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Reginald Foort

Reginald John Foort (23 January 1893 – 22 May 1980), FRCO, ARCM, was a cinema organist and theatre organist. He was the first official BBC Staff Theatre Organist from 1936 to 1938, during which time he made 405 broadcasts on the organ at St George's Hall, Langham Place.[1] 'Reggie' was a hugely popular broadcaster in his heyday in the late 1930s and 1940s in Britain and later settled in the United States, where he similarly enjoyed an illustrious career performing and recording.

Reginald Foort
Foort in 1932
Background information
Also known asReggie
Born(1893-01-23)23 January 1893
Daventry, England
Died22 May 1980(1980-05-22) (aged 87)
Pasadena, California, United States
Occupation(s)Organist
Instrument(s)Cinema organ/ theatre organ

Biography

Reginald Foort was born in Daventry, England, on 23 January 1893. His father was a church organist (leading Foort to joke later that he was 'born an organist'). Foort learnt the piano from the age of seven and took up the organ at eleven after his family moved to Rugby, studying with Basil Johnson, Master of Music at Rugby School.[2] Foort became both an Associate and a Fellow of the Royal College of Organists (FRCO) by the age of only 17 under the tutelage of Sir Walter Parratt[2] and began his career as organist and choirmaster at St Mary's, Bryanston Square, London.[3] Having served in the Royal Navy during World War I, during which he served in the Battle of Jutland, he worked as a piano accompanist for silent films in the 1920s, from which it was a natural progression to become a cinema organist.[3]

Career in Britain and Europe

Foort's first performance on a Wurlitzer was at a theatre in Edinburgh,[2] and a few weeks later he took up a job as organist at the New Gallery Kinema, Regent Street, London, where in the late 1920s he passed what he described as 'one of the happiest periods of my life',[2] popularising the theatre organ as a 'one-man orchestra' through broadcasts and recordings of his performances on the cinema's F2/S Wurlitzer.[4] This was followed by spells at the Paramount Theatre (Paris); the London Palladium, and, with Sandy MacPherson, the Empire, Leicester Square. He made his first commercial recording in 1926.[5]

In 1930 Foort became solo organist at the Regal, Marble Arch, performing on a Christie organ.[2] In 1932 he was appointed the first resident organist at the Regal, Kingston upon Thames, and advised on the installation of theatre organs in a number of regional cinemas[6] in collaboration with the organ builder Peter Conacher of Huddersfield. During a visit to the US in 1935, he performed on the 4/36 organ at the Paramount Theatre in New York. Touring back home in Europe, he was warmly received at the Jerusalemkirk in Denmark owing to a popular following from his radio broadcasts.[6] He did a five-month spell at the City Theatre, Amsterdam, and broadcast on the Dutch radio station Radio Hilversum,[6] returning to London to take up a post as organist of the four-manual Compton organ at the Paramount Theatre, Tottenham Court Road.

In 1936 Foort was appointed as Staff Theatre Organist at the BBC, performing at St George's Hall, Langham Place,[4] and attained widespread popularity, not only for his musicality but also for his personal charm. Each episode began and closed with his beguiling signature tune 'Keep Smiling'. In 1937 Foort was voted the most popular radio entertainer in Britain, with twice as many votes as Gracie Fields, beating his friend and fellow organist Reginald Dixon into third place.[3][6] He remained in the role of Staff Theatre Organist until 1938, continuing to make broadcasts for the BBC on a freelance basis.

In 1938 Foort designed and commissioned a mobile organ from the American firm M. P. Möller,[7] which was first set up at the Drury Lane Theatre, London[4] in only five days, enabling him to make his first recording on it on the fifth day.[6] During the next few years he made a series of memorable recordings of classical and light music on the Möller. In 1941 he loaned the mobile organ to the BBC, and for the next ten years travelled round the country, often by train, giving performances. His warm and personable style, combined with his patriotism, were a boost to wartime morale, and he set himself a punishing schedule with the result that a decade later, in his words, 'there was not a town or city anywhere in Great Britain that I had not visited'.[6][8]

Career in the United States

Having greatly enjoyed his 1935 visit to the US, when he played the organ of the Paramount Theatre in New York, Foort vowed to return to the States to live. The opportunity came in 1951, when he was invited to establish an American foothold for a Dutch firm, the Standaart Organ Company. He settled with his wife (Betty) and family in Suffolk, Virginia, in 1952. Foort made recordings on the Mosque Theatre organ in Richmond, Virginia, and used the pseudonym Michael Cheshire for his recordings of light music, which were not considered serious enough to fit with Standaart's reputation (he had also used this name previously in England under the Eclipse label).[6] However the Standaart project was discontinued after only ten months owing to lack of capital.

