Nigel Playfair
Sir
Nigel Playfair (
1874-
1934) was the actor-manager of the
Lyric Theatre,
Hammersmith,
London, in the
1920s.
He starred in the
Mermaid Society's well-received
1904 London production of
The Way of the World by
William Congreve and went on to produce a very effective modern run twenty years later at The Lyric with
Edith Evans as Millamant (1924).
By then, Playfair was well known. He had produced
Shakespeare's
As You Like It for the opening night of the Shakespeare Festival at
Stratford-upon-Avon in April
1919, and brought it back to the Lyric in April
1920. Critics derided an unconventional set and costumes by
Claud Fraser, but in what Shakespearean scholar Sylvan Barnet calls the play's "first modern production", their spare, evocative design was later acknowledged as a groundbreaking departure from the unimaginatively literal Shakespearean production typical of the time.
As early as
1914, Fraser had also begun to think up designs based on John Gay's
The Beggar's Opera. His innovative set and costume designs premiered at the Lyric Theatre on
June 5,
1920, in what is now considered to have been another of Playfair's masterpieces.
Playfair is credited with a major influence on the
BBC's
1923 wireless Shakespeares, the first produced by that organisation. He continued to work as a BBC producer for some years, and is credited with having commissioned
Richard Hughes to write the world's first radio play,
Danger, which was broadcast on
January 15,
1924.
Playfair also appeared in a few motion picture
films during the last years of his life.
He was knighted in
1928. The
National Portrait Gallery holds a pen and ink
caricature portrait of Sir Nigel Playfair by
Harry Furniss.
Fortnum & Mason still markets
Sir Nigel's Vintage Marmalade, and there is a Nigel Playfair Avenue in
Hammersmith, near
Ravenscourt Park tube station.
Playfair wrote two volumes of memoirs about the Lyric:
The Story of the Lyric Theatre, Hammersmith (London: Chatto & Windus 1925) with
Arnold Bennett &
A. A. MilneHammersmith Hoy. A Book of Minor Revelations (London: Faber & Faber 1930)
His satirical play
When Crummles Played opened at the Garrick Theatre on
October 1,
1928.
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Lady Windermere's Fan (????)
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Perfect Understanding (1933)
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Crime On the Hill (1933)
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The Lady Is Willing (1934)
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Little Stranger (1934)
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Portrait*
Sir Nigel's Vintage Marmalade