thumb|right|Playfair in 1922

Sir Nigel Ross Playfair (1 July 1874 – 19 August 1934) was an English actor and director, known particularly as actor-manager of the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith, in the 1920s.

After acting as an amateur while practising as a lawyer, he turned professional in 1902 when he was 28. After a time in F. R. Benson's company he made steady professional progress as an actor, but the major change in his career came in 1918, when he became managing director of the Lyric, a run-down theatre on the fringe of central London. He transformed the theatre's fortunes, with a mix of popular musical shows and classic comedies, some in radically innovative productions, which divided opinion at the time but which have subsequently been seen as introducing a modern style of staging.

Life

Family background

Playfair was born in the parish of St George Hanover Square, Westminster, on 1 July 1874, the younger son of the five children of the obstetric physician William Smoult Playfair (1835–1903), and his wife, Emily, née Kitson (1841–1916). The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography says that the doctor is notable nowadays for "his unintended contribution to medical ethics" by breaching the confidentiality of one of his patients, and for popularising the Weir Mitchell "rest-cure", a treatment criticised by Charlotte Perkin Gilman in The Yellow Wallpaper. Nigel Playfair's paternal uncles included Lyon Playfair, 1st Baron Playfair, scientist and politician, and Lambert Playfair, soldier, diplomat and naturalist. His maternal uncle was James Kitson, 1st Baron Airedale, industrialist and politician, named after his father, Nigel's grandfather, James Kitson, the pioneering railway engineer. Nigel's cousin was Robert Hawthorn Kitson, a painter who settled in Taormina, Sicily.

Early years

He was educated at Winchester, Harrow, and University College, Oxford, where he took a third-class honours degree in modern history (1896). In 1903 he played his first professional Shakespeare role, Dr Caius in Herbert Beerbohm Tree's production of The Merry Wives of Windsor at His Majesty's Theatre. The Era called it "a satire on cheap gentility which would have delighted Thackeray.

thumb|upright=2|alt=stage scene with six rustics in approximately Elizabethan costume|Playfair, second from right, as Bottom, 1914.

Playfair joined F. R. Benson's company touring in the West Indies, chiefly in comic Shakespearian parts.

Lyric, Hammersmith

in 1918 the author Arnold Bennett, who had been active in the theatre before the war, resumed his theatrical interest. He became chairman, with Playfair as managing director, of the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith. A biographer of Playfair writes that the Lyric was "a derelict playhouse in what was then little more than a slum … this theatre seemed the last place in the world where high-class entertainment could possibly succeed". But the theatre prospered. Among the productions were Abraham Lincoln by John Drinkwater, and The Beggar's Opera, which, in Frank Swinnerton's phrase, "caught different moods of the post-war spirit", and ran for 466 and 1,463 performances respectively. In The Oxford Companion to the Theatre (1967) Phyllis Hartnoll comments that the Lyric became "one of the most popular and stimulating centres of theatrical activity".

Playfair, left, as Bob Acres in [[The Rivals (1925), with Douglas Burbidge as Jack Absolute|alt=short middle aged white man and tall young one in 18th century wigs and costumes|thumb|left]]

In 1920 Playfair returned to the role of Ralph in The Knight of the Burning Pestle. The scholar David Crystal describes the production as "bright, dynamic and musical, with young actors". At the time, some theatre-goers resented it, but Crystal comments that many critics now call it the first modern production of the play.

In 1922 Playfair bought a long lease on Thurloe Lodge in South Kensington. Playfair and his family had previously lived at 26 Pelham Crescent. He bought the cottages with the proceeds from The Beggar's Opera. The family moved from the house in late 1924 or early 1925.

Legacy

Fortnum & Masons sell a rich, bitter marmalade, made for Playfair since the 1920s and named in memory of him.

In 1965, London County Council erected a blue plaque commemorating Playfair at his former home, 26 Pelham Crescent, South Kensington.

Memoirs

Playfair wrote two volumes of memoirs about the Lyric:

  • The Story of the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith with an introduction by Arnold Bennett and an epilogue by A. A. Milne. (London: Chatto & Windus 1925)
  • Hammersmith Hoy: A Book of Minor Revelations (London: Faber & Faber 1930)

Films

Playfair appeared in some films. He made several silents, and what his biographer Robert Sharp calls "four indifferent talkies":

Notes, references and sources

Notes

References

Sources

  • Play and acting roles on the Great War Theatre website
  • Portrait
  • Sir Nigel's Vintage Marmalade
  • Play and acting roles on the Great War Theatre website