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Old 29-02-2008, 11:20 AM
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Default John Gielgud: 1950s 'Victim' ?




John Gielgud: When England hounded a hero

THE INDEPENDENT

John Gielgud's arrest for cottaging in 1953 sparked public outrage and, for the actor, private agony. A new play tells the story of the scandal


The most terrible moment in John Gielgud's life – on which he maintained a public silence for 50 years – is about to be put on public view. Nicholas de Jongh, theatre critic of the Evening Standard, has written a play in which we will witness Gielgud, played by Jasper Britton, give the glad eye in a public lavatory to a man who then turns out to be an undercover policeman.

But Plague Over England is concerned with much more than Gielgud's arrest in 1953 on the charge of "importuning for immoral purposes". The play shows the milieu Gielgud inhabited and the forces arrayed against him. Its characters include the producer who nearly ended his career, the virulently anti-homosexual Lord Chief Justice Rayner Goddard (a man, says de Jongh, "by buggery obsessed"), an American fleeing his own country's anti-Communist paranoia, and a doctor who claims to "cure" same-sex attraction with Clockwork Orange-style electric shock therapy.

Homosexuals had long been feared and hated in England as men who, it was believed, preyed on the innocent young, and were thus unfit to lead normal, happy lives. Until 1967, they risked prosecution for what the law called "acts of gross indecency between male persons", even in private, and could be arrested for merely showing – in a police spy's opinion – an intent to commit them.

Police throughout England were alert for any hints of homosexual behaviour. The officer who arrested Gielgud was part of a Metropolitan Police squad established in 1930 that regularly lurked in central London toilets.

The year in which Gielgud came to grief in a Chelsea convenience was a particularly dangerous one for homosexuals, as the increased frankness of the period allowed politicians, the police, and the press to profit by inflaming public hysteria, warning that a "plague" or "epidemic" of sodomy was sweeping the land. The Conservative government's crackdown on men who in previous decades would have been protected by their position began in earnest. The Labour MP William Field merely had to resign and pay a fine, but the popular travel author Rupert Croft-Cooke and Lord Montagu of Beaulieu, along with two of his house guests, would be tried and sentenced to between nine and 18 months in prison. The climate of fear was chilling to gay men who paid even the slightest attention to the news.

Gielgud, however, was, in his own words a "silly gubbins" who took in nothing apart from his work. On 21 October, following the rehearsal for NC Hunter's genteel A Day By the Sea, this supremely unworldly man, then 49, had a few drinks at a party and then visited a lavatory popular with cottagers.

Nicked, and aware that he should give a false identity, he said he was a clerk called Arthur (his real name) Gielgud. The next day he appeared before a magistrate who did not know who he was, fined him £10, and ordered him, with the disdain and sexual ignorance of the period, to "see your doctor the moment you leave this court."

Unfortunately, a better-informed Evening Standard reporter was there, too. When that afternoon's paper hit the streets, he was on the front page.

One can imagine the shame and the terror with which Gielgud turned up at rehearsal (he had considered suicide) for the role of a bachelor diplomat whose mother worries that he is lonely and unloved.

But the company, led by his co-star, Dame Sybil Thorndike, in fact welcomed him with open arms. "Oh, John," she said, in one of the most magnificent double entendres of all time, "you have been a silly bugger!"

The producer of A Day By the Sea, however, the immensely powerful Binkie Beaumont, saw the newspaper leaders and the hate mail, and worried that the public would stay away. Yet his thoughts of sacking the star were checked by Gielgud's brother, Val, who applied a little judicious blackmail about Binkie's very own private life.

Although everyone was nervous that Gielgud might be greeted with silence, or even boos, on his first appearance at the Liverpool opening, in the event he was cheered to the rafters, as he was again in London. Five months into the run, however, he began suffering from double vision, had a breakdown, and had to leave the play. He never spoke of the incident publicly, or referred to it in his several volumes of memoirs, and until his death in 2000, other writers respected his wish that it be forgotten.

