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Music Hall, Britain's first form of commercial mass entertainment, emerged, broadly speaking, in the mid-19th century, and ended (arguably) after the First World War, when the halls rebranded their entertainment as Variety. [1]
The Arthur Askey comedy film I Thank You (1941) features old-time music hall star Lily Morris as an ex-music hall artiste now ennobled as "Lady Randall". In the last scene of the film, however, she reverts to type and gives a rendition of " Waiting at the Church " at an impromptu concert at Aldwych tube station organised by Askey and his side ...
The Metropolitan Theatre was a London music hall and theatre in Edgware Road, Paddington.Its origins were in an old inn on the site where entertainments became increasingly prominent by the early 19th century.
Music hall songs were sung in the music halls by a variety of artistes. Most of them were comic in nature. There are a very large number of music hall songs, and most of them have been forgotten. In London, between 1900 and 1910, a single publishing company, Francis, Day and Hunter, published between forty and fifty songs a month.
The Water Rats is a live music venue at 328 Grays Inn Road, Kings Cross, London, England. Until 1992, it was known as The Pindar of Wakefield and was famous for its regular old time music hall entertainment. Bob Dylan played his first UK gig here in December 1962. [1]
William Biggs Boulton (1901), Amusements of Old London, London: J. C. Nimmo, OCLC 382918; Henry Barton Baker (1904), History of the London Stage and its Famous Players (1576-1903), London: Routledge, OL 7081413M; Walter Besant (1904), "Theatres", London in the Time of the Tudors, Survey of London, London: A. & C. Black