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Harry was born in Neath, Port Talbot in 1914 and in his short career he wrote music, and sometimes lyrics, which were used in Films, Shows, Revues and by individual recording artists. His music lives on, as does his memory.
A short resume of his work and associations follows and gratitude is expressed to Guy Thomas for his hard work in bringing together all these facts from research and from his own memories of the actual performances.
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HARRY PARR DAVIES would have had many happy memories of the London Hippodrome theatre. It was where many of his stage songs were first heard,' Pedro The Fisherman' and `Never Say Goodbye' among them, in shows put on by the London impresario, George Black. Black was the driving force behind the West End's best known musicals and revues of the 1930s and 1940s, filling his flagship theatres the London Palladium and the London Hippodrome. He encouraged the songs HARRY PARR DAVIES contributed to the 1938 Hippodrome revue Black Velvet, starring Frances Day, Vic Oliver, Pat Kirkwood and Roma Beaumont. As the curtain fell on the first night Black called his young composer to the front of the footlights telling the audience "Here is a young man you'll hear a lot of in the future". His promise kept, HARRY PARR DAVIES would write songs for George Black's next revue Haw-Haw at the Holborn Empire, for the Palladium revues Top Of The World and Gangway and the full length Hippodrome musicals The Lisbon Story and Jenny Jones. In the heart of London's theatreland, at the corner of Charing Cross Road and Cranbourn Street, the Hippodrome is remembered with affection as having a very special warmth and theatrical magic. The theatre was built in 1899, the architect being Frank Matcham, foremost of all theatre building designers. The London Palladium, the Coliseum, the Victoria Palace and the Hippodrome were all Matcham buildings, as were the great variety theatres of the provinces, the Empire music halls of cities and towns up and down the country. The Hippodrome owned first by Edward Moss, founder of the Moss Empire Music Hall circuit, was to realise his ambition for London to have a circus that could be presented as a large scale musical spectacle. Water shows, made possible by incorporating a vast water tank underneath the stage, became the talk of London with titles like The Avalanche, The Typhoon and the North Pole (one, they say, introduced a one-legged diver plunging 30 feet into a turbulence of seething waters). Fashion changed and variety revues like Hallo Ragtime and Brighter London gained popularity, giving way eventually to musical comedies. The American musical Hit The Deck came to the Hippodrome, followed by the Jack Buchanan shows That's A Good Girl, Stand Up And Sing (with Dame Anna Neagle starting out as a chorus girl) and Mr Whittington. The Vivian Ellis musical Mister Cinders with Bobby Howes and Binnie Hale singing `Spread a Little Happiness' was a big favourite. And then came George Black with one success after another; Black and Blue, Black Velvet, Lets Face It (Cole Porter), Get A Load Of This and the two HARRY PARR DAVIES shows The Lisbon Story and Jenny Jones. Ivor Novello took the Hippodrome for his musical play Perchance To Dream with its song `We'll Gather Lilacs', a show that was to run for over a 1,000 performances and Julie Andrews, then just 12 years old, made a startling impact as the little girl everyone wanted to hear hitting High Cs in the 1947 revue Starlight Roof. Audrey Hepburn danced in the chorus of High Button Shoes in 1949. By 1955 the Hippodrome, now called the Talk Of The Town, had become restaurant and cabaret for entertainers like Judy Garland and Mel Torme , before reverting back to its first name and run as a popular nightclub by Peter Stringfellow. At the time of writing there is talk of the Hippodrome being demolished and replaced with flats and offices. A campaign is underway to ensure the future of this listed building that in its time nightly filled the 1350 audience capacity. It can only be hoped that common sense and enthusiasm for lovely theatres will save one of London's most historic playhouses. That is a wish, had he been alive, HARRY PARR DAVIES would surely have endorsed.
Harry
contributed
songs to these London revues:
Black Velvet (Hippodrome) 1939

Haw Haw 1939
HAW HAW At the start of the Second World War, September 1939, all London theatres were closed as a sign of the national emergency. It was an unpopular move and by Christmas, entertainment became regarded by the Government as an essential morale booster and theatres in London and the provinces once again opened their doors. George Black's first wartime show was to be Haw Haw, opening in December at the Holborn Empire and starring Max Miller (the Cheeky Chappie), Bebe Daniels and Ben Lyon (two American entertainers who resolutely stayed in Britain during the war years) and a great variety favourite of the time, Gaston Palmer, the juggler who missed all his tricks on purpose. George Black wanted it loud, chirpy and vulgar. He wanted can-can girls, a laugh-a-minute and catchy songs. And the star he wanted was that crowd puller Max Miller. One of the popular songs of the time was `We're Going To Hang Out Our Washing On The Siegfried Line', another was HARRY PARR DAVIES' march `Wish Me Luck As You Wave Me Goodbye', and it was that kind of kick-in-the-face-for-Hitler (who happened to be born on the same day as Hitler!) which Black felt would give Haw Haw the punch it needed. He had Max Miller guying Lord Haw Haw, who broadcast Nazi propaganda on the German overseas radio service and became a figure of fun to listeners in England who tuned in (his real name was William Joyce and at the end of the war he was executed for treason); there was Max Miller as a camped-up version of Hitler, Max as an old soldier once sleeping in Anne Boleyn's bed and Max in the army trenches. It was a boisterous variety rampage - though years later Max Miller was to say that taking part in scripted sketches was not his cup of tea; he preferred the stand-up gags he plundered from his blue joke book and there were plenty of customers around who would have agreed with him. All in all the show was a hit with London's wartime theatre-goers and it stayed at the Holborn Empire until the following June. HARRY PARR DAVIES contributed one of the songs for Haw Haw called `Your Company's Requested'. The next show at the Holborn Empire was another of George Black's revues, Apple Sauce. Again the star was Max Miller joined this time by a young singer on the verge of a colossal show business career, Vera Lynn. Apple Sauce was in the middle of a popular run when the Holborn Empire was demolished in a wartime German bombing raid and never re-built.
