- George Devine
Infobox Person
name = George Devine
image_size =
caption =
birth_date = birth date|1910|11|20|mf=y
birth_place = London
death_date = death date and age|1966|1|20|1910|11|20|mf=y
death_place = London flagicon|England
occupation = Theatrical producer, manager, actor
spouse = Sophie Harris
parents = Georgios Devine, Ruth Eleanor Cassady
children = Harriet, b. 1942George Alexander Cassady Devine CBE (
20 November ,1910 -20 January ,1966 ) was an extremely influential theatrical manager, director, teacher and actor inLondon from the late 1940s until his death. He also worked in the media of TV and film.Biography
Devine was born in London. His father, Georgios Devine, was half Irish and half Greek. His mother, Ruth Eleanor Cassady, was Irish Canadian.
Early theatrical experience
While reading history at
Oxford University , Devine became interested in theatre, and in 1932 was made president of theOxford University Dramatic Society (OUDS). In that year he invitedJohn Gielgud to guest-direct a production ofRomeo and Juliet which was to starPeggy Ashcroft andEdith Evans playing as Juliet and Nurse. As part of the arrangement Gielgud insisted on having the costumes designed byMotley , a newly-formed London design team consisting of Sophie Harris, her sister Margaret (known as "Percy"), [Little & McLaughlin, p.21] and Liz Montgomery. The production was a great success, and so was the meeting between George and Sophie Harris. They began living together almost immediately, and married onOctober 27 ,1939 despite an age gap of ten years in George's favour. They returned from Oxford as a couple to London, where George became an actor, and performed in a number of Gielgud's productions. He also worked for the Motleys as their business manager. [Devine, p.59] In 1936 he collaborated with the distinguished French directorMichel Saint-Denis andGlen Byam Shaw in founding and running an acting and directing school that they called "London Theatre Studio". (Jocelyn Herbert , who would later play a large part in Devine's life, was a student for a while). In 1939, he directed his first production on the London stage, an adaptation ofGreat Expectations byCharles Dickens , starringAlec Guinness , and took the part of Sir Toby Belch inShakespeare 'sTwelfth Night , directed for television byMichel Saint-Denis .Wartime
George and Sophie had one daughter, Harriet, born
September 18 ,1942 , but George did not set eyes on her until after long military service in theRoyal Artillery , stationed first inIndia and thenBurma .Old Vic, Sadlers Wells, Stratford
Returning to the London theatre scene, Devine again collaborated with
Glen Byam Shaw andMichel Saint-Denis , setting up and running theOld Vic Theatre School and theYoung Vic Company in 1946. In 1950 severe disagreements with the Old Vic Board of Governors led all three of them to resign, along with the entire faculty. [Devine, p.42] The Young Vic company ceased to exist until resurrected on new premises 19 years later by directorFrank Dunlop .By this time a still-young George Devine was an acknowledged expert in stagecraft, in demand at England's elite theatres. He directed opera at
Sadler's Wells Theatre and spent the summers both directing and acting at theRoyal Shakespeare Theatre inStratford-upon-Avon ; he also directed at theBristol Old Vic , for instance in a 1952 production ofBen Jonson 's "Volpone ". In this period he also appeared in several films.Collaboration with Tony Richardson
Tony Richardson was a 'hot' young director fresh fromOxford University when he cast Devine in a TV adaptation of a short story byAnton Chekhov , 'Curtain Down'. Richardson and Devine found they had virtually identical ideas about English theatre and how it could be revived. Eventually Richardson became a lodger in George and Sophie Devine's house on theThames embankment atHammersmith . So, too, did the American sociologist George Goetschius. The three men planned what was to become the English Stage Company together.Personal life
White-haired, with a twinkle in his eye and a pipe ever-present between his teeth, the word avuncular might have been invented to describe Devine. But his outward unflappability belied the real man inside. In reality he was a driven workaholic who suffered at least two documented nervous breakdowns, brought on by overwork. [The most serious, in October 1961, caused him to take three months off, leaving
