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Clement Scott

Clement William Scott (6 October 1841 – 25 June 1904) was an influential English theatre critic for The Daily Telegraph and other journals, and a playwright, lyricist, translator and travel writer, in the final decades of the 19th century. His style of criticism, acerbic, flowery and (perhaps most importantly) carried out on the first night of productions, set the standard for theatre reviewers through to today.

Clement Scott, from a copy of the Theatre magazine, aged about 40

Scott accumulated enemies among theatre managers, actors and playwrights as years went on, picking quarrels with William Archer, Ibsen, George Bernard Shaw and others. After he gave a particularly ill-considered 1898 interview, in which he attacked the morals of theatre people, especially actresses, he was forced to retire as a theatre critic and his reputation and prospects suffered badly until, by the end of his life, he was impoverished.

Life and career

Born the son of William Scott, the perpetual curate of Hoxton in north London, Scott converted to Roman Catholicism before his 21st birthday. Educated at Marlborough College, he became a civil servant, working in the War Office beginning in 1860.[1][2]

Early career

Encouraged to write by the humourist Tom Hood the younger, who also was a clerk in the War Office, Scott contributed to The Era, Weekly Dispatch, and to Hood's own paper, Fun, where Scott and W. S. Gilbert were colleagues. Scott's interest in writing and the theatre led him to brief dalliance with the failed Victoria Review.[1]

He became the dramatic writer for The Sunday Times in 1863 but held the position for only two years because of the intemperance of his published opinions and his unpopular praise of the French theatre. In 1871, Scott began his nearly thirty years as a theatre critic with The Daily Telegraph. He also contributed regularly to The Theatre, a magazine that he edited from 1880 to 1889, and wrote sentimental poetry and song lyrics (including "Oh Promise Me"), which were often published in the magazine Punch by his friend, the editor, F. C. Burnand. Scott continued to work at the War Office until 1879, when he finally decided to earn his living entirely by writing.[1][2]

As well as criticism, Scott wrote plays, including The Vicarage, The Cape Mail, Anne Mié, Odette, and The Great Divorce Case. He wrote several English adaptations of Victorien Sardou's plays, some of which were written in collaboration with B. C. Stephenson, such as Nos intimes (as Peril) and Dora (1878, as Diplomacy). The latter was described by the theatrical paper The Era as "the great dramatic hit of the season".[3] It also played with success at Wallack's Theatre in New York.[4] Scott and Stephenson also wrote an English version of Halévy and Meilhac's libretto for Lecocq's operetta Le Petit Duc (1878). Their adaptation so pleased the composer that he volunteered to write some new music for the English production.[5] For all these, Scott adopted the pen name "Saville Rowe" (after Savile Row) to match Stephenson's pseudonym, "Bolton Rowe", another Mayfair street.[6] The pieces with Stephenson were produced by the Bancrofts, the producers of T. W. Robertson's plays, which Scott admired. He also wrote accounts of holiday tours around the British Isles and abroad, becoming known for his florid style. Scott's travels also inspired his creative writing. Some sources say that after a tour of New Zealand, he wrote the tune to the "Swiss Cradle Song", later adapted as "Now Is the Hour"[7] and as "Haere Ra", the Māori farewell song, which white New Zealanders "mistakenly thought [to be] an old Maori folksong".[8] It is also used for the hymn "Search Me, O God", with lyrics by J. Edwin Orr.[9] However, an Australian family has long claimed that the "Clement Scott" who wrote the tune is a pseudonym for a family member.[10]

Poppyland and later years

In 1883, The Daily Telegraph printed an article which Scott had written about a visit to the north Norfolk coast. He became enamoured of the district and gave it the name Poppyland. His writing was responsible for members of the London theatre set visiting and investing in homes in the area. Ironically, he was unhappy at the result of his popularisation of this previously pristine area.[11][12]

