Maisie Gay

Maisie Gay

Maisie Gay, born Maud Daisy Noble (7 January 1878 – 13 September 1945), was an English actress and singer, known for comic character roles in works by Noel Coward, James T. Tanner, and Edgar Wallace.

Early life

Maud Daisy Noble was born in 1878 (though many sources give 1883), in Willesden, London, daughter of Peter Noble and Charlotte Elizabeth Pratt Noble. She attended the North London Collegiate School for Girls.[1]

Career

Maisie Gay first appeared on stage in 1903, as a chorus girl. She soon rose to more prominent roles, and from 1904 to 1907 she played the lead in a musical, A Country Girl, by J. T. Tanner. She made her West End debut in A Waltz King in 1908, and followed that with a role in The Girls of Gottenberg by George Grossmith. After a successful run in J. T. Tanner's Our Miss Gibbs, Maisie Gay toured the United States in another Tanner show, The Quaker Girl. She returned to London to appear in a fourth show by Tanner, The Girl on the Film, in 1913. Gay remained very active on the stage in both London and New York, in musicals and revues, during World War I, especially in a US tour of Arthur Hammerstein's High Jinks in 1914 and 1915.[2] She was often in works by Noel Coward, including London Calling! (1923, produced by Andre Charlot), and This Year of Grace (1928–1929, on a tour of Australia).[3]

During her 1915 American tour, she was featured as a celebrity endorsement in newspaper advertisements for Lehman Pianos.[4] In 1925, Sketch magazine called Maisie Gay "one of our leading comedians."[5] Her stage persona has been described as both "matronly" and "madcap."[6] One comic song by Coward, "There's Life in the Old Girl Yet," became her signature song, and her part in London Calling! as "Miss Hernia Whittlebot" drew ire from Edith Sitwell, who believed the role was a crude parody of herself.[7]

She performed in silent film during visits to the United States, including The Siren's Song (1915). She made her first sound film in 1930, singing in To Oblige a Lady (adapted from the show by Edgar Wallace). She appeared in a second Wallace film adaptation in 1932, The Old Man. Around the same time she wrote her autobiography, Laughing through Life (1931),[8] and retired from the stage as she experienced advancing arthritis.[9]

Personal life

Maisie Gay married stage manager Oscar Drewe "Odee" Harris. In retirement they bought a public house called Northey Arms in Box, Wiltshire,[10] and led a mostly quiet retirement there until she died in 1945, aged 67.[11]

References

  1. Robert Sharp, "Gay, Maisie (1878–1945)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press 2004).
  2. "High Jinks a Scream" Salinas Daily Union (28 January 1915): 8. via Newspapers.com
  3. "Return of Maisie Gay" The Age (23 April 1929): 9. via Newspapers.com
  4. Lehman Pianos advertisement featuring Maisie Gay, Des Moines Register (31 January 1915): 11. via Newspapers.com
  5. "The Child Mother to the Woman? No. 14: Maisie Gay" Sketch: A Journal of Art and Actuality (October 28, 1925): 186.
  6. James Ross Moore, Andre Charlot: The Genius of Intimate Musical Revue (McFarland 2005): 78. ISBN 9780786481330
  7. Holly Laird, "Laughter and Nonsense in the Making and (Postmodern) Remaking of Modernism" in Hugh Witemeyer, ed., The Future of Modernism (University of Michigan Press 1997): 88-89. ISBN 9780472108350
  8. Maisie Gay, Laughing through Life (Hurst & Blackett 1931).
  9. "Miss Maisie Gay Ill" Hull Daily Mail (12 January 1938).
  10. "Noel Coward Pulls a Pint or Two at Box" BBC.co.uk (24 February 2004).
  11. "Well-Known Actress, Maisie Gay, Dead" Sydney Morning Herald (15 September 1945): 1. via Trove

External links

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