Come Out To Play (Phoenix) 1940
Top Of The World (Palladium) 1940
Gangway (Palladium) 1941
Best Bib and Tucker (Palladium) 1942
Happidrome (lyrics) (Palladium) 1942
Big Top (His Majesty’s) 1942
Fine Feathers (Prince of Wales) 1945
The Shephard Show (1946)

Firth
Shephard, the London impresario who presented many
musicals and revues.
London musicals for which
Harry wrote the full score:
Full Swing (Palace) 1942

The Knight Was Bold (Piccadilly) 1943
The Lisbon Story (Hippodrome) 1943

Jenny Jones (Hippodrome) 1944
Her Excellency (Hippodrome) 1949

Dear Miss Phoebe (Phoenix) 1950

Blue For A Boy (His Majesty’s) 1950

Music was also
contributed to:
‘The Glorious Days’ (Palace) 1953
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FULL SWING
(1942)
Full Swing, with
Harry Parr Davies being invited to join George Posford to write
the music, was created for the lively West-End husband and wife comedy
partnership, Jack Hulbert and Cicely Courtneidge.
It opened at the
Palace Theatre
on the 16th April, 1942 and predictably ran for almost a year guaranteed by the
popularity of the Hulberts.
They played a
married film star team, the same characters who had appeared in
one of their successes a few years earlier ‘Under Your Hat’, which had music
written by Vivian Ellis. In Full Swing they became involved in an unlikely
secret mission, a topical story tracking down state secrets and missing dossiers
on behalf of the War Office.
Harry Parr
Davies wrote Jack Hulbert’s best song, “You Only Want It Cos You
Haven’t Got It” and Gabrielle Brune joined the cast with among other Harry
Parr
Davies songs “Music Makes Me Mad” and “Full Swing”.
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THE KNIGHT WAS
BOLD
(1943)
Sonnie Hale, Adele Dixon and Frances L. Sullivan were the stars of this comedy
music with a plotline not far removed from the American extravaganza ‘A Yankee
At The Court of King Arthur’. It was the tale of an impecunious Knight of the
Realm (Sonnie Hale) who dreams he is back in the middle ages — with all the
likely consequences.
The songs
included:
‘I Go On My
Whistling Way’
‘Where the
Rainbow Ends’
‘Whoopee
Diddle de Dum de Dum’.
It opened at the Piccadilly Theatre on the 1st July, 1943 with little success.
10 performances later, it closed.
Sonnie Hale was
a very popular comedy and musical revue star, frequently
appearing in the West End with his sister, Binnie Hale.
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‘The Lisbon Story’ drew large audiences to the London Hippodrome during
wartime
Britain, when it was presented there by George Black in June 1943. It became
Harry Parr Davies’ most successful musical and the show which is still fondly
remembered for introducing the whistling tune, ‘Pedro The Fisherman’. After
it
was first heard it sold an astonishing 50,000 song copies a week and the record
made by the Vincent Tildsley Mastersingers, who sang it in the show, was radio’s
most frequent request. ‘Pedro’ remains a family favourite to this day.
The book and lyrics were by Harry Parr Davies’ long time collaborator, Harold
Purcell. They contrived a story of a famous Parisienne star, Gabrielle Girard,
who escapes from the Occupation, colludes with Nazi officials in neutral
Portugal in an attempt to secure freedom for an important French scientist and
when her deceit is revealed at the final curtain, she is executed. It made a
thrilling coup de theatre.
And there was
more to enjoy. Patricia Burke in the black and silver uniform of a
French drummer boy beating out the inspiring march ‘Follow The Drum”. A
touching
balcony scene while the Portugese guitarist (played by Ronaldo Mazar) strummed
‘Never Say Goodbye’. The dancing of Halama and Konarski and of course the
Vincent Tildsley Mastersingers dressed as Portugese fishermen mending their nets
and delighting everyone with ‘Pedro The Fisherman’.
Patricia Burke
as the Paris star made her own triumph. Albert Lieven, so often
the Nazi Officer In British wartime films, fired the fatal shot and in the cast
were Jack Livesey, Margaret McGrath and a young
Noele Gordon, years later to
establish her position as the Queen of the TV Soaps playing the motel owner in
‘Crossroads’.
