Albert Chevalier

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(1861–1923), one of the outstanding stars of the British music-hall. After a successful and varied career in comedy, burlesque, and melodrama, he was persuaded by his friend Charlie Coborn, already a well-known name in the entertainment world, to go on the ‘halls’. He made his first appearance at the London Pavilion in 1891 singing his own composition ‘The Coster's Serenade’ and was immediately successful. Although he later presented other characters, including a Chelsea Pensioner, a yokel, and a curate, it was as a Cockney that he gained his immense popularity, with ‘Knocked 'Em in the Old Kent Road’, ‘The Narsty Way 'E Sez It’, ‘It Gits Me Talked Abaht’, ‘Appy’ ‘Ampstead’, and above all ‘My Old Dutch’, for which he wrote the words himself, his brother supplying the music. Chevalier was also the author of a number of sentimental ballads and sketches and of one unsuccessful play, The Land of Nod (1898). He was one of the few music-hall stars who never appeared in pantomime.

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Albert Chevalier

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Albert Chevalier

Albert Chevalier
Background information
Birth name Albert Onesime Britannicus Gwathveoyd Louis Chevalier
Also known as Albert Knight
Born 21 March 1861
Notting Hill, London
Died 10 July 1923(1923-07-10) (aged 62)
Genres Music hall comedy
Occupations Actor

Albert Onesime Britannicus Gwathveoyd Louis Chevalier (21 March 1861 – 10 July 1923) was an English comedian and actor.

Contents

Early life

Albert Chevalier was born in the Royal Crescent, in London's Notting Hill. The son of a French master at Kensington Grammar School, and a Welsh mother, he showed a keen interest in acting and performed The September Gale in a private family performance, when he was seven. His brother Charles Ingle, who served as his manager and occasional partner, is known for composing music hall classics such as "My Old Dutch". In 1869, Albert premièred in public as Mark Anthony in Shakespeare's Julius Caesar, in an amateur performance at the local Cornwall Hall. He joined another local amateur group, the Roscius Dramatic Club at the age of fourteen, adopting the stage name, Albert Knight.[1]

Career

In 1877, at sixteen, he was engaged as an actor in the company of Mr. and Mrs. Squire Bancroft in London, and for fourteen years played legitimate parts at the Court Theatre and elsewhere.

In 1891, however, he began a successful music hall career as a singer of coster songs of his own invention, a new type in which he had an immediate success, both in England and America. He subsequently organized an entertainment of his own, with sketches and songs, with which he went on tour, establishing a wide popularity as an original artist in his special line.

Chevalier appeared in the 1909 production of "The Sins of Society" at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London, playing the role of James Hogg.

Chevalier performed several sentimental songs in his act; the most popular of these was My Old Dutch, about an old man's long happy marriage to his wife. The song's title is based on Cockney rhyming slang: in this case, "Dutch" is a shortening of the phrase "Duchess of Fife" which rhymes with "wife". The singer's "old Dutch" is therefore his spouse. Chevalier also starred in a film entitled My Old Dutch. His own old Dutch, was his wife, Florrie, the daughter of music hall star George Champagne Charlie Leybourne.

Chevalier died on 10 July 1923. He is buried with his son and father in law George Leybourne at Abney Park Cemetery, Stoke Newington, London. Their grave is cared for by The Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America.

Bibliography

  • Before I Forget Albert Chevalier (1902)

References

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. 

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Mentioned in

Bottle (1915 Film)
Middleman (1915 Film)
My Old Dutch (1915 Drama Film)
My Old Dutch (1926 Film)
The Zydeco: The Early Years (1989 Album by Various Artists)