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julian_craster
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Avril Angers
The Times November 11, 2005
April 18, 1918 - November 9, 2005
Forces sweetheart who endured as a versatile stage actress
BEST known as a theatrical trouper — was there no role she could not play on
stage? — Avril Angers had a way of getting audiences to take her to their
hearts. Either as a singer or dancer, dramatic actress or exponent of revue
or musical comedy, Angers was nothing if not versatile.
She mastered the art as a teenage player of being able to project a sense of
fun wherever it was happening — over the wireless, in films, on television
or the stage; and even in old age she could be counted on to play aunts and
mothers with an engaging lightness of touch.
In farces or thrillers, musical comedies or pantomimes, and sometimes as the
foil for the most expert television comics of the day, Angers brought
self-assurance and authority to the stage. What she established in the
theatre was atmosphere: her acting had a way of setting the scene; though
with comics like Fred Emney, Frankie Howerd, Arthur Askey, Benny Hill and
Les Dawson she played remarkably straight.
Not that Angers was at ease only in light comedy. It is true that this was
how she began, but later she could deliver a barbed witticism in revue, or
strike a heartbreaking note in a Noël Coward song, or deliver a monologue
with pathos.
In a classic revival — as Mrs Hardcastle in Goldsmith’s She Stoops to
Conquer, or as Miss Prue in Congreve’s Love for Love — she could sometimes
come into her own.
Often she wrote her own (mainly comic) material, which she used as an
adolescent in pre-war summer shows, and on the lyric stage — especially in
revue, which was in vogue almost throughout her early career. She was often
compared to the most brilliant exponents of the genre, such as the two
Hermiones (Gingold and Baddeley).
What Angers revelled in was the quick-change, sharp-witted, satirical
musical show popular in the 1930s and 1940s. Her parents already worked in
the theatre; hence her education at various schools in England and
Australia. It was at a concert party at the Palace Pier, Brighton, in 1936
that Avril Angers made her first theatrical appearance. With her slim
figure, high spirits, tuneful voice and good looks, she was soon to join the
Tiller Girls.
At Birmingham she made an impression in the 1936 Cinderella (Alexandra
Theatre) before taking on light concert work from 1937-44. In 1940 she was
with the Fol-de-Rols, a touring revue, and then for five years with Ensa,
the Entertainments National Service Association, which provided shows for
the troops at home and abroad.
She began broadcasting for the BBC radio service in 1944 when she made her
first West End appearance — in the Cyril Fletcher-Betty Astell revue, Keep
Going, at the Palace. At the Winter Garden Theatre in 1945 in the Leslie
Henson show, Gaieties, she showed, according to the critic J. C. Trewin,
“how cunningly moonstruck she could be”. In Make it a Date (Duchess, 1946),
a revue led by Max Wall, she “had a more rewarding chance”. She contrives
“to be at once both matter-of-fact and fiercely boisterous. The
Herbs-and-Simples monologue proves that she is of the Baddeley-Gingold clan”
.
In search of straight-play experience, Angers moved for a season to the
Connaught Theatre, Worthing, (1949). As “a guest artist”, she played Miss
Prue in Congreve’s Love for Love; then the title role in Aimee Stuart’s
Jeannie, the 1940 hit for the Scottish actress Barbara Mullen.
Other leading roles which she found out of town included Madeleine in Sacha
Guitry’s sophisticated French comedy, Don’t Listen, Ladies, and the
wise-cracking American dumb blonde, Billie Dawn, in Garson Kanin’s hit, Born
Yesterday.
In 1951 she returned to the West End as Dolores in the farce, Mary Had a
Little . . . (Strand, 1951). But pantomime moved her more. As Robinson
Crusoe, Angers spent seasons at Wimbledon (1953) and Folkestone (1955).
After the try-out of a peculiar American comedy, The Night Life of a Virile
Potato (Lyric, Hammersmith, 1960), Angers went to Australia in the revue
Paris by Night for most of 1962. After returning to England for out-of-town
parts in 1964, she found herself heading the company as the elder Belle
Poitrine in an imported American musical comedy, Little Me, (Cambridge)
which Neil Simon adapted from Patrick Dennis’s novel. As B. A. Young wrote:
“Avril Angers plays her in maturity — an admirable but unrewarding
performance, since she always appears in her little linking scenes on the
tail of someone else’s applause. She has a duet with her younger self,
Eileen Gourlay, at the end, to show what a talented performer she really is
when she gets the chance.”
In the 1970s Angers again played opposite Max Wall in Cockie! (Vaudeville),
stopping the show at one point “with her brilliant, heartbreaking” version
of Coward’s song, If Love Were All.
In Norman, Is That You? (Phoenix) Angers partnered the television comedian,
Harry Worth, and in the exceptionally long-running comedy, No Sex, Please,
We’re British (Strand, 1975) she took over the role of the mother-in-law,
Eleanor Hunter.
After touring as Miss Skillon in the farce See How They Run, Angers took
over as Miss Marple in Murder at the Vicarage (Savoy); and in the 1980s
appeared in two of Coward’s one-act plays, Easy Virtue and Post-Mortem (King
’s Head, Islington).
Inevitably she seized every chance of pantomime at Croydon, Richmond, Bath
and Eastbourne. Finally, she played the Mother in the Gershwin musical,
Crazy for You (Prince Edward, 1993).
Her television credits included Dad’s Army, All Creatures Great and Small,
Are You Being Served?, Minder, Coronation Street and The Tomorrow People.