‘The Lisbon
Story’ was a topical play for the War years. However Harry Parr
Davies’ songs also struck a chord for people separated by the destructiveness
of
the times. “Someday We Shall Meet Again” and “Never Say Goodbye” had
their
enduring appeal, staying in the ballad singers’ repertoire ever since. Harry
Parr Davies forecast the song “Happy Days”, given to a minor character,
might be
the smash hit; but it was ‘Pedro The Fisherman” was what the packed
audiences
wanted to hear.
At the
Hippodrome, ‘The Lisbon Story’ ran for 492 performances. It was revived
shortly afterwards at the Stoll, when Maria Ejaler led the cast. The National
tour was still running when a film version was made in 1946. Patricia Burke
re-created her role as Gabrielle Girard, Albert Lieven was again the Nazi and
the international tenor, Richard Tauber sang ‘Pedro The Fisherman’.
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First staged at the London Hippodrome in 1943, a national tour of HARRY PARR
DAVIES’ musical ‘The Lisbon Story’ was still playing the
provinces
when British Lion Films released a screen version in 1946.
Speculation that
the show’s wartime popularity would gain the same
appreciation in the cinema proved a false hope.
The British
stage musical had a bad track record when transferred to the screen
and ‘The Lisbon Story’ became yet one more casualty. A film industry
strapped
for cash bred low production values and a missed opportunity to mount an
exciting story using cinematic techniques, resulted in little more than a
photographed stage performance. The critics were far from enthusiastic and
interest waned.
Patricia Burke,
the admired star of the Hippodrome theatre production, recreated
her role as Gabrielle Girard, a Parisian actress forced to flee the war-time
occupied capital for neutral Portugal. In an attempt to foster the escape of an
important scientist, Gabrielle feigns collusion with Nazi agents and when the
trickery is exposed, she is shot.
Walter
Rilla was the sinister
Nazi executioner and the film introduced the international tenor, Richard Tauber
to sing the ever popular ‘Pedro The Fisherman’.
All the HARRY
PARR DAVIES songs remained in the film: ‘Someday We Shall Meet Again’,
‘Never Say Goodbye’, ‘Song Of The Sunrise’ and of course ‘Pedro The
Fisherman’.
There was also a new song, very much in the style of a French cabaret tune, for
Patricia Burke, called ‘Paris In My Heart’.
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“Jenny Jones”, with music by Harry Parr Davies, lyrics by Harold Purcell and
a
book by Ronald Gow (who had written the famous play ‘Love On The Dole’)
opened
at the London Hippodrome on the 2nd October, 1944.
Based on short
stories by the Welsh poet Rhys Davies, it told of Morgan Jones a
Welsh miner and the father of 18 children wanted to make it 21 and his daughter
who comes back from London with an operetta that her Welsh valley folk
want to perform.
Carole Lynne
was
Dilys and the love of her life Ronald Millar, playing not only
the juvenile lead but also made responsible for re—shaping the show when its
pre— London tour met with disapproval. (He went on to become Sir Ronald
Millar,
speechwriter for Baroness Thatcher and the creator of her famous catch—phrase
‘The lady is not for turning’)
Boasting
costumes by the royal couturiers Norman Hartnell and Digby Morton,and
the popular Harry Parr Davies songs “Where The Blue Begins” and “Yet
Another
Day” (rescued from an earlier short—lived Palladium revue ‘Top Of The
World’)
Jenny Jones proved far from a major success. The Observer’s critic was fairly
typical: “the Welsh episodes were as much like the real thing as the Rhondda
is
to Leicester Square”.
What could not
be denied was nightly applause for the Welsh boy soprano, Malcolm
Thomas singing “My Wish” with all the yearning for the Welsh homeland. It
brought the show to a standstill every night of its 153 performances.
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HER EXCELLENCY
(1949)
Harry Parr
Davies was to join Manning Sherwin, composer of the hugely popular
wartime song A Nightingale Sang In Berkeley Square, to write the musical score
for the Cicely Courtneidge show, Her Excellency. It opened at at the London
Hippodrome on 21st September, 1949. Once again the popularity of Cicely
Courtneidge, under the production of Jack Hulbert, her husband, would guarantee
the show’s success and it ran for 252 performances.
In a story not all that dissimilar from the Irving Berlin and Ethel Merman show,
Call Me Madam, Cicely Courtneidge was to play an Ambassador from Britain in a
South American republic forcing a meat king to sell beef to England rather than
to the United States.
Thorley Walters
was to play the Ambassadors commercial attache chasing the
meat-farmer’s daughter and Patrick Barr the American ambassador to the same
republic who would catch the eye of the lady from England.
It was all but
obligatory that in a Cicely Courtneidge show she would have a
song that extolled the simple and nostalgic pleasures of an England which
everyone loved. In ‘Her Excellency’ the song was called ‘Sunday Morning In
England’ a title which speaks for itself, The music was written by Harry Parr
Davies, who also contributed two other songs:
“Diplomacy”
and “I Wonder”.
The lyrics and
the book were by Archie Menzies and Max Kester.
