Cyril Ritchard
Cyril Ritchard | |
---|---|
Ritchard (left) and Eddie Mayehoff in the play Visit to a Small Planet (1957) | |
Born |
Surry Hills, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia | 1 December 1898
Died |
18 December 1977 79) Chicago, Illinois, United States | (aged
Occupation | Actor |
Years active | 1918–1977 |
Spouse(s) | Madge Elliott |
Cyril Ritchard (1 December 1898 – 18 December 1977) was an Australian stage, screen and television actor, and director. He is probably best remembered today for his performance as Captain Hook in the Mary Martin musical production of Peter Pan. In 1945, he played Gabriele Eisenstein in Gay Rosalinda at the Palace theatre in London, a version of Strauss's Die Fledermaus by Erich Wolfgang Korngold in which he appeared with Peter Graves, Irene Ambrus and Ruth Naylor. The show was conducted by Richard Tauber and ran for almost a year.[1]
Life and career
He was born Cyril Joseph Trimnell-Ritchard in Surry Hills, Sydney, New South Wales, to Sydney-born parents, Herbert Trimnell-Ritchard, a Protestant grocer, and his wife Marguerite, a devout Roman Catholic who ensured her son was raised as a Roman Catholic. Educated by the Jesuits at St Aloysius' College, Cyril was a lifelong devout Catholic who attended Sunday Mass wherever he happened to be.
Early in his career, Ritchard played in numerous musical comedies, including Yes, Uncle! and Going Up, both in 1918 with actress Madge Elliott (who became his wife in September 1935).[2]
He achieved star status in 1954 as Captain Hook in the Broadway production of Peter Pan co-starring Mary Martin, with whom he shared the same birthday (1 December). For his work in the show, Ritchard received a Tony Award as Best Featured Actor in a Musical.[3] Both Ritchard and Martin reprised their roles in the NBC television productions of the musical, beginning with a live color telecast in 1955. In 1958, he starred in the Cole Porter CBS television musical Aladdin. In 1959, he won his second Tony Award for Best Actor in a Play for "The Pleasure of His Company"
He appeared onstage in Sugar (1972), and The Roar of the Greasepaint – The Smell of the Crowd (1965), with Anthony Newley.[4] He was also a director, directing on Broadway The Happiest Girl in the World (1961) (in which he also appeared), Roar Like a Dove (1964)[5][6] and The Irregular Verb to Love (1963), in which he also appeared.[7]
His film appearances include a villainous role in Alfred Hitchcock's early talkie Blackmail (1929) and much later in the Tommy Steele vehicle Half a Sixpence (1967).
Ritchard also appeared regularly on a variety of television programs in the late 1950s and 1960s. For example, he did a stint as one of the What's My Line? mystery guests on 22 December 1957, episode of the popular Sunday night CBS-TV program.[8] In the 1950s Ritchard played the comic lead in Jacques Offenbach's operetta, La Perichole at the Metropolitan Opera in New York City. Later Ritchard served as a guest panelist on the Met's radio quiz show, where he was, perhaps comically, referred to as 'Sir Cyril'. However, Ritchard was never knighted.
A memorable television out-take features Ritchard saying 'Goodnight' to an audience, before spinning a ball on a roulette wheel. Ritchard watches as the ball rattles around the wheel, seemingly interminably, before it finally bounces off the wheel, hits the spindle and flies off-screen.[9]
Death
Shortly before he died, Ritchard performed as the voice of Elrond in the Rankin/Bass television production of The Hobbit.[10] Ritchard lived at The Langham, a famed apartment house in New York. He suffered a heart attack on 25 November 1977, aged 78, while appearing as the narrator in the Chicago touring company of Side by Side by Sondheim. He died nearly a month later in Chicago, aged 79, and was buried at Saint Mary's Cemetery in Ridgefield, Connecticut, where he had long resided in his rural home. His funeral Mass was celebrated by Archbishop Fulton Sheen. His wife Madge predeceased him in 1955 as did a baby boy who died in infancy in 1939.
Label
- Wonderland Records
Selected filmography
- Blackmail (1929)
- Piccadilly (1929)
- Just for a Song (1930)
- Symphony in Two Flats (1930)
- Danny Boy (1934)
- The Show Goes On (1937)
- It's a Grand Old World (1937)
- Dangerous Medicine (1938)
- I See Ice (1938)
- The Winslow Boy (1948)
- The Daydreamer (1966)
- Hans Brinker (1969) Hans Brinker, or The Silver Skates
- Half a Sixpence (1967)
- The Enchanted World of Danny Kaye: The Emperor's New Clothes (1972)
- The First Christmas: The Story of the First Christmas Snow (1975)
- The Hobbit (1977)
Radio appearances
Year | Program | Episode/source |
---|---|---|
1952 | Theatre Guild on the Air | The Pickwick Papers[11] |
References
- ↑ Charles Castle, This was Richard Tauber, London 1971
- ↑ "Madge Elliott and Cyril Ritchard".
- ↑ "Tony Awards, 1955" broadwayworld.com, accessed 26 March 2012
- ↑ Ritchard Listing, Broadway Internet Broadway Database, accessed 26 March 2012
- ↑ "Roar Like a Dove Listing" playbillvault.com, accessed 26 March 2012
- ↑ Roar Like a Dove Internet Broadway Database, accessed 26 March 2012
- ↑ The Irregular Verb to Love Internet Broadway Database, accessed 26 March 2012
- ↑ "What's My Line?: Episode #394". TV.com.
- ↑ It'll Be Alright on the Night 3, ITV 1981
- ↑ Cyril Ritchard's IMDb profile imdb.com
- ↑ Kirby, Walter (December 21, 1952). "Better Radio Programs for the Week". The Decatur Daily Review. p. 44. Retrieved June 8, 2015 – via Newspapers.com.
External links
- Cyril Ritchard at Find a Grave
- Cyril Ritchard at the Internet Broadway Database
- Cyril Ritchard at the Internet Movie Database
- Biography of Ritchard