 
Clement Scott memorial at Cromer, Norfolk

Scott married Isabel Busson du Maurier, the sister of George du Maurier, and the couple had four children. She died in 1890, and he remarried Constance Margarite Brandon, an American journalist and actress, in San Francisco. Scott's long-time wish to be elected a member of the famous literary gentlemen's club, the Garrick Club (to which Henry Irving, Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan, among many other notable men belonged), was finally realised in 1892. After an ill-considered 1898 interview in Great Thoughts, Scott was forced to retire as a theatre critic and moved to Biarritz to write The Drama of Yesterday and Today. He then worked for a couple of years at the end of the century for the New York Herald, later returning to London. In 1900, he founded The Free Lance, a Popular Society and Critical Journal, for writers who worked by the job, which he edited.[2]

Scott fell into illness and poverty in his last years and died at his residence in Woburn Square at the age of 62.[2][13]

Style, controversies and influence

 
Scott playing The Daily Telegraph violin (1897)

Scott's position on The Daily Telegraph and the support of its proprietor, J. M. Levy, allowed him to pioneer the essay-style review of drama, which came to replace the earlier bare notices. His column of notes and reviews became very popular throughout Britain, and later his own magazine, The Theatre, achieved wide circulation. He wrote his theatre reviews immediately after he saw the opening night of a piece which, together with his short temper and his dislike of critic William Archer, the chief English supporter of Ibsen, tended to involve him often in controversies.[1]

Scott played an important part in encouraging a more attentive attitude by theatre audiences. In his early days, it was not uncommon for audiences to be very boisterous and noisy, frequently booing and talking during productions, especially through the overture. He also insisted on first night reviews. It had been common for reviewers to wait a few days before writing about a production. Scott insisted that the paying audience on the first night should expect to see a fully fledged production, and not one where the leading characters did not know all their lines. Theatre managers disliked the opening night reviews when they felt that a new piece had not had time to settle down yet.[14] On the other hand, Scott supported actor-managers of his time by providing them with translations of popular French plays and with his own plays.

 
Scott in the Entr'acte in 1898, when he accused Ibsen and Shaw of being harmful to society

Early in his career, he wrote approvingly of the "cup and saucer" realism movement, led by T. W. Robertson, whose plays were notable for treating contemporary British subjects in realistic settings. Later, he favoured the grand and spectacular type of London theatrical production which had developed with new types of theatre building, electric lighting and technologies allowed more and more adventurous staging. As time went on, he became strongly conservative and opposed to the new drama of Ibsen and Shaw, arguing that domestic intrigue, sexual situations and wordy philosophising were inappropriate for an evening at the theatre, and even harmful to society, especially young women. Scott especially became embroiled in legal claims through his outspoken criticism of various actors and actresses. His scathing attacks on Ibsen and Shaw became evident in their lack of journalistic neutrality.[14]

Scott outraged the theatre community with an extraordinary attack on the morals of theatre people in general, and especially of actresses, in an interview that was published in the evangelical weekly Great Thoughts in 1898. He said that the theatre warps people's character and that it was impossible for a pure woman to be successful in a stage career, and that all leading actresses were immoral and could have achieved their success only by virtue of the extent of their "compliance". Even before the publication, the transcript of the interview was released to the press, and Scott immediately received a firestorm of condemnation. Although he apologised and recanted his remarks, he was barred from theatres, and The Daily Telegraph was forced to dismiss him. He soon retired and found his reputation and prospects much diminished. By the end of his life, however, he received a measure of forgiveness, and shortly before his death the theatre community held a generous benefit for him.[14]

His papers are located in the library of Rochester University, New York State. Filmmaker John Madden made his first film, for BBC Two television, Poppyland (1985), around the story of Scott's 1883 visit to Poppyland.[15]