De Jongh recalls one exception – on Gielgud's 80th birthday, the rather odd and very religious critic Harold Hobson wrote that the "sickening" episode would not have happened if he had only got married.

De Jongh based his depiction of the incident on the report of an actor friend who had the temerity, near the end of Gielgud's life, to ask him what really happened. In Gielgud's version, he had not gone looking for sex, but his account was punctuated by his longtime companion, Martin Hensler, growling, "No, no, John, you always lie!"

Gielgud was known, de Jongh says, as having a penchant for anonymous lavatory sex – "It's one of the reasons his knighthood [just a few months before the arrest] was postponed for years." It was even known he had a "cruising cap" for such forays, an attempt to disguise himself as someone lower down the social scale. But, de Jongh says, "There was no one at the time close enough to him to say, 'John, you mustn't.'"

The arrest had important consequences, and not only for Gielgud, who was told by the British embassy in Washington to forget about a planned American production of The Tempest, as he might prove "an embarrassment". Afterwards, says de Jongh, "the floodgates opened", as the public was confronted by the disturbing fact that an extremely distinguished and beloved artist was one of the people they, in theory, despised. The fuss contributed to the Wolfenden Commission, set up the following year to study prostitution, taking on homosexuality as well. Its recommendations eventually led to decriminalisation.

De Jongh believes that, while the affair broke Gielgud emotionally, he put himself back together in a way that made him better suited to a theatre in a world of greater change and upheaval. He recalls one of Gielgud's greatest performances, which he feels was informed by that consciousness of loss and guilt, in David Storey's Home (1970). "He sat, saying almost nothing, but the tears rolled down his cheeks. He was the picture of shattered, silent despair. Not one of the present generation of so-called great actors could do that now."

'Plague Over England', Finborough Theatre, London SW10 (0844 847 1652), to 22 March; NC Hunter's 'A Day by the Sea' will also run at the theatre during this period
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Old 29-02-2008, 11:36 AM
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THE INDEPENDENT
John Gielgud: When England hounded a hero


Although everyone was nervous that Gielgud might be greeted with silence, or even boos, on his first appearance at the Liverpool opening, in the event he was cheered to the rafters, as he was again in London.
So obviously England didn't hound him at all.



I think if I was arrested skulking for sex in public lavatories I'd be bloody embarrassed too, regardless of the object of my ardour.

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Old 29-02-2008, 11:41 AM
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So obviously England didn't hound him at all.
Quite. Never let the truth get in the way of a good story...
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Old 29-02-2008, 11:58 AM
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Why was everyone so certain he was about to get a knighthood? Surely you're either offered one or you're not? It's not conditional on good behaviour.
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Old 29-02-2008, 12:02 PM
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Quite. Never let the truth get in the way of a good story...
To be honest, it does seem that much of the anti-homosexual feeling was from those in power, and that other classes were far more tolerant, unless the men or women in question were exceptionally flamboyant, a la Quentin Crisp.
No-one honestly imagined figures such as Noel Coward or Ivor Novello were anything other than gay, and Wilde's plays in constant production, drawing huge business. The couple who lived next door to us when I was growing up had been living openly together there since the thirties....and they were schoolteachers. No one gave a tuppenny damn.
The Lord Chamberlain's Office and the BBFC kept the topic off the screens...but the real people were around and getting on with life. Not all took the diplomatic marriage route.

Bit of a Bay Window, what??
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Old 29-02-2008, 12:12 PM
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So obviously England didn't hound him at all.



I think if I was arrested skulking for sex in public lavatories I'd be bloody embarrassed too, regardless of the object of my ardour.

No but he was barred from the states for a while because of it.

