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THE D'OYLY CARTE OPERA COMPANY
H. Cooper Cliffe (1879-81, 1882, 1883) [Born Oxford 19 Jul 1862, died New York City 2 May 1939] The son of a
well-known actor and manger (Clifford Cooper) and an equally well-known
Shakespearian actress (Agnes Kemble), Henry Cooper Cliffe, was known as Henry
Cooper when he made his stage debut in Grimsby on July 21, 1879, two days after
his seventeenth birthday, in the chorus of H.M.S. Pinafore with D'Oyly
Carte's touring "Comedy Opera Company Ltd." On August 4, 1879, the Company
became known as Mr. D'Oyly Carte's "First Pinafore Company." The Company
disbanded on December 13, 1879, but H. Cooper Cliffe (still known as Henry
Cooper) was engaged as chorister and understudy with Carte's "D" Company,
touring The Sorcerer and H.M.S. Pinafore from March 1 to December
11, 1880. He appeared on occasion as J. W. Wells in The Sorcerer (June
1880) and as Dick Deadeye in Pinafore (December 1880). On December 27, "D" Company switched to The
Pirates of Penzance, and H. Cooper Cliffe (as he was now known) was the
Sergeant of Police. He left the Company (it had been redesignated "E" Company
in March) and the D'Oyly Carte organization on July 30, 1881, to make his first
appearance on the London Stage:as Podge in Stephens and Solomon's Claude
Duval at the Olympic on August 24, 1881, but returned to the D'Oyly Carte
fold briefly in 1882 (January-March) to tour in the somewhat larger role of
Boscat in Carte's touring production Claude Duval. In July 1882 he was
back in London:this time at the Globe:to appear as Tommy Merton in the original
production of The Vicar of Bray, but returned to the D'Oyly Carte for
the third and last time the following year, touring as Private Willis with Mr.
D'Oyly Carte's No. 2 Iolanthe Company from March to October 1883. Cliffe soon shifted
from comic opera to the dramatic stage.
He appeared regularly on the London Stage throughout the 1890s and until
1906. He was associated with Wilson
Barrett for ten of those years, in London, the provinces, and America. Cliffe emigrated to America permanently in
1906, but continued to perform well into his 70s. His last appearance in New York was as King James II in The
O'Flynn in December 1934. He was a cousin of Alice Barnett. |
| Page created August 27, 2001 | © 2001 David Stone |