Basil Rubin
(19*-) Impressario. ** A wine chemist and the son of a cinema owner. He owned the Pinewood Cinema in Pinelands circa 1963. He presented bio-vaudeville programmes – live entertainment preceding the film – with Pieter Toerien. He formed Toerien and Rubin and staged many variety shows topped by visiting British artists such as vocalist Alma Cogan and Dickie Valentine, booked by Hugo Keleti. Toerien-Rubin brought out the English comedians Dora Bryan and Alfred Marks in 1964. Together with Pieter Toerien he staged James Ambrose-Brown’s The Years of the Locust at the Alexander Theatre, starring Johann Nell, Frank Shelley and Yvonne Bryceland in 1966. Together with Toerien he brought Russ Conway back to the Civic in 1967. Together with Toerien he brought Hollywood dancer-actress Cyd Charisse and her husband, Tony Martin to the Civic in August 1967. Together with Pieter Toerien he presented Aleksei Arbuzov’s The Promise, starring English actor Andrew Ray, John Fraser and Olive MacFarlane here in 1967. It was directed by Leonard Schach. Toerien-Rubin also staged the revue Maggie and Frank, starring Maggie Soboil and Frank Lazarus, at the Brooke in 1967. Together with Toerien he started importing complete productions from the West End, starting with Oscar Wilde’s An Ideal Husband, starring Richard Todd, Jean Kent, Vanessa Lee, Peter Graves, Derek Bond and Joyce Grant in 1969. They also brought Dames at Sea to the Alexander from America, directed by Don Liberto and Jimmy Edwards’ London hit Big Bad Mouse, starring Cardew Robinson and Bess Finney circa 1969. Together with Shirley Firth and Toerien he stepped forward as new management of the Intimate in 1969. Their first co-production was The Secretary Bird which was directed by Kerry Jordan and starred Jeremy Hawk, Shelagh Holliday, Ivan Berold and Firth. Toerien-Rubin staged Noël Coward’s Fallen Angels at the Alexander circa 1970. It starred Hermione Gingold and Joan Heal. Toerien, Rubin and Firth staged Anthony Shaffer’s thriller Sleuth, starring Ralph Michael and Nicholas Amer, and directed by Warren Jenkins at the Intimate circa 1970. Toerien-Rubin brought director Anthony Sharp and actors Cicely Courtneidge, Jack Hulbert, Roger Livesey, Ursula Jeans, David Kossoff and Robertson Hare from London to star in Oh, Clarence at the Civic circa 1970. He presented Mummenschanz at the Civic in 1984. In association with the Market he presented Herb Gardiner’s I’m not Rappaport in 1986. In association with CAPAB he presented William Luce’s Zelda at the Adcock-Ingram in August 1987. He co-presented Panorama with Pieter-Dirk Uys at the Alexander in 1987.
Sources
Tucker, 1997
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