Foort and his family chose to remain in the US. He was invited to work for the Chicago-based firm Baldwin Organs, a role that he retained for many years. Having resettled in Chicago he enjoyed another active period of his career, including as organist for the Jewish Reform Temple (Temple Sholom), playing its horseshoe-shaped Wurlitzer.[6] According to Foort's friend Ben M Hall, Foort could 'thrill huge audiences... with deft interpretations of serious classics, light classics, show tunes and pop tunes,' being 'the master of each genre'.[6]

Möller organ specification and history

Weighing 30 short tons (27 t), Foort's specially commissioned Möller organ had five manuals (keyboards), 27 ranks of pipes, 259 stops, over 100 pistons and controls, and percussion instruments.[6][7] It was transported in sections, by a fleet of five lorries and thirteen staff; during World War II fuel rationing it was transported by train.[6][7] During Foort's travels from 1938 onwards the organ was set up 167 times at 118 different locations.[6] In 1941 Foort loaned the organ to the BBC after theirs was destroyed by German bombing.[9] They subsequently purchased it in 1946, erecting it at the Jubilee Hall, London.[6] In 1963, the BBC sold the organ to Radio Hilversum. From there, it went, in 1975, after a thorough refurbishment, to a pizza parlour in Pacific Beach, California, where Foort rededicated it.[9] Since 1979 it has been installed at Pasadena Civic Auditorium, California, where Foort attended its 23 April 1980 inaugural performance.[9] He died in Pasadena, California, less than a month later, on 22 May.

Broadcasts and recordings

Foort made his first broadcast from Marconi House, playing the piano, on January 15, 1923.[10] His most famous broadcasts and recordings in the UK were in 1936-8 on his Möller organ, as the BBC Staff Theatre Organist.

In 2004 Phoenix Historic Records was set up by William Henry Lewis (1924-2021) to bring his collection of Foort 78 records to a wider audience through digitally remastered CD editions. The featured melodies, medleys and excerpts are by a wide range of composers of classical and light music, including Addinsell, Amers, Bizet, Brahms, Chopin, Coates, Delibes, Donaldson, Drigo, Friml, Green, Handel, Hanley-Mills, Harline, Joyce, Kahn-Woods, Ketelby, Kilmer-Rasbach, Klein-Dillon, Nevin, Orth, Purcell, Rombert, Rossini, Schubert, Simons-Marks, Sullivan, Suppé, Taylor-Fisher, Tobias-DeRose, Toselli, Wagner, Haydn Wood, Yradier and Zalva. The CD titles are as follows:[11]

  • Reginald Foort at the organ of the Regal Cinema, Kingston-on-Thames (1932-33)
  • Reginald Foort on his giant Möller concert organ (1938-42), volumes I-VI [3][4][8][12][13][14]
  • Reginald Foort on the Paramount Theatre Organ, New York

A special programme to mark Foort's departure from the BBC, Farewell to Reginald Foort, was broadcast on the BBC Home Service on 31 October 1938.[1] He featured as a castaway on the BBC Radio 4 programme Desert Island Discs on 8 May 1971.[15]

Foort made many recordings while in the US, in Virginia, Chicago, Pasadena (California) and other locations. He described his first LP, recorded at Boston Symphony Hall, as his finest recording (despite temperatures on the night having been around 100 °F (38 °C)!).[6]

Bibliography

  • —— (1932). The cinema organ (1 ed.). Pitman.
  • —— (1970). The cinema organ: A description in non-technical language of a fascinating instrument and how it is played (2 ed.). Vestal Press. ISBN 978-0911572056.