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Fred Emney,
Richard Hearne, Eve Lister and Hermene French were the stars of this
small scale musical, as it was described, which opened at His Majesty’s
Theatre
(now Her Majesty’s Theatre in the Haymarket where Andrew Lloyd Webber’s
large
scale version of The Phantom of the Opera continues its history-making
long-running success) on the 30th November, 1951. It was Harry Parr Davies’
second musical that year - earlier in the Autumn ‘Dear Miss Phoebe’ had
achieved
a great success at the Phoenix Theatre.
‘Blue For A Boy’ had been written to exploit the cigar— smoking,
majestically
built comedy star Fred Emney. Dressed in blue baby rompers, indicating what sort
of show it was going to be, Emney was the mischievous and large stepson who
chooses his stepfather’s wedding anniversary to make the poor fellow’s new
wife
aware of his existence.
Once again
Harold Purcell was to add his lyrics to a Harry Parr Davies song and
they wrote together a title number for ‘Blue For A Boy’ which became a
popular
song of the of the day. Two other songs were:
“Lying Awake
and Dreaming” and “At Last it’s Happened”.
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J.M.Barrie, who created Peter Pan, had written the popular play ‘Quality
Street’
as a romantic story set after the Napoleonic Wars of the early 19th century
which
culminated in the Battle of Waterloo.
It was ‘Quality
Street’ on which Christopher Hassall based his musical play
‘Dear Miss Phoebe’, for which he also wrote the lyrics and Harry Parr Davies
one
of his most enduring musical scores.
The musical
opened at the Phoenix Theatre on the 13th October, 1950 and after
‘The Lisbon Story’ it gave Harry Parr Davies his second big success. Peter
Graves and Carol Raye were the hero and heroine lovers and
Gretchen Franklin was
the perky maid who supplied the comedy relief. Gretchen Franklin had been in the
C.B. Cochran revue ‘Big Top’ (also with musical contributions from Harry
Parr
Davies) and the ‘Sweet and Low” revues starring Hermione
Gingold. Many years
later she found rather more fame with the character Ethel who died as the result
of voluntary euthanasia in the BBC TV soap opera, East-enders.
The story of
Dear Miss Phoebe followed the heartfelt complications and
misunderstandings when a wounded officer comes home from the wars in France to a
sweetheart he fails to recognise. The lovelorn heroine, wilting in the beautiful
empire—line style dresses of the period would have to adopt an ingenious
disguise before true love can win the day.
One of the songs, ‘I Leave My Heart In An English Garden’ nostalgic
sentiment
for an England of a by—gone age, became a classic ballad of the musical
theatre
repertoire, sung by all the tenors, John Hanson, Ivor Emmanuel among them and
recorded famously by Edmund Hockridge. Two other songs were ‘Whisper While You
Waltz’ and ‘Spring Will Sing a Song For you’.
Dear Miss Phoebe
ran for 283 performances.
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“Pedro the fisherman was always whistling
Such a merry call.
Girls who were passing by would hear him whistling
By the harbour wall!”
The whistling
tale of a fisherman who sailed away, seeking fortune enough to buy
his bride-to-be
“a dress, a
cuckoo clock, a saucepan and a ring". was the triumphant hit of
Harry Parr Davies’ 1963 musical ‘The Lisbon Story’.
Sheet music
sales alone reached an astonishing 50,000 copies a week after it was
first heard, phenomenal by any standards yet more so in wartime Britain. Vincent
Tildsley’s Mastersingers, who sang it in the show, made a record which became
radio’s most frequent request. Another by Gracie Fields took the song round
the
world. When ‘The Lisbon Story’ was filmed in 1946, the international tenor
Richard Tauber chose to sing ‘Pedro the Fisherman’ and it remains a family
favourite to this day.
Covering a
tricky scene change, with the Mastersingers dressed as Portugese
fishermen mending their nets, the song added a splash of sunny local colour. As
well as its catchy melody with a whistling introduction that invited everyone to
join in, the clear narrative of Harold Purcell’s lyrics, it was a clever line
halfway through the song which tickled the shows’ audiences.
A four letter
word, no matter how mild, would never be used on the popular stage
at that time, probably not allowed by the powerful censorship of the Lord
Chamberlain. So there was a good deal of innocent delight to hear the father of
Nina, the heroine of the story, persuading her there was a better marriage
prospect than Pedro, with:
“Though Miguel
is rather fat his vineyard’s doing well. So marry him and let
your dreams of Pedro go to .
The rhyming
expletive masked by a discreet cough!
Harry Parr
Davies had forecast that the song ‘Happy Days’, given to a minor
character, played by Noele Gordon, would be the smash hit. The audiences thought
otherwise and Pedro the Fisherman helped ‘The Lisbon Story’ to run for 492
performances at the London Hippodrome, many more when it was revived shortly
afterwards at the Stoll and the subsequent national tour throughout the country.
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LILACS IN THE
SPRING
(1955)
Dame Anna Neagle won a popular audience for her Coronation Year romantic pageant
‘The Glorious Years’ staged at the Palace Theatre, London, in 1952.
With songs by
HARRY PARR DAVIES and a book put together by his ‘Lisbon Story’
collaborator, Harold Purcell, it was transferred to the screen by Anna Neagle’s
husband the director, Herbert Wilcox.