Among her films were Skimpy in the Navy, Lucky Mascot, The Green Man, Devils
of Darkness, The Family Way, Staircase, A Girl in My Soup and Two a Penny.
Avril Angers, actress and singer, was born on April 18, 1918. She died on
November 9, 2005, aged 87.
------------------------------------------
Daily Telegraph, London
Avril Angers
11/11/2005
Avril Angers, who has died aged 87, was one of the most zestful, charming and reliable character comediennes in the post-war London theatre; she also appeared in television series such as Dad's Army, All Creatures Great and Small, Are You Being Served?, Minder, Coronation Street and The Tomorrow People.
A trouper who was a Tiller Girl at 14 and took leads in provincial pantomime at 15, Avril Angers wrote her own material as an adolescent in summer shows. With her ebullient personality, sharp sense of timing and sound theatrical training, she was fitted for anything from radio, cabaret and television series to West End thrillers, classical revivals, musical comedies and farces.
It was, however, on the stage that she made her name in the now defunct but once popular tradition of West End satirical revue, presided over in the 1940s by such comediennes as Hermione Gingold and Hermione Baddeley.
As Avril Angers moved commandingly about the stage, with a gleam in her eye and pertness of manner which heralded the delivery of a barbed comment or a cruel lyric, the shapely young brunette was often compared with the two Hermiones as a likely successor in their brand of satire.
If she arrived in the West End a little late to triumph in revue, her comic persona flourished on stage and television, particularly in provincial pantomime and in television partnerships with comedians like Benny Hill, Arthur Askey, Frankie Howerd, Terry-Thomas and Les Dawson, and in shows such as Dad's Army and Coronation Street.
In a career that spanned six decades, West End credits included revue with Max Wall in Make It a Date (1946); the musical comedy Little Me (1964); the farce The Mating Game (1972); and the tribute to CB Cochran, Cockie (1973). She was in the American comedy Norman, Is That You? (1975); the long-running farce No Sex, Please, We're British (1975); Agatha Christie's whodunnit Murder at the Vicarage (1976); and was the Mother in the Gershwin musical Crazy For You (1993).
The daughter of the comedian Harry Angers, she was born in Liverpool on April 18 1918 and educated at schools in England and Australia before making her first appearance at the Palace Pier, Brighton, in 1936.
After stints as a Tiller Girl and in assorted alternative capacities in pre-war summer shows, cabaret, pantomime and Fol-de-Rols revues, she joined Ensa in the Second World War, serving five years in the official organisation for entertaining the troops. She started broadcasting for the BBC radio service in 1944. It was when she was in Cairo with the troops that Douglas Moodlie saw her as a future radio personality, and Variety Bandbox gave her her big chance; followed by more than a year with the Carroll Levis radio show.
She first appeared in the West End in the Cyril Fletcher-Betty Astell revue Keep Going (Palace, 1944), followed by the Leslie Henson-Hermione Baddeley revue The Gaities (Winter Garden, 1945), in which her comedienne's gift for the non-sequitur and the moonstruck look first earned critical praise.
A year later, opposite Max Wall in Make It a Date (Duchess), Avril Angers won recognition for her way of achieving a style both matter-of-fact and boisterous and of delivering a monologue with finesse.
The era of such revues was drawing to a close; and Avril Angers found herself as often as not out of town in the legitimate theatre - as Miss Prue in Congreve's Love for Love; as Billie Dawn, the dumb blonde, in Born Yesterday and as Madeleine in Guitry's Don't Listen, Ladies, though she was back in the West End in 1951 in a dullish farce, Mary Had A Little... (Strand), which she helped to brighten.
Meanwhile, she had a topical musical slot called Look Back with Angers on the BBC radio show Roundabout, from which she was upset to be "given a rest" in 1959. From the 1930s through to the 1950s, she was a fixture as a cartoon character in Radio Fun, in a comic strip entitled The Adventures of Avril Angers.
After playing a charlady in a quirky comedy, The Nightlife of the Virile Potato (Lyric, Hammersmith, 1960), she went to Australia with the revue Paris by Night and then, in the West End, took the title role of the glamorous Belle Poitrine in an imported Broadway musical comedy, Little Me (Cambridge, 1964).
Other West End credits in the 1970s included Mrs Finney in the Ray Cooney production of The Mating Game (Apollo) and Peter Saunders's musical Cockie! (Vaudeville), again playing opposite Max Wall, in which she stopped the show with what a critic called her "brilliant, heartbreaking" version of Noel Coward's song If Love Were All. In the West End comedy Norman, Is that You? she partnered the comedian Harry Worth.
In No Sex, Please, We're British (Strand 1975), she took over the role of Eleanor Hunter. She also toured as Miss Skillon in the farce See How they Run and took over as Miss Marple in Murder at the Vicarage (Savoy).
Regional work included Mrs Hardcastle in She Stoops to Conquer (Birmingham Rep), a tour as Madame Arcati in Coward's Blithe Spirit (her favourite role), Miss Marple in A Murder is Announced, and tours of Cluedo, Oklahoma!, When we Are Married, The Killing of Sister George and, in the Middle and Far East, Cooney's Move Over Mrs Markham.
Film credits included Skimpy in the Navy, Lucky Mascot, The Green Man, Devils of Darkness, The Family Way, Staircase, A Girl in My Soup and Two a Penny, a dire vehicle for Cliff Richard and (implausibly) Billy Graham, in which she was splendid.
In the 1980s she appeared in two of Coward's lesser-known plays Easy Virtue and Post-Mortem (King's Head, Islington) and in pantomime at Croydon, Richmond, Bath and Eastbourne.
She never married.
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