Dame Gracie Fields
Dame Gracie Fields, DBE (born Grace Stansfield, 9 January 1898 – 27 September 1979), was an English-born, later Italian-based actress, singer and comedienne and star of both cinema and music hall.
Grace Stansfield was born over a fish and chip shop owned by her grandmother, Sarah Bamford, in Molesworth Street, Rochdale, Lancashire.  She made her first stage appearance as a child in 1905, joining  children's repertory theatre groups such as 'Haley's Garden of Girls'  and the 'Nine Dainty Dots'. Her two sisters, Edith and Betty and  brother, Tommy, all went on to appear on stage, but Gracie was the most  successful. Her professional debut in variety took place at the Rochdale Hippodrome theatre in 1910 and she soon gave up her job in the local cotton mill, where she was a half-timer, spending half a week in the mill and the other half at school.
She met comedian and impresario Archie Pitt and they began working  together. Pitt gave Fields champagne on her 18th birthday, and wrote in  an autograph book to her that he would make her a star. Pitt would come  to serve as her manager and the two married in 1923 at Clapham Registry  Office. Their first revue in 1915 was called Yes I Think So and the two continued to tour Britain together until 1924 in the revue Mr Tower of London, with other reviews including By Request, It's A Bargain and The Show's The Thing.
Archie Pitt was the brother of Bert Aza, founder of the Aza agency,  who were responsible for many talents of the day including the actor and  comedian Stanley Holloway, who was introduced to Aza by Fields. Fields and Holloway first worked together on her film Sing As We Go in 1934 and the two remained close friends for the rest of their lives.
Fields came to major public notice when Mr Tower of London came to the West End. Her career rapidly accelerated from this point with straight dramatic performances and the beginning of a recording career.
One of her most successful productions was at the Alhambra Theatre in 1925. The show, booked by Sir Oswald Stoll,  was a major success and toured for ten years, throughout the UK. She  later said "One day I was in Plymouth's palace theatre and the next  playing Blackpool!". She made the first of ten appearances in Royal Variety Performances  in 1928, following a premiere stint at the London Palladium, gaining a  devoted following with a mixture of self-deprecating jokes, comic songs  and monologues, as well as cheerful "depression-era" songs all presented in a "no-airs-and-graces" Northern, working class style. She recorded her first record for HMV Because I Love You and My Blue Heaven in 1928.
At one point, Fields was playing three shows a night in London's West  End. She appeared in the Pitt production she was working on, with Gerald Du Maurier in the straight play SOS at the Saint James Theatre, with also a cabaret spot at the Cafe De Paris following this.
Fields had a great rapport  with her audience, which helped her become one of Britain's highest  paid performers, playing to sold out theatre's across the country.
Her most famous song, which became her theme, "Sally," was worked into the title of her first film, Sally in Our Alley (1931), which was a major box office hit. She went on to make several films initially in Britain and later in the United States  (for which she was paid a record fee of £200,000 for four films).  Regardless, she never enjoyed the process of performing without a live  audience, and found the process of film-making boring. She tried to opt  out of filming, before director Monty Banks  persuaded her otherwise, landing her the lucrative Hollywood deal.  Fields demanded that the four films were to be filmed in Britain and not  Hollywood, and this was the case.
Ironically, the final few lines of the song "Sally" were written by  her husband's mistress, Annie Lipman, and Fields sang this song at  nearly every performance she made from 1931 onwards - claiming in later  life that she wanted to "Drown blasted Sally with Walter with the  aspidistra on top!"
The late 1930s saw her popularity peak and she was given many honours: the Officer of the Venerable Order of St. John (for charity work), the Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) (for services to entertainment) in 1938 and the Freedom of the Borough of Rochdale.
She donated her house, "Tower," 20, Frognal Way, Hampstead, London,  NW3 6XE (which she had not much cared for and which she had shared with  her husband Archie Pitt and his mistress) to a maternity hospital after  the marriage broke down. In 1939, she became seriously ill with cervical cancer. The public sent over 250,000 goodwill messages and she retired to her villa on Capri. After she recovered, she recorded a very special 78rpm record simply called Gracie's Thanks, in which she thanks the public for the many cards and letters she received while in hospital. During World War II, she paid for all servicemen/women to travel free on public transport within the boundaries of Rochdale.