References

  1. ^ a b "National Programme Daventry, 31 October 1938 20.10: Farewell to Reginald Foort". Radio Times. BBC. 61 (787). 28 October 1938.
  2. ^ a b c d e Foort, Reginald: The cinema organ: A description in non-technical language of a fascinating instrument and how it is played, second edition, 1970, Vestal Press
  3. ^ a b c d Lewis, William H, (ed). Booklet accompanying 'Reginald Foort on His Giant Moller Concert Organ' (CD series vol 1), 2004, Phoenix Historic Records
  4. ^ a b c d Lewis, William H, (ed). Booklet accompanying 'Reginald Foort on His Giant Moller Concert Organ' (CD series vol 4), 2005, Phoenix Historic Records
  5. ^ From the private handwritten notes of lifelong Foort enthusiast William Henry Lewis (1924-2021).
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Courney, Jack: Theatre Organ World, Theatre Organ World Publications, 1946, pages 25-6|
  7. ^ a b c Ogden, Nigel. "Nigel Ogden: The Organist Entertains, Popular Organ Recordings, Reginald Foort's Touring Moller Organ". BBC Online. Retrieved 14 August 2014.
  8. ^ a b Lewis, William H, (ed). Booklet accompanying 'Reginald Foort on His Giant Moller Concert Organ' (CD series vol 2), 2005, Phoenix Historic Records
  9. ^ a b c "ATOS: Pasadena Civic Auditorium Moller". Retrieved 14 August 2014.
  10. ^ "Reginald Foort". Radio Times. BBC. 57 (733): 54. 15 October 1937.
  11. ^ Details on the content of each CD and how to obtain it can be found in the contact under 'external links'.
  12. ^ Lewis, William H, (ed). Booklet accompanying 'Reginald Foort on His Giant Moller Concert Organ' (CD series vol 3), 2005, Phoenix Historic Records
  13. ^ Lewis, William H, (ed). Booklet accompanying 'Reginald Foort on His Giant Moller Concert Organ' (CD series vol 5), 2006, Phoenix Historic Records
  14. ^ Lewis, William H, (ed). Booklet accompanying 'Reginald Foort on His Giant Moller Concert Organ' (CD series vol 6), 2006, Phoenix Historic Records
  15. ^ "Desert Island Discs - Castaway : Reginald Foort". BBC Online. BBC. Retrieved 13 August 2014.

