Windmill Theatre

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The Windmill Theatre, later the Windmill Club, was a famous West End theatre in Great Windmill Street, London. Great Windmill Street took its name from an actual windmill that stood there from the reign of King Charles II until the late 18th century. In 1910 a cinema, the Palais de Luxe, opened on the site. It stood on the corner of a block of buildings that included the Apollo and Lyric theatres, where Archer Street joined Great Windmill Street, just off Shaftesbury Avenue. The Palais de Luxe was one of the first places where early silent films were shown. However as larger cinemas were their debut in the West End, business slowed and the Palais de Luxe was forced to close.

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[edit] Mrs. Henderson Presents

In 1931, Laura Henderson bought the Palais de Luxe building and hired Howard Jones, an architect, to remodel the interior to a tiny, one-tier theatre. It was renamed as The Windmill. It opened on June 22, 1931, as a playhouse with a new play by Michael Barrington called Inquest. Its run as a theatre was short as it was not profitable and it soon returned to screening films, such as The Blue Angel starring Marlene Dietrich. Henderson's hired a new theatre manager, Vivian van Damm, who came up with the idea of producing the Revudeville — a program of continuous, non-stop variety that ran from 2.30pm until 11pm. They began to put on shows with singers, dancers, showgirls and specialty numbers. The first Revuedeville act opened on February 3, 1932, featuring 18 unknown acts. However, the Windmill was still making a loss. The theatre had lost £20,000 in the first few years of its opening. Van Damm introduced shows that featured singing, dancing, sketches and comics and glamorous nude females on stage, inspired by the Folies Bergères and Moulin Rouge in Paris. This coup was made possible by exploiting a loophole in obscenity laws that forbade the display of nudity in theatres: since the authorities could not credibly hold nude statues to be morally objectionable, the theatre presented its nudes — the legendary "Windmill girls" — in motionless poses as living statues or tableaux vivants. Van Damme produced a series of nude tableaux vivants based around themes such as Annie Oakley, Mermaids, Red Indians and Britannia. The Windmill's shows became a huge commercial success. Piccadilly and Pavilion theatres copied the format and ran non-stop shows too which took its toll on the Windmill's ticket sales.

[edit] "We Never Closed"

The theatre's famous motto "We Never Closed" (often humorously modified to "We Never Clothed") was a reference to the fact that the theater was never closed, apart from the compulsory closure that affected all theatres for 12 days (September 4-16) in 1939. The Windmill remained open throughout the Second World War, entertaining Londoners right through the The Blitz. The showgirls, cast members and crew moved into the safety of the theatres two underground floors during some of the worst air attacks of the Blitz, from September 7, 1940 to May 11, 1941.

Many of the Windmill's patrons were families and troops as well as celebrities who came as Henderson's guests. These high society guests included Princesses Helena Victoria and Marie Louise (the daughter and granddaughter of Queen Victoria). The theatre ran into the occasional problem with male patrons, but theatre security guards were always on the lookout for improper behavior. One of the more comical off-stage acts was the spectacle of the "Windmill Steeplechase", where at the end of a show, patrons from the back rows would make a dash over the top of the seats to grab the front rows.

The Windmill was home to many famous variety artists including Freddie Eldrett and numerous famous comedians and actors had their first real success there, including Jimmy Edwards, Tony Hancock, Harry Secombe, Peter Sellers and Barry Cryer. A number of the most celebrated photographic pin-up models of the 1950s and early 1960s also did a stint as "Windmill Girls", including Pamela Green and June Palmer.

[edit] End of an era

When Henderson died in 1944, at age 82, she left the Windmill to Van Damm, who continued with the legacy of their work. Van Damm ran the theatre until his death in December 1960. He left the theatre to his daughter, Sheila van Damm. She struggled to keep it going but by this time, London's Soho neighborhood had become a seedier place. The Soho neighborhood of the 1930s and 1940s was a respectable place filled with shops and family restaurants. The Windmill officially closed on October 31, 1964 as it was unable to compete with the low-end strip joints and massage parlors. The last Revudeville show was seen in 1964.

The theatre then changed hands, became a cinema and casino, and was for a time a private club. In February 1974, the venue was bought by nightclub and erotica entrepreneur, Paul Raymond. Raymond made it a home for nude shows "a la Revuedeville but without the comic element." For a time in the 1980s, Raymond re-introduced burlesque when he renamed the Windmill La Vie en Rose. Today, an erotic lap-dancing club occupies the building that once housed the Windmill Theatre.

[edit] Film depictions

There have been four films made about or featuring The Windmill. In 1942 Tonight and Every Night starring Rita Hayworth was made in technicolour, based on a Broadway Stage play called Heart of the City by Leslie Storm. Although the Theatre in the film is called "The Music Box" it is clearly a thinly-disguised Windmill - American GIs in war-torn London, the theatre is hit by bombs in the Blitz. The film does not feature a Vivian Van Damm character - so he hated it. However the Theatre is run by May Tolliver played by Florence Bates - who could be construed as being Mrs Henderson - no wonder Van Damm hated it so.

The second movie was Murder at the Windmill - a 1949 low-budget exploitation movie which was little more than an excuse to feature the Windmill boys and girls performing intercut with a very weak plot about the murder of a man in the front row. Van Damm auditioned to play himself in the movie but was considered "too wooden" for the part. Marked early appearances for Diana Decker, Jon Pertwee and Jimmy Edwards (whose act is by far the best thing in the film). It was the first movie for Producer Danny Angel who was married to one of Van Damm's daughters.

The third movie was even more exploitative. Secrets of a Windmill Girl was the first outing for Pauline Collins, Martin Jarvis and Dana Gillespie.

Lastly, a 2005 "dramedy" film about the theatre, starring Judi Dench and Bob Hoskins, called Mrs. Henderson Presents was critically acclaimed but was not a strong commercial success.

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