors | Welsh musical theatre composers | Operetta composers | Welsh stage actors | Welsh actors | People from Cardiff | Natives of the Vale of Glamorgan | Gay actors | Gay musicians | LGBT people from Wales | 1893 births | 1951 deaths