Fields also helped Rochdale F.C. in the 1930s when they were struggling to pay fees and buy sports equipment.
In 1933 she set up the Gracie Fields Children's Home and Orphanage at  Peacehaven in Sussex for children of those in the theatre profession  who could not look after their children. She kept this until 1967, when  the home was no longer needed. This was near her own home in Peacehaven,  and Fields often visited, with the children all calling her 'Aunty  Grace'.
World War II  was declared while she was recovering in Capri, and Fields - still very  ill after her operation, threw herself into her work and signed up for ENSA headed by her old film producer, Basil Dean. Fields travelled to France  to entertain the troops in the midst of air-raids, performing on the  backs of open lorries and in war-torn areas. She was the first artist to  play behind enemy lines in Berlin.
Following her divorce from Archie Pitt, she married Italian-born film director Monty Banks in March 1940.
However, because Banks remained an Italian citizen and would have been interned in the United Kingdom, she was forced to leave Britain for North America during the war, at the instruction of Winston Churchill,  who told her to "Make American Dollars, not British Pounds," which she  did in aid of the Navy League and the Spitfire Fund. She and Banks moved  to their home in Santa Monica,  California. She did occasionally return to England to show she was not  indeed a traitor, performing in factories and army camps around the  country. After their initial argument, Parliament offered her an  official apology.
Although she continued to spend much of her time entertaining troops  and otherwise supporting the war effort outside Britain, this led to a  fall-off in her popularity at home. She performed many times for Allied troops, travelling as far as New Guinea, where she received an enthusiastic response from Australian personnel. Late 1945 saw her tour the South Pacific Islands.
After the war, Fields continued her career less actively. She began performing in Britain again in 1948 headlining the London Palladium over Eartha Kitt who was also on the bill. The BBC gave her her own Radio Show in 1947 dubbed Our Gracie's Working Party  in which 12 towns were visited by Fields, and a live show of music and  entertainment was broadcast weekly with Fields compering and performing,  and local talents also on the bill. This tour commenced in Rochdale.
In 1951, Fields opened the Festival of Britain  celebrations. She proved popular once more, though never regaining the  status she enjoyed in the 1930s. She continued recording, but made no  more films, moving more towards light classical music as popular tastes  changed, often adopting a religious theme. She continued into the new  medium of LP records, and recorded new takes of her old favourite songs,  as well as new and recent tracks to 'liven things up a bit'.
Monty Banks died in 1950 of a heart attack while travelling on the Orient Express. Two years later Fields married Boris Alperovici, a Romanian radio repairman. She claimed that he was the love of her life, and that she couldn't wait to propose to him. She proposed on Christmas Day in front of friends and family. They married at the Church of St Steffano on Capri in a quiet ceremony before honeymooning in Rome.
She lived on her beloved Isle of Capri for the remainder of her life, at her home La Canzone Del Mare,  a swimming and restaurant complex which Field's home overlooked. It was  favoured by many Hollywood stars during the 1950s, with regular guests  including Richard Burton, Elizabeth Taylor, Greta Garbo and Noël Coward.
She began to work less, but still toured the UK under the management of Harold Fielding, manager of top artists of the day such as Tommy Steele and Max Bygraves.  Her UK tours proved popular, and in the mid 1960s she performed  farewell tours in Australia, Canada and America - the latter performance  was recorded and released years later.
In 1956, Fields played Miss Marple in a US TV production of Agatha Christie's A Murder is Announced. The production featured Jessica Tandy and Roger Moore, and predates the Margaret Rutherford films by some five years. She also starred in television productions of A Tale of Two Cities, The Old Lady Shows Her Medals, - for which she won a TV Award, and Mrs 'Aris Goes to Paris, which was remade years later with Angela Lansbury as Mrs Harris, a charwoman in search of a fur coat. (A Chanel dress in Lansbury's case.)
