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TITHERADGE, GEORGE SUTTON (1848-1916), actor,
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was born at Portsmouth, England, on 9 December 1848. He made his first
appearance on the stage at the Theatre Royal, Portsmouth, subsequently supported
Charles Dillon in Shakespearian plays, and in 1873 played the junior lead at
Bristol. In 1876 he was Joseph Surface in the Chippendale classical company, and
in the same year played Hamlet at Calcutta. On 1 January 1877 he was the Herald
at the Calcutta Durbar and proclaimed Queen Victoria Empress of India. He made
his first appearance in London in October 1877, and on 8 April 1878 played Iago
to the Othello of Henry Forrester. He visited India a second time and, going on
to Australia, made his first appearance there in May 1879 as Lord Arthur Chilton
in False Shame. He joined the London Comedy Company at Sydney in 1880.
After a world tour including the United States, Titheradge was engaged in 1883
by Williamson
and Garner to come to Australia and play Wilfred Denver in The Silver
King. He made a great success in this character, and in leading parts in
other popular dramas of the period. He joined the Brough and Boucicault
(q.v.) company in 1887, and for 10 years played lead in plays by Robertson,
Grundy, Jones, Pinero and other dramatists of the period. There was one
Shakespearian production, Much Ado About Nothing, in which Titheradge was
an excellent Benedick to the Beatrice of Mrs Brough. He must have played
something like 100 parts in Australia, not one without distinction, and many
seemed almost faultless. Possibly his Aubrey Tanqueray and Village Priest
returned most often to the memories of play-goers of the time. He went to London
in 1898, and played with success with Mrs Patrick Campbell, including his old
part of Aubrey Tanqueray, and was with her company in America in 1902, among his
parts being Schwartze in Magda. In January 1903 he played Professor
Rubeck at the Imperial Theatre, London, in Ibsen's When We Dead Awaken,
and later in the year toured America with Henry Miller and Margaret Anglin in
Camille, The Devil's Disciple, and other plays. He was in the
United States again late in 1905, and toured with Sothern and Julia Marlowe. In
England in 1907 he was with Sir John Hare's company in Caste and A
Pair of Spectacles. He returned to Australia in 1908 and in that year and in
1909 played in The Thief, The Taming of the Shrew, The Village
Priest, The Silver King and other plays. During the remainder of his
life Titheradge made only occasional appearances, among them being in The
Village Priest, with Mrs Brough in 1912, Shylock to the Portia of Ellen
Terry at her benefit at Sydney in 1914, and George II in a Lewis Waller
production of A Fair Highwayman. He died at Sydney on 22 January 1916. He
married about 1879 Alma Santon who survived him with a son and six daughters, of
whom Madge Titheradge, born in Melbourne, in 1887, made a reputation as an
actress in London, playing many leading parts. The son, Dion Titheradge, born in
Melbourne in 1889, after experience as an actor in Australia, U.S.A. and
England, became well-known as a producer and author of many plays and scenarios.
Titheradge was over medium height, well-formed, and an artist to his finger
tips. He was the personification of natural acting, and every gesture seemed the
inevitable one. It was said of him that to play Aubrey Tanqueray he only needed
to play himself, a cultured gentleman. But he would have dissented strongly from
this; he had no patience with the "typing" of actors which became so prevalent
in the present century. And though he believed in naturalness on the stage he
considered it was being overdone and was leading to dullness, when he returned
to England at the close of the century. Personally Titheradge was everywhere
much respected; he was president of the Actors' Association of Australia at the
time of his death. The charm of his personality is well suggested in the article
in the Bookfellow referred to below. In private life he was interested in
the growing of daffodils and in botany.
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