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Charles Morton (impresario)

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Charles Morton (15 August 1819–18 October 1904) was a Music hall and theatre manager. Born in Hackney, he built the first purpose built tavern Music hall, the Canterbury Music Hall, and became known as the Father of the Halls.

Career

Canterbury Hall

Morton and Frederick Stanley, his brother in law, purchased the Canterbury Arms, in Upper Marsh, Lambeth, in 1849. Morton had been impressed with the entertainments at Evans Music-and-Supper Rooms in Covent Garden and decided to offer a harmonic meeting, held on Saturdays, in the back room of the public house. Soon, a Thursday evening programme was added to accommodate the crowds and admit women, giving the venue wider appeal than the old time song and supper rooms, which were male preserves.[1] Entry was free, but the profits from the sale of food and drink allowed the construction in 1852 of a 700 seat hall on the site of an adjacent skittle alley. This made sufficient profit to fund the building of a 1,500 seat hall, around the old hall. The old building was demolished in one weekend and the New Canterbury opened in December 1856. In 1855, and again in 1856, Morton was prosecuted under the Theatres Act 1843 for the presentation of 'legitimate drama' in sketches – this still being reserved to a small number of licensed theatres. Even this setback was turned to advantage by taking advertisements in The Times – the first such for this type of behaviour.[2]

Their success at the Canterbury allowed Stanley and Morton to build The Oxford, in Holborn, as a competitor to the nearby Weston's Music Hall, opening on 26 March 1861. The pair managed both the Canterbury & Oxford halls, with acts moving between the halls in coaches.[3] With their interests now established in the West End, on Boxing Night 1867, Morton relinquished management of the Canterbury to William Holland.

Variety theatre

In 1877, Morton became the manager of the Alhambra Theatre, in Leicester Square. The theatre fell into financial difficulties following the decision by the Middlesex Magistrates not to grant a Music and Dancing Licence in October 1870. It was destroyed by fire in December 1882.[3] Morton took it over and made a success, presenting a programme of variety. The theatre re-opened on 18 October 1884, with Morton in charge.

Morton announced his retirement in 1891, but in 1892, he was persuaded by the Newson-Smith Syndicate to take over Richard D'Oyly Carte's failed Royal English Opera House on Cambridge Circus. He re-opened it as the Palace Theatre of Varieties, with a programme of variety theatre and continued to manage the theatre profitably, until his death in 1904.[4]

Legacy

His biography, Sixty Years Stage Service was published in 1905 by his brother and Henry Chance Newton and did much to establish his reputation as The Father of the Halls. Morton appears to have been the first to coin the term "Music hall" and popularised the concept through aggressive advertising in The Times. Many aspects of the entertainment had already been tried elsewhere, especially in the northern provinces and by the 1840s, the artistes themselves had already formed a benevolent society. Morton was able to combine these ideas into a package of entertainments and make them widely popular with many imitators. He went on to anticipate the move from the halls to the large variety theatres of the Edwardian era and to manage some of the most profitable and notable.[2]

References

  1. ^ Green pp. 7–9
  2. ^ a b Russell, Dave Popular Music in England, 1840-1914: A Social History pp. 83–87 (Manchester University Press, 1997) ISBN 0-7190-5261-0
  3. ^ a b Charles Morton (Arthur Lloyd) accessed 27 March 2008
  4. ^ Pages about Palace Theatre feature (Arthur Lloyd, January 2005) accessed 27 March 2008
  • Green, Benny (ed) (1986) The Last Empires: A Music Hall Companion, (Pavilion, 1986) ISBN 1-85145-061-0
  • Morton, William H. and Newton, Henry Chance. Sixty Years' Stage Service: Being a Record of the Life of Charles Morton (1905, Gale and Polden, Ltd.)