Notes

  1. ^ a b c d Burner, Alma J. "A Chapter of the London Stage: The Clement Scott Papers", Vol. XXVII, Winter 1973–1974, No. 2, University of Rochester Library Bulletin, University of Rochester, accessed 1 May 2014
  2. ^ a b c d Emeljanow, Victor. "Scott, Clement William (1841–1904)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, September 2004, accessed 1 May 2014
  3. ^ The Era, 23 June 1878, p. 12
  4. ^ "Theatrical Gossip", The Era, 7 April 1878, p. 6
  5. ^ "Theatrical Gossip", The Era, 28 April 1878, p. 7
  6. ^ "Theatrical Gossip", The Era, 24 September 1876, p. 4
  7. ^ Scowcroft, Philip L. "A 206th Garland of British Composers, June 2001, MusicWeb International, accessed 1 May 2014
  8. ^ , Time, 19 January 1948
  9. ^ "Search Me, O God" at the Cyber Hymnal.
  10. ^ Smyth, Terry. "Unsung hero", The Sunday Star-Times, 13 December 2009
  11. ^ "Norfolk History and Past Times – Louie Jeremy", Norfolkcoast.co.uk, 2005, accessed 21 September 2009
  12. ^ "Norfolk History and Past Times – Garden of Sleep", Norfolkcoast.co.uk, 2005, accessed 21 September 2009
  13. ^ "Death of Clement Scott", The New York Times, 26 June 1904, p. 7 (subscription required); and "A Dramatic End", London Evening News, 25 June 1904, p. 3
  14. ^ a b c Gillan, Don. "The Fall of Clement Scott", StageBeauty.net, 2007, accessed 13 June 2014
  15. ^ "Screen Two: Poppyland", BBC Radio Times 1923–2009, 13 January 1985

References

  • Poppyland – Strands of Norfolk History, Stibbons and Cleveland, Pub: Poppyland Publishing, Fourth ed. 2001, ISBN 0-946148-56-2
  • Poppyland in Pictures, Elizabeth Jones, Pub: Poppyland Publishing, Second ed. 2004, ISBN 0-946148-66-X
  • The Drama of Yesterday and Today, Clement Scott, Pub: Macmillan, London, 1899, two volumes
  • Ellen Terry, Clement Scott, Pub: Frederick A. Stokes, NY 1900
  • From The Bells to King Arthur, Clement Scott, Pub: John Macqueen, London, 1896
  • Some Notable Hamlets of the Present Time, Clement Scott, Illus: Will G. Mein, Pub: Greening & Co., London, 1900.

External links

  • Works by or about Clement Scott at Internet Archive
  • Works by Clement Scott at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Poppyland (1985) (TV) at IMDb
  • Information about the Scott and Stephenson collaborations
  • Clement Scott at the Internet Broadway Database
  • Sheet Music for "O Promise Me", G. Schirmer, Inc., 1889.

