Clarice Mayne
Clarice Mayne (6 February 1886 – 16 January 1966) was a music hall and variety theatre singer and performer.
Life and career
Mayne was born in London in 1886. She is best known for the song "A Broken Doll" written by her husband, the composer James W. Tate and lyricist Frank Clifford Harris.
Early in her career, Mayne often played the "principal girl" in pantomimes for Francis Laidler, among others.[1] She also became a noted music hall performer. Later, she played the "principal boy" roles.[2]
Mayne sang in the variety theatre act called "Clarice Mayne and That". Mayne was "This", and Tate, accompanying on the piano, was "That" ("This sings, That Plays!"). They first appeared together at “The Oxford” in 1906 and introduced a number of popular numbers including “I was a Good little girl, ‘till I met You” (1912), and “Put on Your Ta-Ta little Girlie”, both written by Tate. They married in 1912 after the death of Tate's first wife, Lottie Collins. Tate died in 1922, and Mayne married Teddy Knox of Nervo and Knox in 1934.
Mayne also played the principal boy in a number of Tate's pantomimes throughout Britain beginning in World War I, including a pantomime version of Cinderella in 1916, Dick Whittington in 1918, Puss In Boots in 1920, Cinderella again, at the London Hippodrome in 1922 (and many times thereafter, playing with Stanley Lupino and her later husband, Teddy Knox),[3] and Dick Whittington again in 1923, at the London Palladium, among others.
In 1936, she played Emily Hackitt in the film Educated Evans. She and Tate had appeared together in the 1916 film Nursie! Nursie![4]
The National Portrait Gallery in London has a number of portrait photographs of Mayne, some including the actress Daisy Burrell.[5]
She died in London in 1966 at the age of 79 and was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium.[6]
Notes
References
External links
- Clarice Mayne at the IMDB database
- Many photos of Mayne
- signed, colourised photo of Mayne
- Links to footage of Mayne in two pantomimes
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