The film
portrays the young London actress, played by Anna Neagle, knocked
unconscious by a bomb explosion during the blitz, who dreams she’s Nell Gwyn
and
Queen Victoria, the inspiration for her own future. (Dame Anna had played both
Nell Gwyn and Queen Victoria before in much earlier films, notably Queen
Victoria in the Herbert Wilcox picture, Sixty Glorious Years).
Errol Flynn
came
from Hollywood to join Anna Neagle as her co-star: David Farrar
would play King Charles, in the Nell Gwyn episode, and Peter Graves who had
starred in the HARRY PARR DAVIES stage musical ’Dear Miss Phoebe' in 1950,
took
the part of Prince Albert.
In the cast list was also the name of Sean Connery, making his first screen
appearance, if only as an extra, before his swift climb to international stardom
as James Bond, 007.
This was probably the last music HARRY PARR DAVIES wrote for film and stage
musicals. By October, aged only 41, he died at his London home.
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PENNY PARADISE
(1938)
In her autobiography, Betty Driver remembers the film ‘Penny Paradise’, in
1938,
as the last Basil Dean made at Ealing Studios. Dean had launched the screen
careers of Gracie Fields and George Formby and was determined to create one more
’star' He chose Betty Driver.
She was establishing herself as a music-hall singer and in London revues and it
was some years later that Betty Driver enjoyed quite a different success playing
the loyal barmaid at the Rovers Return, Betty Turpin, in the long running
Granada Television series, ‘Coronation Street’.

The story of ‘Penny Paradise’ told of the tug-boat skipper who celebrates
winning on the football pools, until he finds his mate has forgotten to post the
coupon. Betty Driver as the skipper’s daughter has to sort out the problems of
the elusive fortune and her own romantic mistakes at the same time.
‘Penny Paradise’ was directed by Sir Carol Reed, then starting work (without
his
title) in the film industry before making the screen classics ‘The Third Man’,
‘Our Man In Havana’ and ‘Oliver’. The cameraman was also in his early
days at
the studios, Ronald Neame, later co— producing’Brief Encounter’ and
directing
‘The Poseidon Adventure’ and ‘The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie’.
First star
billing in ‘Penny Paradise’ was that of Edmund Gwenn, a Welsh actor
working in Hollywood and always remembered as Santa Claus in ‘Miracle on 34th
Street’.
The songs for ‘Penny Paradise’ were by HARRY PARR DAVIES.
Betty Driver sang ‘Stick Out Your Chin’, one of many
breezy,happy tunes the composer wrote and also ‘You Can’t
Have Your Cake’
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I SEE ICE (1938)
Looking after the stage
props for an ice ballet company, George Formby finds
himself the blundering inventor of camera which can take pictures concealed
inside a bow-tie. When he accidentally takes a snapshot of a gang of crooks in
suspicious circumstances, it is time for George to get his skates on - with
pratfall results.
Kay Walsh was the girl friend and HARRY PARR DAVIES wrote two songs for the
film: “Noughts and Crosses” and “In My Little Snapshot Album”, a ukelele
comedy
number with its share of doubtful lyrics and which remained as one of the
all-time Formby favourites.
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IT’S IN THE AIR (1938)
By consent this was the best of the George Formby films and the funniest.
In a mix—up with his sister’s fiancee, George is conscripted as a Royal Air
Force recruit, not only at war with the flying authorities, but also the only
passenger in a pilotless plane, looping the loop.
For the picture HARRY PARR DAVIES wrote two songs - “They Can’t Fool Me”
and
both the words and music for the title song ’It’s In The Air’. A
happy-go-lucky
morale booster a year later when World War 2 broke out, It’s In The Air
became
a breezy marching song not only for the Royal Air Force but for troops
everywhere as they went into battle.
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WE’RE GOING TO
BE RICH
(1937)
By 1937 HARRY PARR DAVIES had established a firm reputation as a songwriter for
the movies, enjoying the sort of popularity that marked him alongside the
composers writing in Hollywood. The songbook was extensive, at least two had
grown into all-time favourites: ‘Sing As We Go’ and ‘Smile When You Say
Goodbye’. A third was on the way, ‘The Sweetest Song In The World’, a
waltz song
this time for the next Gracie Fields 1937 picture, ‘We’re Going To Be Rich’.
The Gracie
Fields films were regarded as money-spinners by now, at least in
Britain. in the new picture, backed by American dollars and bidding for more
universal appeal, the production company aimed at something different.
The star would
have to be the same feisty Lancashire lass and the songs would
come from HARRY PARR DAVIES. But out went the working class overalls, the cotton
mills and a cast of familiar British actors; in came mid-Victorian hats and
costumes, a story located in far flung Australia and South Africa and two well
known stars from Hollywood, Victor McClagen and Brian Donlevy.
Gracie Fields is
the Australian settlers sweetheart, with a wayward husband,
Victor McClagen foiling her triumphant homeward journey to Britain by investing
in a loss-making South African gold-mine. When he lands up in jail, Oracle is
left with no option than working with the Johannesburg trekkers, fighting off a
philandering bar-owner and, by now reunited with the jailbird, sets out in
search for South African gold.