clement, scott, clement, william, scott, october, 1841, june, 1904, influential, english, theatre, critic, daily, telegraph, other, journals, playwright, lyricist, translator, travel, writer, final, decades, 19th, century, style, criticism, acerbic, flowery, p. Clement William Scott 6 October 1841 25 June 1904 was an influential English theatre critic for The Daily Telegraph and other journals and a playwright lyricist translator and travel writer in the final decades of the 19th century His style of criticism acerbic flowery and perhaps most importantly carried out on the first night of productions set the standard for theatre reviewers through to today Clement Scott from a copy of the Theatre magazine aged about 40 Scott accumulated enemies among theatre managers actors and playwrights as years went on picking quarrels with William Archer Ibsen George Bernard Shaw and others After he gave a particularly ill considered 1898 interview in which he attacked the morals of theatre people especially actresses he was forced to retire as a theatre critic and his reputation and prospects suffered badly until by the end of his life he was impoverished Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early career 1 2 Poppyland and later years 2 Style controversies and influence 3 Notes 4 References 5 External linksLife and career EditBorn the son of William Scott the perpetual curate of Hoxton in north London Scott converted to Roman Catholicism before his 21st birthday Educated at Marlborough College he became a civil servant working in the War Office beginning in 1860 1 2 Early career Edit Encouraged to write by the humourist Tom Hood the younger who also was a clerk in the War Office Scott contributed to The Era Weekly Dispatch and to Hood s own paper Fun where Scott and W S Gilbert were colleagues Scott s interest in writing and the theatre led him to brief dalliance with the failed Victoria Review 1 He became the dramatic writer for The Sunday Times in 1863 but held the position for only two years because of the intemperance of his published opinions and his unpopular praise of the French theatre In 1871 Scott began his nearly thirty years as a theatre critic with The Daily Telegraph He also contributed regularly to The Theatre a magazine that he edited from 1880 to 1889 and wrote sentimental poetry and song lyrics including Oh Promise Me which were often published in the magazine Punch by his friend the editor F C Burnand Scott continued to work at the War Office until 1879 when he finally decided to earn his living entirely by writing 1 2 As well as criticism Scott wrote plays including The Vicarage The Cape Mail Anne Mie Odette and The Great Divorce Case He wrote several English adaptations of Victorien Sardou s plays some of which were written in collaboration with B C Stephenson such as Nos intimes as Peril and Dora 1878 as Diplomacy The latter was described by the theatrical paper The Era as the great dramatic hit of the season 3 It also played with success at Wallack s Theatre in New York 4 Scott and Stephenson also wrote an English version of Halevy and Meilhac s libretto for Lecocq s operetta Le Petit Duc 1878 Their adaptation so pleased the composer that he volunteered to write some new music for the English production 5 For all these Scott adopted the pen name Saville Rowe after Savile Row to match Stephenson s pseudonym Bolton Rowe another Mayfair street 6 The pieces with Stephenson were produced by the Bancrofts the producers of T W Robertson s plays which Scott admired He also wrote accounts of holiday tours around the British Isles and abroad becoming known for his florid style Scott s travels also inspired his creative writing Some sources say that after a tour of New Zealand he wrote the tune to the Swiss Cradle Song later adapted as Now Is the Hour 7 and as Haere Ra the Maori farewell song which white New Zealanders mistakenly thought to be an old Maori folksong 8 It is also used for the hymn Search Me O God with lyrics by J Edwin Orr 9 However an Australian family has long claimed that the Clement Scott who wrote the tune is a pseudonym for a family member 10 Poppyland and later years Edit In 1883 The Daily Telegraph printed an article which Scott had written about a visit to the north Norfolk coast He became enamoured of the district and gave it the name Poppyland His writing was responsible for members of the London theatre set visiting and investing in homes in the area Ironically he was unhappy at the result of his popularisation of this previously pristine area 11 12 Clement Scott memorial at Cromer Norfolk Scott married Isabel Busson du Maurier the sister of George du Maurier and the couple had four children She died in 1890 and he remarried Constance Margarite Brandon an American journalist and actress in San Francisco Scott s long time wish to be elected a member of the famous literary gentlemen s club the Garrick Club to which Henry Irving Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan among many other notable men belonged was finally realised in 1892 After an ill considered 1898 interview in Great Thoughts Scott was forced to retire as a theatre critic and moved to Biarritz to write The Drama of Yesterday and Today He then worked for a couple of years at the end of the century for the New York Herald later returning to London In 1900 he founded The Free Lance a Popular Society and Critical Journal for writers who worked by the job which he edited 2 Scott fell into illness and poverty in his last years and died at his residence in Woburn Square at the age of 62 2 13 Style controversies and influence Edit Scott playing The Daily Telegraph violin 1897 Scott s position on The Daily Telegraph and the support of its proprietor J M Levy allowed him to pioneer the essay style review of drama