That's the joke that killed the Music Hall
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Old 29-02-2008, 12:26 PM
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Its ironic that 50 years later George Michael finds himself in the same situation with an undercover cop in public lavatories and getting busted for his trouble. What followed was more or less the ruination of his popularity in the USA. In the 1950s I guess the police could argue that they were lurking in the lavs to catch and punish homosexuals, judging by news reports, it seems the police are still lurking in the lavs both here in the UK and the US, that seems odd to me, if you are a Heterosexuall and you have sex in a public place such as in a broom cupboard at a posh London restaurant (Boris Becker) then there is no police involvement but if you were a gay couple would it be a different story? I don't think things have changed that much in 50 years, mind you Geilguld was a theatre actor famous for his classic roles rather than a film heart throb so perhaps the public could be more accepting of his sexuality as it did not seem at odds with his acting and public persona. When "ladies man" playboy, Peter Wyngarde was charged with gross indecency in the Gents, and had his public image crushed by revelations of his homosexual encounters it ended his career overnight. Perhaps in Geilgulds case it was not a surprise to many that he was Gay, I think people get disapointed or irritated if an actor is promoting an image which is the opposite of their true persona so the fall out is always more severe if you are found out. If someone like Rock Hudson was outed at the height of his popularity I think the backlash would have certainly ended his career.
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Old 29-02-2008, 01:57 PM
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I do think - as I said on the other thread touching this subject - that the majority of the British public are more liberal in outlook than either their masters, or the American public, and have been that way for many decades.

Bit of a Bay Window, what??
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Old 29-02-2008, 02:13 PM
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I do think - as I said on the other thread touching this subject - that the majority of the British public are more liberal in outlook than either their masters, or the American public, and have been that way for many decades.
yep, I would totally agree with that.
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Old 29-02-2008, 02:29 PM
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Nothing against people's sexual preferences,but it always amazed me that in days gone by they were all at it in public bogs!!!!!!!!!!!! How romantic
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Old 29-02-2008, 05:55 PM
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Poor John, same thing happened to Wilfrid Brambell as well at Shepherds Bush in the early 60's, I have read that the person who was Home Secretary in the 50's (don't recall his name) was an obsessed Homophobic who called Homosexuals 'Proselyters' in the House of Commons and other derogatory words, he told the Police to step up their efforts in arresting Men for even the slighest transgression, and therefore there were many more Arrests in the 50's than there had ever been before or since..........Thank goodness we live in more enlightened times today!

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Old 29-02-2008, 06:02 PM
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Poor John, same thing happened to Wilfrid Brambell as well at Shepherds Bush in the early 60's, I have read that the person who was Home Secretary in the 50's (don't recall his name) was an obsessed Homophobic who called Homosexuals 'Proselyters' in the House of Commons and other derogatory words, he told the Police to step up their efforts in arresting Men for even the slighest transgression, and therefore there were many more Arrests in the 50's than there had ever been before or since..........Thank goodness we live in more enlightened times today!
I know Wilfrid Brambell was a very dapper man in real life, but the image of John Gielgud picking up Old Man Steptoe in a London convenience has just flitted across my brain, so I thought I'd share it, so as not to suffer alone....

Bit of a Bay Window, what??
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Old 29-02-2008, 07:05 PM
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I've always thought it paradoxical that, in less liberal times, the average U.K. man or woman largely disapproved of homosexuals, but at the same time had great affection, and made up most of the audience, of camp comedians, entertainers or drag queens.
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Old 02-03-2008, 08:53 AM
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I've always thought it paradoxical that, in less liberal times, the average U.K. man or woman largely disapproved of homosexuals, but at the same time had great affection, and made up most of the audience, of camp comedians, entertainers or drag queens.
I guess they could tolerate gays as long as they were distinctly "other".
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Old 02-03-2008, 11:28 AM
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I know Wilfrid Brambell was a very dapper man in real life, but the image of John Gielgud picking up Old Man Steptoe in a London convenience has just flitted across my brain, so I thought I'd share it, so as not to suffer alone....
a remarkable thought
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