The film,
according to one writer, was an ‘astonishing success’. And the title
was prophetic. 20th Century Fox offered Oracle Fields a £200,000 contract for
four more films, more money than the big stars in Hollywood were being paid and
joined by HARRY PARR DAVIES as her accompanist she crossed the Atlantic for a
nationwide American tour.
HARRY PARR
DAVIES’ song ‘The Sweetest Song In The World’, remained in everyones
memory, a familiar last-waltz-of-the-evening in the dance halls, a radio and
record request and a long-standing item for the concerts Oracle Fields took all
over the world.
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Shipyard Sally was the film in which Gracie Fields first introduced the HARRY PARR DAVIES song "Wish Me Luck As You Wave Me Goodbye". Released in 1939, the film reached Britain's cinemas just days before the outbreak of World War 2. Straight away the song caught everyone's attention and it went on to become a great marching chorus wherever troops went into battle. Gracie Fields made it the sing-a-long finale for her thousands of concerts worldwide and it stayed a giant all-time British favourite along with `Tipperary', `Pack Up Your Troubles' and `Land Of Hope And Glory'.
Shipyard Sally told the story of a couple of failing music hall artists, an uncle and niece variety turn, opening a pub largely for the benefit of unemployed shipyard workers on Clydeside, reflecting the true life post-depression years of an industry that until then was world famous. Money is in short supply, morale is low, but with the heart-of-gold spirit of music hall life Gracie Fields heads to London for a fight against the indifference of the aristocratic shipyard owners. The Union Jack flies as a newly built ocean liner is majestically launched down the slipway.
Gracie Fields would recall this film as her favourite. Sidney Howard, a mournful-eyed popular entertainer of the pre-war music hall and London stage, joined the cast to play the uncle, well meaning but invariably obstructive. Morton Seldon and Norma Varden were the London aristocrats and the film was directed by Gracie's then husband, Monty Banks.
Now largely forgotten the film is sometimes shown on late-night television, though it is more likely to find a prominent place in Gracie Fields retrospectives. What refuses to be lost is HARRY PARR DAVIES' music and Phil Parks lyrics for "Wish Me Luck As You Wave Me Goodbye
SING AS WE GO
(1934)
‘Sing As We Go’ was a lively, entertaining comedy which underpinned the
growing
popularity of Oracle Fields as a film star; a mixture of north country music
hall humour and happy-go-lucky sentiment. That was 1934. 70 years on and a
telling sub-text appears, making it all but a documentary of British life and
hardship in the 30s depression.
J. B.
Priestley,
whose novels ‘Angel Pavement’ and ‘The Good Companions’
chronicled the years between the two world wars, wrote the screen play. The
HARRY PARR DAVIES title song was its heart beat.
Gracie Fields is
the Lancashire mill-girl thrown out of work by an industrial
strike, who cycles her way to temporary employment among the holiday crowds at
Blackpool. The laughs, and tears, come as she bungles her way through jobs as
chambermaid, fortune teller, a singer and as a human spider falling into the
Tower Circus water tank. The strike ends as Grade leads the mill-girls back
through the factory gates with the song ‘Sing As We Go’. It was a defining
image.
Basil Dean
directed ‘Sing As We Go’ and in the cast were John
Loder, Dorothy
Flyson and Stanley Holloway.
HARRY PARR
DAVIES’ title song march become an anthem for the unemployed. As a
schoolboy in Neath, South Wales he had written an end-of-term musical with ‘Sing
As We Go’ in the score. Spruced up for Gracie Fields the song’s success
cemented
their relationship as performer and accompanist and its brass band swagger
demands it is heard as much today as in 1934.
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PATRICIA BURKE. — the star of Harry Parr Davies’ most successful musical, ‘The Lisbon Story’. At the start of her career she had been a chorus girl in the Gertrude Lawrence musical Nymph Errant. Revues and London musicals made her one of the most popular young stars of the West End theatre “Hide and Seek”, “Up and Doing” and the Cochran revue “Big Top” when she sang the Harry Parr Davies number ‘When I Hear Music’. It was then she was chosen to be the leading lady of ‘The Lisbon Story’, playing Gabrielle Girard , a formidable star of the French theatre who flees wartime Paris only to find the long arm of Nazi persecution in a neutral country.
She was widely admired, yet it seemed to trigger a change of career when after that, with some minor exceptions, she concentrated on a more dramatic theatre. Benn Levy’s comedy ‘Clutterbuck’, Katherine in ‘The Taming of the Shrew’ at the Old Vic (one critic wrote he had never heard Shakespeare more beautifully spoken) and eventually in such revivals as “Mrs Dot” and ”Trelawney of The Wells”. In ‘The Lisbon Story’ she sang two of Harry Parr Davies’ more famous songs ‘Someday We Shall Meet Again’ and ‘Never Say Goodbye’.