which came to replace the earlier bare notices His column of notes and reviews became very popular throughout Britain and later his own magazine The Theatre achieved wide circulation He wrote his theatre reviews immediately after he saw the opening night of a piece which together with his short temper and his dislike of critic William Archer the chief English supporter of Ibsen tended to involve him often in controversies 1 Scott played an important part in encouraging a more attentive attitude by theatre audiences In his early days it was not uncommon for audiences to be very boisterous and noisy frequently booing and talking during productions especially through the overture He also insisted on first night reviews It had been common for reviewers to wait a few days before writing about a production Scott insisted that the paying audience on the first night should expect to see a fully fledged production and not one where the leading characters did not know all their lines Theatre managers disliked the opening night reviews when they felt that a new piece had not had time to settle down yet 14 On the other hand Scott supported actor managers of his time by providing them with translations of popular French plays and with his own plays Scott in the Entr acte in 1898 when he accused Ibsen and Shaw of being harmful to society Early in his career he wrote approvingly of the cup and saucer realism movement led by T W Robertson whose plays were notable for treating contemporary British subjects in realistic settings Later he favoured the grand and spectacular type of London theatrical production which had developed with new types of theatre building electric lighting and technologies allowed more and more adventurous staging As time went on he became strongly conservative and opposed to the new drama of Ibsen and Shaw arguing that domestic intrigue sexual situations and wordy philosophising were inappropriate for an evening at the theatre and even harmful to society especially young women Scott especially became embroiled in legal claims through his outspoken criticism of various actors and actresses His scathing attacks on Ibsen and Shaw became evident in their lack of journalistic neutrality 14 Scott outraged the theatre community with an extraordinary attack on the morals of theatre people in general and especially of actresses in an interview that was published in the evangelical weekly Great Thoughts in 1898 He said that the theatre warps people s character and that it was impossible for a pure woman to be successful in a stage career and that all leading actresses were immoral and could have achieved their success only by virtue of the extent of their compliance Even before the publication the transcript of the interview was released to the press and Scott immediately received a firestorm of condemnation Although he apologised and recanted his remarks he was barred from theatres and The Daily Telegraph was forced to dismiss him He soon retired and found his reputation and prospects much diminished By the end of his life however he received a measure of forgiveness and shortly before his death the theatre community held a generous benefit for him 14 His papers are located in the library of Rochester University New York State Filmmaker John Madden made his first film for BBC Two television Poppyland 1985 around the story of Scott s 1883 visit to Poppyland 15 Notes Edit a b c d Burner Alma J A Chapter of the London Stage The Clement Scott Papers Vol XXVII Winter 1973 1974 No 2 University of Rochester Library Bulletin University of Rochester accessed 1 May 2014 a b c d Emeljanow Victor Scott Clement William 1841 1904 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press September 2004 accessed 1 May 2014 The Era 23 June 1878 p 12 Theatrical Gossip The Era 7 April 1878 p 6 Theatrical Gossip The Era 28 April 1878 p 7 Theatrical Gossip The Era 24 September 1876 p 4 Scowcroft Philip L A 206th Garland of British Composers June 2001 MusicWeb International accessed 1 May 2014 Music Now Is the Hour Time 19 January 1948 Search Me O God at the Cyber Hymnal Smyth Terry Unsung hero The Sunday Star Times 13 December 2009 Norfolk History and Past Times Louie Jeremy Norfolkcoast co uk 2005 accessed 21 September 2009 Norfolk History and Past Times Garden of Sleep Norfolkcoast co uk 2005 accessed 21 September 2009 Death of Clement Scott The New York Times 26 June 1904 p 7 subscription required and A Dramatic End London Evening News 25 June 1904 p 3 a b c Gillan Don The Fall of Clement Scott StageBeauty net 2007 accessed 13 June 2014 Screen Two Poppyland BBC Radio Times 1923 2009 13 January 1985References EditPoppyland Strands of Norfolk History Stibbons and Cleveland Pub Poppyland Publishing Fourth ed 2001 ISBN 0 946148 56 2 Poppyland in Pictures Elizabeth Jones Pub Poppyland Publishing Second ed 2004 ISBN 0 946148 66 X The Drama of Yesterday and Today Clement Scott Pub Macmillan London 1899 two volumes Ellen Terry Clement Scott Pub Frederick A Stokes NY 1900 From The Bells to King Arthur Clement Scott Pub John Macqueen London 1896 Some Notable Hamlets of the Present Time Clement Scott Illus Will G Mein Pub Greening amp Co London 1900 External links Edit Wikisource has original works by or about Clement Scott Wikimedia Commons has media related to Clement Scott Works by or about Clement Scott at Internet Archive Works by Clement Scott at LibriVox public domain audiobooks Poppyland 1985 TV at IMDb Information about the Scott and Stephenson collaborations Clement Scott at the Internet Broadway Database Sheet Music for O Promise Me G Schirmer Inc 1889 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clement Scott amp oldid 1083543445, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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