External links

reginald, foort, reginald, john, foort, january, 1893, 1980, frco, arcm, cinema, organist, theatre, organist, first, official, staff, theatre, organist, from, 1936, 1938, during, which, time, made, broadcasts, organ, george, hall, langham, place, reggie, hugel. Reginald John Foort 23 January 1893 22 May 1980 FRCO ARCM was a cinema organist and theatre organist He was the first official BBC Staff Theatre Organist from 1936 to 1938 during which time he made 405 broadcasts on the organ at St George s Hall Langham Place 1 Reggie was a hugely popular broadcaster in his heyday in the late 1930s and 1940s in Britain and later settled in the United States where he similarly enjoyed an illustrious career performing and recording Reginald FoortFoort in 1932Background informationAlso known asReggieBorn 1893 01 23 23 January 1893Daventry EnglandDied22 May 1980 1980 05 22 aged 87 Pasadena California United StatesOccupation s OrganistInstrument s Cinema organ theatre organ Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Career in Britain and Europe 1 2 Career in the United States 2 Moller organ specification and history 3 Broadcasts and recordings 4 Bibliography 5 References 6 External linksBiography EditReginald Foort was born in Daventry England on 23 January 1893 His father was a church organist leading Foort to joke later that he was born an organist Foort learnt the piano from the age of seven and took up the organ at eleven after his family moved to Rugby studying with Basil Johnson Master of Music at Rugby School 2 Foort became both an Associate and a Fellow of the Royal College of Organists FRCO by the age of only 17 under the tutelage of Sir Walter Parratt 2 and began his career as organist and choirmaster at St Mary s Bryanston Square London 3 Having served in the Royal Navy during World War I during which he served in the Battle of Jutland he worked as a piano accompanist for silent films in the 1920s from which it was a natural progression to become a cinema organist 3 Career in Britain and Europe Edit Foort s first performance on a Wurlitzer was at a theatre in Edinburgh 2 and a few weeks later he took up a job as organist at the New Gallery Kinema Regent Street London where in the late 1920s he passed what he described as one of the happiest periods of my life 2 popularising the theatre organ as a one man orchestra through broadcasts and recordings of his performances on the cinema s F2 S Wurlitzer 4 This was followed by spells at the Paramount Theatre Paris the London Palladium and with Sandy MacPherson the Empire Leicester Square He made his first commercial recording in 1926 5 In 1930 Foort became solo organist at the Regal Marble Arch performing on a Christie organ 2 In 1932 he was appointed the first resident organist at the Regal Kingston upon Thames and advised on the installation of theatre organs in a number of regional cinemas 6 in collaboration with the organ builder Peter Conacher of Huddersfield During a visit to the US in 1935 he performed on the 4 36 organ at the Paramount Theatre in New York Touring back home in Europe he was warmly received at the Jerusalemkirk in Denmark owing to a popular following from his radio broadcasts 6 He did a five month spell at the City Theatre Amsterdam and broadcast on the Dutch radio station Radio Hilversum 6 returning to London to take up a post as organist of the four manual Compton organ at the Paramount Theatre Tottenham Court Road In 1936 Foort was appointed as Staff Theatre Organist at the BBC performing at St George s Hall Langham Place 4 and attained widespread popularity not only for his musicality but also for his personal charm Each episode began and closed with his beguiling signature tune Keep Smiling In 1937 Foort was voted the most popular radio entertainer in Britain with twice as many votes as Gracie Fields beating his friend and fellow organist Reginald Dixon into third place 3 6 He remained in the role of Staff Theatre Organist until 1938 continuing to make broadcasts for the BBC on a freelance basis In 1938 Foort designed and commissioned a mobile organ from the American firm M P Moller 7 which was first set up at the Drury Lane Theatre London 4 in only five days enabling him to make his first recording on it on the fifth day 6 During the next few years he made a series of memorable recordings of classical and light music on the Moller In 1941 he loaned the mobile organ to the BBC and for the next ten years travelled round the country often by train giving performances His warm and personable style combined with his patriotism were a boost to wartime morale and he set himself a punishing schedule with the result that a decade later in his words there was not a town or city anywhere in Great Britain that I had not visited 6 8 Career in the United States Edit Having greatly enjoyed his 1935 visit to the US when he played the organ of the Paramount Theatre in New York Foort vowed to return to the States to live The opportunity came in 1951 when he was invited to establish an American foothold for a Dutch firm the Standaart Organ Company He settled with his wife Betty and family in Suffolk Virginia in 1952 Foort made recordings on the Mosque Theatre organ in Richmond Virginia and used the pseudonym Michael Cheshire for his recordings of light music which were not considered serious enough to fit with Standaart s reputation he had also used this name previously in England under the Eclipse label 6 However the Standaart project was discontinued after only ten months owing to lack of capital Foort and his family chose