RONALD MILLAR
— an actor and writer whose career had started in plays like 'War
And Peace’ and ’Mr. Boifry’ He had also played revue and musicals which
led to
the Harry Parr Davies show Jenny Jones. He was to be given the part of the young
hero but he also became responsible for re—shaping the production when it met
with some disapproval on its pre—London tour. That seemed to have developed
his
writing career and he went on to offer plays ’Frieda’, ‘Waiting For
Gillian’,
‘The Bride and the Bachelor’ and the hugely popular musical based on the
lives
of Robert Browning and Elizabeth Barret Browning which he called ‘Robert and
Elizabeth’. What brought him a different sort of fame was his time as a
speechwriter for Baroness Thatcher during her period as Prime Minister. He it
was who gave her the famous line ‘The lady is not for turning’.
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CAROLE LYNNE
— who was to take a leading role in the Harry Parr Davies’ musical
‘Jenny Jones’ at the London Hippodrome in 1944. She had been in the revues
‘Black and Blue’ , ‘Black Velvet’, also at the Hippodrome and ‘Rise
Above It’.
Richard Tauber chose her as his leading lady In his musical romance ‘Old
Chelsea’
as Mary Fenton, a role which was her favourite. She became Lady Delfont,
marrying the well known London impresario Bernard Delfont.
ANNE ZIEGLER and
WEBSTER BOOTH- the wel1
loved husband and wife singing partnership who had an immense following on the
stage, on radio and In the
concert hall. She had sung in musical comedies , he had been with the D’oyly
Carte company and at Covent Garden, as well as being a long established oratorio
singer. Their duets from the best loved musicals and films of an earlier age
gave them an enduring success. Kenneth Leslie Smith wrote the music for their
musical play “Sweet Yesterday” at the Adelphi in 1945 and they had been in
the
George Black revue ‘Gangway’, at the Palladium, singing the Harry Parr
Davies
song 'My Paradise'. Their popularity in the
Concert
Hall was to span many years until they set up home for a time in South Africa.

GEORGE FORMBY
- the toothy grin and the ukelele said it all about the popular
singing comedian, who for many years was probably not only the Box Office
favourite of film and music hall audiences but also the highest paid in Britain.
Yet he had started life, the son of a music hall comic with the same name, as a
jockey, once weighing in at 3st 13 lbs. He never won a big race, but as a
variety artist the rewards of large audiences and acclaim stayed with him
throughout his life. He was a great favourite with the Royal Family and among
his famous songs were ‘A Little Stick of Blackpool Rock’, ‘When I’m
Cleaning
Windows’ and the song Harry Parr Davies wrote for his film “It’s In The
Air” .
His musical Zip Goes A Million played with enormous success at the Palace
Theatre.
Simultaneously
with the popular Grade Fields films of the 1930's, George Formby
was making a succession of near slapstick screen comedies, sometimes two a year.
George Formby,
with his cheeky grin and his ukelele songs, had become a
knock-out, top-of-the-bill music hail entertainer. Everyone wanted to see him:
the London Palladium, his native North Country, Royalty, troop concerts; he’d
made radio his own and his records sold in l000's. Small wonder the earnings
were huge.
So was the
demand to see George Formby in the cinema. Ealing Studios put him
under long-term contract and by 1936, alongside Gracie Fields - though they
never appeared together - he had achieved top position as a British box-office
favourite.
HARRY PARR
DAVIES wrote his first song for George Formby, ‘Your Way Is My Way’,
in 1935. They became great friends and the composer went on to write for many of
the Formby films, including
‘No Limits’
1935
‘Keep Your
Seats Please’ 1936
‘I See Ice’
1938
‘It’s In The
Air’ 1938
Bell Bottom George’ 1944
ADELE DIXON
- a glamorous, talented actress and singer whose career spanned the
entire spectrum of the theatre. Chekov, pantomime as principal boy, the Old Vic,
musical comedy and revue, she appeared in many of the best known productions
between the 20’s and 50’s. She is widely remembered as the singer on the
opening
night of the BBC Television Service with the song “Here’s Looking At You”.
Adele
Dixon was the star of the Harry Parr Davies musical ‘The Knight Was Bold’at
the
Piccadilly Theatre in 1943.

GEORGE BLACK
- impresario. A pioneer of the cinema business in Britain who
helped to establish the first permanent Picture Houses. His success led him to
theatre management and he became the figurehead of Moss Empires who controlled
many West End Theatres and others all over the country. He introduced the Crazy
Gang to the Palladium in London and staged many successful musicals and revues
at the London Hippodrome. Harry Parr Davies wrote music for the George Black
shows: ‘Black Velvet’, ‘Top of the World’, ‘The Lisbon Story' and
‘Jenny Jones’.
They were great friends and George Black had future plans for their working
relationship, when he died in 1945.
SONNIE HALE
- the chorus boy who became a big West End star. He appeared in the C.B.Cochran
revues of the 20s and 30s ‘This Year of Grace’ and ‘Wake Up And
Dream: He was frequently teamed with his sister, Binnie, Hale and also Jessie
Matthews in such shows as Hold My Hand. He was also a popular pantomime dame.
Sonnie Hale was in two shows with music by Harry Parr Davies: ‘Come Out To
Play’
at the Phoenix in 1940 and in “The Knight Was Bold” at the Piccadilly
Theatre in
1943.
