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BOUCICAULT, DION (1859-1929), actor and stage director,
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was born at New York on 23 May 1859, the son of Dion Boucicault the elder,
the well-known actor and dramatist, and of his wife, Agnes Boucicault, who was
also well known on the stage. Boucicault was educated at Esher, Cuddington and
Paris, and made his first appearance as an actor in New York on 11 October 1879.
His first appearance in London was in November 1880, when he played Andy in Andy
Blake. Thereafter he was constantly on the stage either playing himself or
directing the production. In 1885 he went to Australia with his father and
decided to remain there. He entered into partnership with Robert Brough in 1886,
and at the Bijou Theatre in Melbourne and the Criterion in Sydney a long series
of plays by Robertson, Pinero, Jones and other dramatists of the period was
produced with great care and artistry. A remarkably fine company was got
together which included Boucicault's. sister Nina, afterwards to make a
reputation in London, G. S.
Titheradge (q.v.), and G. W. Anson. Though modern comedy was usually played
there was one excursion into Shakespeare, a notable performance of Much Ado
About Nothing with Titheradge as Benedick, and Mrs Brough as Beatrice.
Boucicault had invaluable experience both as a producer and as an actor, and
when he returned to London in 1896 he was capable of taking any part that his
small stature did not disqualify him for. On 20 January 1898 he played one of
his most successful parts, Sir William Gower, in Trelawney of the Wells,
and a long succession of important parts followed. He directed the first
production of Peter Pan and other well-known plays by Barrie, Milne and
various leading dramatists of the time. He visited Australia in 1923 with his
wife Irene Vanbrugh, with a repertoire which included Mr Pim Passes By,
Belinda, The Second Mrs Tanquerary, Trelawney of the Wells,
His House in Order and Aren't We All. Two other visits followed in
1926 and 1927-28 when plays by Barrie, Milne and others were staged.
Boucicault's health began to decline in Australia, and returning to London, he
died there on 25 June 1929. His wife survived him. A portrait by Byam Shaw is at
the national gallery, Melbourne.
Boucicault was a great producer of comedy. No detail was too small and
everything fell into its place in exact relation to the whole production. In
Australia he set a standard that has seldom if ever been surpassed. He was a
most finished actor in a wide range of parts and in his later years became the
legitimate successor of Sir John Hare in playing old men's parts. It might be
urged that his carefully thought out and elaborate business in such a part as Mr
Pim drew too much attention to himself and prevented him from keeping within the
frame of the picture. But to his many admirers the perfection of his detail was
a constant delight, which more than compensated for any risks of that kind he
may have run.
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