- J. H. Ryley
John Handford Ryley, (c. 1841 –
July 28 1922 ) was an English singer and actor, best known for his performances in the comicbaritone roles of theSavoy Operas with theD'Oyly Carte Opera Company , particularly in America. His second wife was D'Oyly Carte performer, actress and playwright Madeleine Lucette Ryley.Life and career
Ryley appeared as Fernando in "Cattarina", a comic opera by
Robert Reece andFrederic Clay , at theCharing Cross Theatre in London in 1875, and as Captain Flint inAlfred Cellier 's "The Sultan of Mocha" in Manchester in 1876. He was the original Zapeter inW. S. Gilbert and Clay's "Princess Toto " (and on tour in 1876), and Amen Squeak in Cellier's "Nell Gwynne" in Manchester in late 1876.Ryley joined the
Richard D'Oyly Carte 's Comedy-Opera Company Ltd. in 1878, appearing as John Wellington Wells in the first provincial production of "The Sorcerer ", and the Learned Judge in "Trial by Jury " on the same bill. In September 1878, the company gave the first provincial tour of "H.M.S. Pinafore ", with Ryley as Sir Joseph Porter. In October the company added "Congenial Souls", a one-act farce written by Riley using music byJacques Offenbach , to the program. This appears to be the only play written by Riley. [ [http://math.boisestate.edu/gas/companions/cong_souls/index.html Information about "Congenial Souls", the only play written by Riley. His wife, Madeleine Lucette, appeared in the work] ] Riley appeared in this curtain raiser as Adolphus Fitzbrown. In 1879, Ryley was chosen to play Sir Joseph in the first authentic American production of "Pinafore" atNew York City 's Fifth Avenue Theatre, which opened onDecember 1 1879 . On December 31 of that year, in the same theatre, he created the role of Major General Stanley in "The Pirates of Penzance " and continued with the role in the U.S. tour until June 1880.Ryley appearing in leading roles in all of the New York productions of the
D'Oyly Carte Opera Company until 1883. He was Captain Felix Flapper in "Billee Taylor " (1881), Reginald Bunthorne in "Patience" (1881-82), Blood Red Bill inEdward Solomon 's "Claude Duval" (1882), Philip of Aragon and Don Jose de Mantilla "Les Manteaux Noirs" (1882), Peter van Dunk in "Rip Van Winkle" (1882, withSelina Dolaro ), and the Lord Chancellor in "Iolanthe " and Mr. Cox in "Cox and Box " (1882-83). [ [http://www.savoyoperas.org.uk/sources/nytimes.html Reviews mentioning Ryley, and particularly praising his Bunthorne] ] He continued to appear in majorGilbert and Sullivan productions in America after leaving the company. In 1884, he played King Gama in New York's first production of "Princess Ida " at the Fifth Avenue Theatre. In 1885, he played Ko-Ko in "The Mikado " at the Standard Theatre in New York and then in Chicago.In 1887, Ryley starred in "
Gasparone " byKarl Millöcker inNew York City at the Standard Theatre, together withLillian Russell andEugene Oudin . [ [http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?_r=1&res=9804E3DD1730E633A25754C1A9639C94669FD7CF&oref=slogin "New York Times" review of 1887 New York production] ] He also appeared with Russell in a tour that included "Iolanthe " (as Lord Chancellor, 1887), and was Jack Point in "The Yeomen of the Guard " inBoston, Massachusetts in February 1889. Ryley continued to appear in New York and on tour in America during the 1890s.He eventually returned to England, appearing in London on several occasions between 1900 and 1913. Among his London roles were Kit Barniger in "Mice and Men" (1902 at the Lyric Theatre, leased by
William Greet ) [ [http://library.kent.ac.uk/library/special/icons/playbills/playdat1.htm Mice and Men was written by his wife, Madeleine Lucette Ryley] ] and Josh Harmony in "Mrs. Grundy" (Scala Theatre , 1905), both plays by his second wife Madeleine Lucette (1868 - 1934).Riley made two films later in his career (see below) and died at the age of 81, survived by Lucette.
Films
Ryley appeared on screen late in his career as the Gravedigger in a 1913 silent film version of "
Hamlet ", starringJohnston Forbes-Robertson . His only other film credit was the 1916 mystery, "Who Killed Simon Baird? ".Notes
References
* [http://math.boisestate.edu/gas/whowaswho/R/RyleyJH.htm J. H. Ryley] at Who Was Who in the D'Oyly Carte
*Imdb name|0753349|J. H. RyleyExternal links
* [http://library.kent.ac.uk/library/special/icons/playbills/playdat1.htm Listing a Ryley 1902 stage role]
* [http://math.boisestate.edu/GaS/companions/curtain.doc Includes a description of Ryley's play "Congenial Souls"]
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