MARIE BURKE
- she had been married to a well known, international tenor Tom
Burke and started her career in Australia and South Africa. In London her first
appearance became a sensation when she played Julie, the half caste actress in
Showboat, the Paul Robeson production at Drury Lane. Other musicals followed
after that — Waltzes From Vienna, the Student Prince and she was a well known
principal boy. She developed her career as a dramatic actress in plays like Love
In Idleness and, at the Old Vic, Major Barbara. She was the mother of Patricia
Burke. She sang the Harry Parr Davies ‘I Shall Always Remember’ in ‘The
Shephard
Show’ at the Princes Theatre in 1946.
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PAT KIRKWOOD
- was described as being the definition of the word Glamour. With a
silver voice, her striking good looks and a personality with warmth to draw an
audience across the footlights, she was among the most popular and sought after
young stars of musicals and revues of the late 1930’s and the three succeeding
decades. The drudgery of an early touring life in the Music Hall and pantomimes
had refined a talent that made a sensational impact on the West End stage. She
sang the Cole Porter number ‘My Heart Belongs To Daddy’ in the ‘Black
Velvet’
revue at the Hippodrome (which also had songs by Harry Parr Davies) and her
immediate appeal led to some of the best known musicals of the following years:
‘Top Of The World” (with more songs by Harry Parr Davies) at the London
Palladium, “Let’s Face It” (by Cole Porter) , “Peter Pan”, “Wonderful
Town” (by
Leonard Bernstein) and Noel Coward’s ‘Ace of Clubs. Later she would tour in
a
revival of Pal Joey, as well as appearing in plays like ‘Hay Fever’ and ‘The
Constant Wife’
Her recently
published autobiography “The Time Of My Life” vividly creates a
life professionally devoted to remaining a star.
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DAME ANNA
NEAGLE - acclaimed and frequently voted Britain’s best loved film star
and won a place for herself in the Guiness Book of Records for her over 2,000
performances in the musical ‘Charlie Girl’. Discovered as a chorus dancer by
Jack Buchanan in his musical ‘Stand Up And Sing’, it was when she married
the
film director, Herbert Wilcox that her career was propelled into world stardom.
Together they made a succession of popular films : Sixty Glorious Years (as
Queen Victoria), “They Flew Alone” (as Amy Johnson), and her partnership
with
Michael Wilding in a series of romantic comedies set in London “Spring In Park
Lane” and “Piccadilly Incident' just two of them. In “Odette” she
portrayed the
life of the World War II heroine Odette Churchill.
Harry Parr Davies wrote the
songs for one more ‘London’ film, ”Maytime In Mayfair” and the
Coronation Year
stage show at the Palace Theatre ‘The Glorious Years’.
Dame Anna Neagle
PETER GRAVES
- tall, distinguished, his bearing frequently meant he played
aristocrats, high—ranking military men and royalty, usually with a touch of
romance and compassion. He was among those favoured few who formed what was
virtually a repertory company for the musicals of Ivor Novello: ‘Glamorous
Night,’ ‘Crest of the Wave’, ’The Dancing Years’ and perhaps notably
in ‘Arc de
Triomphe’. He had also played Count Danilo many times in revivals of the Lehar
operetta ‘The Merry Widow’ and would later appear in plays partnering his
wife,
Vanessa Lee (a Novello leading lady). In the Harry Parr Davies musical ‘Dear
Miss Phoebe’ he was cast as the wounded hero home from the Napoleonic Wars.
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JACK BUCHANAN
- tall, dashing, debonair he was the universally loved matinee
idol of the London theatre during the 20’s, 30’s and 40’s; however the
soubriquet undermined his marvellous talent as a dancer, singer, actor, producer
and stage choreographer. He appeared In some of the most well known productions
of the period: “That’s A Good Girl”, “This’ll Make You Whistle”, “Sunny”,
“Castle In The Air” and he made a film of the musical “Goodnight Vienna”
when
his recording of the title song became an established favourite. In 1953 his
Hollywood appearance with Fred Astaire and Cyd Charisse in “The Band Wagon”
found him yet another generation of followers. In the Prince of Wales 1945 revue
‘Fine Feathers’ he sang the Harry Parr Davies song “Sweet Virginia”.

FRED EMNEY
- born at the beginning of the century, the son of a well known music
hall comedian, be started his career as a page boy in an early play called
‘Romance’ . But he was to develop both his style and his girth as a much
loved
variety comedian. In spite of his very Englishness in appearance and humour he
enjoyed 12 years as a favourite with theatre audiences in America. In London
during the 1940's he appeared in Starlight Roof with Vic Oliver , Pat Kirkwood
and Julie Andrews at the Hippodrome and a musical which aptly described him,
“Big Boy”. He joined Richard Hearne for the Harry Parr Davies musical ‘Blue
For
A Boy’ at His Majesty’s Theatre in 1950.

RICHARD HEARNE
- a comedian who started his career as a circus acrobat and he
was to be well known in variety and revue for his physically visual comedy. He
was a popular pantomime dame and in London appeared in such shows as “Panama
Hattie (by Cole Porter), “Shephards Pie” and “Running Riot”. On
television he
enjoyed a countrywide children’s audience as “Mr. Pastry”. He was in the
Harry
Parr Davies musical “Blue For A Boy”.
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