- Source: Lupino Lane
Henry William George Lupino (16 June 1892 – 10 November 1959) professionally Lupino Lane, was an English actor and theatre manager, and a member of the famous Lupino family, which eventually included his niece, the screenwriter/director/actress Ida Lupino. Lane started out as a child performer, known as 'Little Nipper', and went on to appear in a wide range of theatrical, music hall and film performances. Increasingly celebrated for his silent comedy short subjects, he is best known in the United Kingdom for playing Bill Snibson in the play and film Me and My Girl, which popularized the song and dance routine "The Lambeth Walk".
Early life and career
Lane was born in Hackney, London, son of Harry Charles Lupino (1867–1925), part of the Hook family who adopted the surname 'Lupino.' He adopted the surname Lane from his great-aunt Sarah Lane (1822–1899, née Borrow), the director of the Britannia Theatre, Hoxton. Lane married actress Violet Blythe on 10 February 1917, and their son was the actor Lauri Lupino Lane (1921–86). Lane's brother was the actor Wallace Lupino, and his nephew, Wallace's son, was another actor, Richard Lupino.
Lane made his first stage appearance at the age of four in a benefit in Birmingham for Vesta Tilley. He made his London début in 1903 as Nipper Lane at the London Pavilion. He worked steadily as a performer thereafter. In 1915, he appeared at the Empire Theatre and played comic roles in theatre and film on both sides of the Atlantic from then on. In 1921, he dived through sixty three stage traps in six minutes while performing in a 1921 pantomime production of Aladdin at the Hippodrome. Lane and his wife Violet Blythe were both in the Broadway production of the musical Afgar, at the Central Theatre, in 1920–21, and he appeared in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1924 at the New Amsterdam Theatre, from June 1924 to March 1925, and subsequently played Ko-Ko in The Mikado on Broadway in 1925, receiving good reviews. In 1929 Lane told a reporter that Ko-Ko was his favorite role.
Lane's silent film career started in 1915 in a series of British short films, including the experimental Mr Butterbuns series. As a comedian, he appeared in 40 Hollywood films made in the 1920s. After several shorts and features for Fox in 1922–23, Lane appeared as Rudolph in D. W. Griffith's 1924 feature Isn't Life Wonderful?.
Silent-comedy star
Earle Hammons of silent-comedy studio Educational Pictures signed Lupino Lane in 1925. Hammons sent his chief producer Jack White to see Lane on stage: "He was working in New York in The Mikado, Gilbert and Sullivan. I went backstage to see him after the show was over and we got to know each other fairly well," recalled White. Lane starred in a series of short comedies that featured his acrobatic flips and falls. Lane's co-star was usually his brother, Wallace Lupino. Wallace also starred in his own comedies, only three of which are known to survive. (Archivist Ben Model discovered one of them and posted it on YouTube.)
During his first year at Educational, Lane found time to produce and star in The Hollywood Music Box Revue, which enjoyed an unusually long run (by local standards) of 19 weeks. Some of the girls featured in the show went on to screen careers, including Lupe Vélez, Nancy Carroll, and Marion Byron.
Roscoe Arbuckle, Charles Lamont, Norman Taurog, and Mark Sandrich were some of Lupino Lane's directors, but in 1928 Lane insisted on directing the films himself. (He received screen credit under the pseudonym "Henry W. George," his given names.) White commented, "[Wallace Lupino] was approachable where Lupino Lane was not. Lane was a very difficult guy to make a movie with, because he disagreed with everything except what came from his head. I thought he was rather arrogant. He went on for a couple years, though [sic]." Lane demonstrated that he knew his business, and his comedies successfully displayed his agility and versatility: in one film he played 27 characters (Only Me, 1929).
Lupino Lane made the transition to talking pictures, his voice being a light, British-accented tenor. He was one of the first of Educational's stars to make talking two-reel comedies; his sound shorts alternated with silent shorts through the end of 1929. He played a major role in the 1929 musical film The Love Parade, and made a guest appearance in the Warner Bros. musical revue The Show of Shows. His last Warner film was Golden Dawn (1930), in which he played a supporting role.