to remain in the US He was invited to work for the Chicago based firm Baldwin Organs a role that he retained for many years Having resettled in Chicago he enjoyed another active period of his career including as organist for the Jewish Reform Temple Temple Sholom playing its horseshoe shaped Wurlitzer 6 According to Foort s friend Ben M Hall Foort could thrill huge audiences with deft interpretations of serious classics light classics show tunes and pop tunes being the master of each genre 6 Moller organ specification and history EditWeighing 30 short tons 27 t Foort s specially commissioned Moller organ had five manuals keyboards 27 ranks of pipes 259 stops over 100 pistons and controls and percussion instruments 6 7 It was transported in sections by a fleet of five lorries and thirteen staff during World War II fuel rationing it was transported by train 6 7 During Foort s travels from 1938 onwards the organ was set up 167 times at 118 different locations 6 In 1941 Foort loaned the organ to the BBC after theirs was destroyed by German bombing 9 They subsequently purchased it in 1946 erecting it at the Jubilee Hall London 6 In 1963 the BBC sold the organ to Radio Hilversum From there it went in 1975 after a thorough refurbishment to a pizza parlour in Pacific Beach California where Foort rededicated it 9 Since 1979 it has been installed at Pasadena Civic Auditorium California where Foort attended its 23 April 1980 inaugural performance 9 He died in Pasadena California less than a month later on 22 May Broadcasts and recordings EditFoort made his first broadcast from Marconi House playing the piano on January 15 1923 10 His most famous broadcasts and recordings in the UK were in 1936 8 on his Moller organ as the BBC Staff Theatre Organist In 2004 Phoenix Historic Records was set up by William Henry Lewis 1924 2021 to bring his collection of Foort 78 records to a wider audience through digitally remastered CD editions The featured melodies medleys and excerpts are by a wide range of composers of classical and light music including Addinsell Amers Bizet Brahms Chopin Coates Delibes Donaldson Drigo Friml Green Handel Hanley Mills Harline Joyce Kahn Woods Ketelby Kilmer Rasbach Klein Dillon Nevin Orth Purcell Rombert Rossini Schubert Simons Marks Sullivan Suppe Taylor Fisher Tobias DeRose Toselli Wagner Haydn Wood Yradier and Zalva The CD titles are as follows 11 Reginald Foort at the organ of the Regal Cinema Kingston on Thames 1932 33 Reginald Foort on his giant Moller concert organ 1938 42 volumes I VI 3 4 8 12 13 14 Reginald Foort on the Paramount Theatre Organ New YorkA special programme to mark Foort s departure from the BBC Farewell to Reginald Foort was broadcast on the BBC Home Service on 31 October 1938 1 He featured as a castaway on the BBC Radio 4 programme Desert Island Discs on 8 May 1971 15 Foort made many recordings while in the US in Virginia Chicago Pasadena California and other locations He described his first LP recorded at Boston Symphony Hall as his finest recording despite temperatures on the night having been around 100 F 38 C 6 Bibliography Edit 1932 The cinema organ 1 ed Pitman 1970 The cinema organ A description in non technical language of a fascinating instrument and how it is played 2 ed Vestal Press ISBN 978 0911572056 References Edit a b National Programme Daventry 31 October 1938 20 10 Farewell to Reginald Foort Radio Times BBC 61 787 28 October 1938 a b c d e Foort Reginald The cinema organ A description in non technical language of a fascinating instrument and how it is played second edition 1970 Vestal Press a b c d Lewis William H ed Booklet accompanying Reginald Foort on His Giant Moller Concert Organ CD series vol 1 2004 Phoenix Historic Records a b c d Lewis William H ed Booklet accompanying Reginald Foort on His Giant Moller Concert Organ CD series vol 4 2005 Phoenix Historic Records From the private handwritten notes of lifelong Foort enthusiast William Henry Lewis 1924 2021 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Courney Jack Theatre Organ World Theatre Organ World Publications 1946 pages 25 6 a b c Ogden Nigel Nigel Ogden The Organist Entertains Popular Organ Recordings Reginald Foort s Touring Moller Organ BBC Online Retrieved 14 August 2014 a b Lewis William H ed Booklet accompanying Reginald Foort on His Giant Moller Concert Organ CD series vol 2 2005 Phoenix Historic Records a b c ATOS Pasadena Civic Auditorium Moller Retrieved 14 August 2014 Reginald Foort Radio Times BBC 57 733 54 15 October 1937 Details on the content of each CD and how to obtain it can be found in the contact under external links Lewis William H ed Booklet accompanying Reginald Foort on His Giant Moller Concert Organ CD series vol 3 2005 Phoenix Historic Records Lewis William H ed Booklet accompanying Reginald Foort on His Giant Moller Concert Organ CD series vol 5 2006 Phoenix Historic Records Lewis William H ed Booklet accompanying Reginald Foort on His Giant Moller Concert Organ CD series vol 6 2006 Phoenix Historic Records Desert Island Discs Castaway Reginald Foort BBC Online BBC Retrieved 13 August 2014 External links EditReginald Foort Organist 1936 British Pathe showing Foort playing the BBC organ Reginald Foort s Touring Moller Organ extract from the BBC radio programme Nigel Ogden The Organist Entertains AllMusic entry Foort recordings digitally remastered and available on CD Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Reginald Foort amp oldid 1137765253, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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