Difference between revisions of "Adam Leslie"
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''[[Hair Hair]]'' (1970-1972), | ''[[Hair Hair]]'' (1970-1972), | ||
+ | ''[[Adam's Apple]]'', | ||
+ | ''[[Snake in the Grass]]'', | ||
+ | |||
+ | ''[[Tongue in Aspic]]'' | ||
+ | |||
+ | ''[[Nothing Sacred]]''. | ||
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In South Africa he was also known as a dress and costume designer. His costume and other designs include those for ''[[Auntie Mame]]'' (1965). ''[[Don't Stop the Carnival]]''; ''[[Excuse Me]]''; ''[[You Can't Fool Mrs Levene]]''; ''[[Musical Hall Revue]]''; ''[[Strike It Rich]]'', ''[[Strike It Richer]]'' and a musical version of Moliere's ''[[The Miser]]''. | In South Africa he was also known as a dress and costume designer. His costume and other designs include those for ''[[Auntie Mame]]'' (1965). ''[[Don't Stop the Carnival]]''; ''[[Excuse Me]]''; ''[[You Can't Fool Mrs Levene]]''; ''[[Musical Hall Revue]]''; ''[[Strike It Rich]]'', ''[[Strike It Richer]]'' and a musical version of Moliere's ''[[The Miser]]''. | ||
+ | |||
+ | he In South Africa he wrote and appeared in ''[[Adam's Apple]]'', ''[[Snake in the Grass]]'', the sensationally successful ''[[Let Your Hair Down]]'', ''[[Tongue in Aspic]]'' and ''[[Nothing Sacred]]''. ' (Programme of a run of ''[[Adam's Rib]]'' directed by [[Ricky Arden]] and starring [[Diane Wilson]] in July 1963) | ||
As playwright and lyricist, he was the author and creator of ''[[Adam's Rib]]''. He wrote the lyrics for [[Noel Langley]]'s ''[[Cage Me A Peacock]]'' and the additional lyrics for the stage version of the ''[[The Wizard of Oz]]'' and, | As playwright and lyricist, he was the author and creator of ''[[Adam's Rib]]''. He wrote the lyrics for [[Noel Langley]]'s ''[[Cage Me A Peacock]]'' and the additional lyrics for the stage version of the ''[[The Wizard of Oz]]'' and, |
Revision as of 06:53, 21 August 2023
Adam Leslie (1916-1979) was a designer, couturier, restaurateur, columnist, director, playwright, lyricist and performer of socio-political satire.
Contents
Biography
Born Leslie Jacobson in Salisbury on 22nd May, 1916,
He was trained in Paris and London as a designer, lyric writer and actor. He worked as a designer and writer in England for a number of years, returning to South Africa in 1956.
During the run of Cage Me A Peacock by Noel Langley and Eve Lynd, for which he was writing the lyrics in 1948-9 (including the songs Time alone will tell, Hocus Pocus and Hey ding-a-ding-ding[1]) he met Joan Blake, with whom he would do many shows later in South Africa.
While in England, he played character parts in a number of films for M.G.M., Warner Bros., Associated British and Ealing Films, and played cabaret in London's Savoy and Berkeley Hotels, the Bagatelle and Ciro's.
Leslie then returned to South Africa and is credited with establishing the intimate revue in South Africa. Between 1956 and 1977 he not only devised and directed more than thirty revues and cabarets which toured South Africa and both northern and Southern Rhodesia, but created, in the Adam Leslie Theatre, one of the major theatrical showplaces in the country.
As a journalist and critic he was also influential, inter alia writing a vitriolic column in the Sunday Express, called Eavesdrop With Adam.
In 1967 Leslie converted a building in Doornfontein, Johannesburg, designed by Sir Herbert Baker in 1906, into the Adam Leslie Theatre. Until its closure in 1975 this theatre was the only permanent venue for intimate revue in South Africa.
He died in Johannesburg on 25th April 1979.
The London Years
As playwright and lyricist, he was the author and creator of Adam's Rib. He wrote the lyrics for Noel Langley's Cage Me A Peacock, for Audrey Hepburn's first London show Sauce Piquante, and the additional lyrics for the stage version of the The Wizard of Oz. Among his own London shows were pieces like Take a Peep and The Gaieties.
Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance
Through his many productions, an astringent blend of topical satire and entertainment, that reflected the social, political and theatrical issues of the time, Leslie established intimate revue as a popular theatrical form in South Africa in a critical time.
Between 1956 and 1977 he contributed to, devised and/or directed more than 30 revues, cabarets and music-hall productions, many put on in the Adam Leslie Theatre in Johannesburg. Among them:
Sextet (with Anthony Farmer and Ralph Trewhela, 1957),
Let Your Hair Down (1958),
Two’s Company (1960-1961),
Hair Hair (1970-1972),
Leslie also promoted many performers, including Joan Blake, Heather Lloyd-Jones, Diane Wilson, Richard Loring and Shelagh Holliday.
In South Africa he was also known as a dress and costume designer. His costume and other designs include those for Auntie Mame (1965). Don't Stop the Carnival; Excuse Me; You Can't Fool Mrs Levene; Musical Hall Revue; Strike It Rich, Strike It Richer and a musical version of Moliere's The Miser.
he In South Africa he wrote and appeared in Adam's Apple, Snake in the Grass, the sensationally successful Let Your Hair Down, Tongue in Aspic and Nothing Sacred. ' (Programme of a run of Adam's Rib directed by Ricky Arden and starring Diane Wilson in July 1963)
As playwright and lyricist, he was the author and creator of Adam's Rib. He wrote the lyrics for Noel Langley's Cage Me A Peacock and the additional lyrics for the stage version of the The Wizard of Oz and,
His London shows were Take a Peep, The Gaieties and he wrote for Audrey Hepburn's first London show Sauce Piquante. In South Africa he wrote and appeared in Adam's Apple, Snake in the Grass, the sensationally successful Let Your Hair Down, Tongue in Aspic and Nothing Sacred. ' (Programme of a run of Adam's Rib directed by Ricky Arden and starring Diane Wilson in July 1963)
He starred in the cabaret Adam and Joan at Cicero's, the fashionable nightclub in Johannesburg with Joan Blake in 1957. This led to a series of revues which took the town by storm.
The beginning of 1959 saw the continuing success of Leslie’s smash hit revue, Let Your Hair Down. It was staged at the Intimate Theatre (formerly the YMCA) as 1958 drew to its close, starring Leslie himself, Joan Blake, Hilda Kriseman, visiting American Eric Micklewood, and a three-girl chorus. He joined forces with Anthony Farmer and composer Ralph Trewhela to create the satirical revue I Spy in 1959. He wrote and starred in For Love or Money which was the inaugural production of the Playhouse in October 1960. Michael Finlayson directed this show also starring Joan Blake, Olive King, and comedian Garth Meade. He staged Anthony Newley’s revue Stop the World – I Want to Get Off, starring Anna Quayle and Michael McGovern for the Reps in 1964. Albert Ninio directed this production which ran for fourteen weeks and formed part of the Johannesburg Festival.
He did costumes for Jerome Lawrence and Robert E. Lee’s Auntie Mame which Taubie Kushlick directed at the Brooke Theatre in 1965. Shirley Hepburn starred in the title role. He presented The Merry Minstrel Show at the Intimate in September 1966. Circa 1967 he had been presenting shows almost continuously for roughly a year, including Adam Leslie Repeats. He staged the revue Strike it Rich in 1967, starring himself, Joan Blake, George Korelin and Judy Layne.
As a critic, he wrote a vitriolic column in the Sunday Express, called Eavesdrop With Adam.
The Adam Leslie Theatre
Together with his partner, Bill Hudson, he restored the old College of Music of Johannesburg, and so The Adam Leslie Theatre opened its doors on 27 August 1967 with the show Music Hall Revue, starring Adam Leslie and Joan Blake. It was directed and designed by Anthony Farmer. Marjorie Gordon replaced Joan during the run.
Sources
Hair Hair programme notes, 19**.
Tucker, Percy 1997. Just the Ticket. My 50 Years in Show Business. Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press.
Various entries in the NELM catalogue.
Mervyn McMurtry, 1995. Adam Leslie and his contribution to satire in intimate review in South African theatre. South African Theatre Journal, 9(1):3-27.
Programme of a run of Adam's Rib directed by Ricky Arden in ???.
Ian Gray 1973. There's a theatre on the way upstairs. In: Showbiz South Africa. June, 1973: p.42.
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