Then Lupino Lane left Educational, Warner, and the American screen behind. In December 1929 the New York Daily News reported that Lupino Lane "is deserting Hollywood for a six-month engagement at the Hippodrome in London." A subsequent Film Daily report added that Lane was leaving Hollywood for his native England, to form his own production company, which was confirmed in a European dispatch from January 1930: "Lupino Lane, who is now appearing at the Glasgow Alhambra, intends setting up an organisation of his own outside London, to make British comedies, and his immediate plans include four features and twelve two-reel comedies a year. He will probably only appear in two features himself, but will direct the others."
Lane's surprise swan song in America was a Vitaphone short called Evolution of the Dance, released in February 1930 as a two-reel Technicolor special, even though the running time (12 minutes) barely exceeded one reel. This was filmed as a production number for the feature-length Show of Shows revue but removed from the final cut. The short is a pageant of performers offering different styles of dance; Lupino Lane leads a hobo ensemble. Dance directors Larry Ceballos and Jack Haskell were credited in the short, but featured performer Lane was not; Vitaphone waited until Lane had left the country before quietly releasing the out-take -- without crediting Lane. Fellow British stage stars Jack Buchanan and Beatrice Lillie also filmed specialty acts for Show of Shows that Warner released separately as Vitaphone shorts.
1930s
In the 1930s, Lane directed and acted in mostly British feature films. He also returned to the musical-comedy stage. With Sir Oswald Stoll, Lane co-produced Twenty to One, written by L. Arthur Rose and Frank Eyton with music by Billy Mayerl, on the West End. Lane made his first appearance as Bill Snibson in this production, in which Snibson, a tout, was a big hit. The production ran for a year starting from November 1935 and went on a long British tour after that.
Me and My Girl, the follow-up show, written by Rose and Douglas Furber with music by Noel Gay, was an even bigger hit. Snibson inherits a country estate and invites his mates from Lambeth to stay with him. It featured a hit song and dance routine from Lane called "The Lambeth Walk", which became popular throughout Europe in the late 1930s. Lane directed and produced the show as well as starring in it for 1,550 performances between 1937 and 1940. It was the first British musical comedy to be televised.
A film version went into production in October 1938. The Me and My Girl film was released by Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer in January 1940 under the title The Lambeth Walk, purely on the popularity of the dance craze. Trade reviewer Pete Harrison cautioned exhibitors that the film was "not for the American masses; the accents are thick, and some of the situations and slang expressions are so British that they will be completely lost on American audiences." Harrison's prediction proved correct: in some American theaters, moviegoers walked out on the picture.
Later career and death
Me and My Girl was a vehicle for Lupino Lane, and it made him a rich man. Lane continued to act on stage and on television in England for the rest of his life. In 1946, after it sustained damage during World War II, he purchased the shell of the Gaiety Theatre in London to rescue it from dereliction, intending to produce comedies. He failed to win the financial backing to refurbish it and sold it in 1950. The theatre was demolished in 1956.
He was the subject of This Is Your Life in March 1956 when he was surprised by host Eamonn Andrews at London's BBC Television Theatre. He also appeared as the castaway on Desert Island Discs in 1957.
Lane died on 10 November 1959, in London, at age 67 and is buried at Streatham Park Cemetery. His wife, Violet Blythe, died 17 March 1983, aged 93.
To mark the 50th anniversary of his death, the Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America restored his memorial at Streatham Park Cemetery and held a memorial service at St Paul's, Covent Garden, with a reception at Theatre Royal, Drury Lane.
A commemorative blue plaque was erected to Lupino Lane on 15 June 2014 at his former home 32 Maida Vale, Paddington, by The Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America.
Partial filmography
DVD release
On 26 December 2012, Alpha Video released Lupino Lane Silent Comedy Collection, Volume 1 on Region 0 DVD-R.
On 28 January 2014, they released Lupino Lane Silent Comedy Collection, Volume 2.
On 15 November 2022, D&D Productions released Lupino Lane: Silent Comedian on DVD & Blu-ray.
References
Sources
See also
Lupino family
External links
Lupino Lane at IMDb
Lupino Lane at the Internet Broadway Database
Lupino Lane at Virtual History
Violet Blythe at IMDb
Violet Blythe at the Internet Broadway Database
Lauri Lupino Lane at IMDb
Lupino Lane on Desert Island Discs
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