In 1957, her single, "Around the World" peaked at #8 in the UK Singles Chart, with her recording of "Little Donkey" reaching #20 in November 1959.
Fields regularly performed in TV appearances, being the first entertainer to perform on Val Parnell's Sunday Night at the London Palladium.  Fields had two Christmas TV specials in 1960 and 1961, singing her old  favourites and new songs in front of a studio audience. 1971 saw A Gift For Gracie, another TV special presented by Fields and Bruce Forsythe. This followed on from her popularity of Jess Yates's Stars on Sunday religious programme, the precursor to Songs of Praise, in which celebrities sang religious hymns and read Bible readings. Fields was the most requested artist on the show.
In 1968, Fields headlined a two week Christmas stint at Yorkshire's  prestigious Batley Variety Club. "I was born over a fish and chip shop -  I never thought I'd be singing in one!" claimed Fields during the  performance recorded by the BBC.
In 1975, her album, The Golden Years, reached #48 in the UK Albums Chart.
In 1978, she opened the Gracie Fields Theatre, located next to Oulder Hill Community School,  in her native Rochdale, performing a concert there recorded by the BBC  to open the show. Fields appeared in ten Royal Variety Performances from  1928 onwards, her last being in 1978 at the age of 80 when she appeared  as a surprise guest in the finale, in which she appeared and sang her  theme song, "Sally".
Her final TV appearance came in January 1979 when she appeared in a special octogenarian edition of The Merv Griffin Show  in America, in which she sang the song she popularised in America, "The  Biggest Aspidistra In The World". Fields was notified by her confidante  John Taylor while she was in America that she had the invitation to  become a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire,  to which she replied: "Yes I'll accept, yes I can kneel - but I might  need help getting back up, and yes I'll attend - as long as they don't  call Boris, Buttons."
Fields' health declined in July 1979, when she contracted pneumonia  after performing an open air concert on the Royal Yacht which was  docked in Capri's harbour. After a spell in hospital, she seemed to be  recovering, but died on 27 September 1979. The press reported she died  holding her husband's hand, but in reality he was at their Anacapri home  at the time, while Gracie was home with the housekeeper, Irena. She is  buried in the non-Catholic cemetery on Capri; the Protestant Cemetery in a white marble tomb. Her coffin was carried by staff from her restaurant. Her husband Boris died in 1984.
The Rochdale Boroughwide Cultural Trust holds the 'Gracie Fields Archive'.
In 2009, Jane Horrocks took the lead in the BBC TV production Gracie!, a drama portraying the life of Fields just before and during World War II and her relationship with Monty Banks (played by Tom Hollander).
Ahh, mostly the daft stuff.....my favourites. :) A few of the pure voice songs as well, though. Not a complete collection by any means....just a nice overview of her massive output of music over the years...I probably risk hellfire and damnation by saying that a little Gracie can go a long way with me, so I tend to lean toward her more humorous selections......ENJOY! 
A Feather In His Tyrolean Hat
Biggest Aspidistra In The World ver 2
Bless Them All
Bless This House
Christmas Bells at Eventide
Clogs and Shawls
Count Your Blessings
Crash Bang I Want To Go Home
Eee By Gum
Fall In And Follow The Band
Forever And Ever
Fred Fannakapan (2)
Fred Fannakapan
Goodnight Children Medley
Goodnight My Love
Gracie's Christmas Party
Grandfather's Bagpipes
He Forgot To Come Back
He Wooed Her And Wooed Her
He's Dead But He Wont Lie Down
How Are Things In Gloccamora
I'll get by
The Betrayal
The Biggest Aspidistra In The World
The Bleeding Heart
The Carefree Heart
The Dicky Bird Hop
the Fairy on the xmas tree
Now you know I love the music hall artistes.....the entertainers....Gracie, George Formby...all of 'em. I HAD TO ADD this classic Peter Cook clip of his HATRED of Gracie.............I laughed so hard I thought I'd DIE !!
 










 
 
It's Gracie's Birthday tomorrow!
ReplyDeleteLoved reading about her here!
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oxo
~confetta
Excellent! I still have to get the next post up :0
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