Tony Richardson in charge. The proximate cause was an almighty row withNigel Dennis afterRex Harrison abruptly quit the cast of Dennis's play "August for the People" (Little & McLaughlin, p.69. Heilpern (p.266) and Devine (p. 142) both confirm this account.)] George was a noted lover ofFrance and the French way of life. He spoke the language fluently and delighted in being taken as French when travelling there, in beret and all. [Devine, pp.31, 53]The age difference between him and Sophie finally poisoned the marriage. In the early 1950s Harriet discovered love letters written to George over a long period of time by his neighbour and ex-student Jocelyn Herbert, who was married to Anthony Lousada at the time. [Devine, pp. 83-85] Sophie may already have known, but in any case she could no longer pretend ignorance and bliss. A few years after the English Stage Company came into being, George and Jocelyn moved to Rossetti Studios in
Flood Street together, abandoning their families. [Little & McLaughlin (p.70) quoteWilliam Gaskill as remarking that TheRoyal Court Theatre caused so many broken marriages in this period that it was jokingly known as the 'Royal Divorce Court'] Jocelyn became resident stage designer, her first design being a production ofIonesco 's 'The Chairs' featuring Devine andJoan Plowright .They never married, but on his death Devine willed his entire estate to Jocelyn. [Devine, p.168]
The English Stage Company
The form of theatre that Devine, Richardson and Goetschius dreamed of was very much a writer's theatre, and a theatre freed from the "Anyone for tennis?" upper-class milieu that English theatre had narrowed to. In January 1956, they placed an advert in the theatrical newspaper "
The Stage " calling for scripts, and received 750 submissions. The company took over theRoyal Court Theatre inSloane Square and opened its first production,Angus Wilson 's 'The Mulberry Bush'.Unfortunately, the 750 scripts were largely dross. The first three productions at The Court were dismal failures, and the future of the English Stage Company was very much in the balance, when along came
Look Back in Anger written byJohn Osborne . "This might have something", said Devine to Richardson when he'd finished reading it through. Indeed it did have something. Thanks largely to glowing reviews from the Sunday criticsKenneth Tynan andHarold Hobson , 'Look Back' was the revolution they'd been looking for.The English Stage Company became not just a writer's theatre but a director's theatre too.
Arnold Wesker ,Ann Jellicoe ,Donald Howarth ,Keith Johnstone , andAlan Sillitoe were some of the writers nurtured in Sloane Square.Anthony Page ,Edward Bond ,Lindsay Anderson ,William Gaskill ,Peter Gill andJohn Dexter some of the now-famous directors.Several more of John Osborne's plays were staged at the Royal Court -- indeed, George Devine was appearing in one, the extravagant transvestite drama 'A Patriot for Me', when he suffered the heart attack [This was the second. The first was in 1963. (Little & McLaughlin, p.75)] that led quite quickly to his death at the age of 56.
He had begun to draft an autobiography, and it included these words::I was not strictly after a popular theatre a la
Joan Littlewood -Roger Planchon , but a theatre that would be part of the intellectual life of the country. In this respect I consider I utterly failed. I feel I have the right to talk in this proprietary way about The English Stage Company to which I gave nine years of my life and nearly died in the tenth. I was convinced the way to achieve my objective was to get writers, writers of serious pretensions, back into the theatre. This I set out to do. I wanted to change the attitude of the public towards the theatre. All I did was to change the attitude of the theatre towards the public.Major sources
*cite book | author=Devine, Harriet | title=Being George Devine's Daughter | publisher=Barkus Books | year=2006 | id=ISBN 0-9546136-1-9
*cite book | author=Heilpern, John | title=John Osborne: A Patriot for Us | location=London | publisher=Chatto & Windus | year=2006 | id=ISBN 978-0-70116-780-7
*cite book | author=Little, Ruth & McLaughlin, Emily | title=The Royal Court Theatre Inside Out | publisher=Oberon Books | year=2007 | id=ISBN 978-1-84002-763-1
Footnotes
External links
*imdb name|0222627
* [http://www.royalcourttheatre.com/about_detail.asp?ArticleID=14 Royal Court Theatre website]Persondata
NAME= Devine, George
ALTERNATIVE NAMES=
SHORT DESCRIPTION= English theatre manager, producer, director
DATE OF BIRTH= November 20, 1910
PLACE OF BIRTH= London
DATE OF DEATH= January 20, 1966
PLACE OF DEATH= London
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