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Stan Laurel first visited Vancouver in early
May, 1911 as part of Fred Karno's
entertainment troupe.
Celebrities in Vancouver
Even
when Vancouver was very young and very small, famous people began
to drop by. Sometimes they werent famous yet: on May 8, 1911,
when Fred Karnos entertainment troupe from England began a
week-long engagement at the Orpheum Theatre (not the present one)
at Pender and Howe Streets, one of the performers was a hugely gifted
22-year-old Charlie Chaplin. Three years later hed
start his fabled movie career. There is a legend that Hollywood
movie maker Mack Sennett was in the Vancouver audience and immediately
spotted Chaplins potential, but, alas, that claim has been
made by a hundred other places. The record is clear: Sennett saw
Chaplin in New York City.
Stan Laurel, of Laurel and
Hardy fame, was another Karno star, and first appeared here from
May 1 to 6, 1911. He left the company in August, 1911, but returned
in time to be with them again on their visits here December 30,
1912 and September 8, 1913. For a very detailed chronology of Stans
visits here (and Charlie Chaplins, too) go to this
site set up by A.J. Marriot.
Rudyard Kipling was in Vancouver
no fewer than three times, the first in 1892, and even bought land
here.
In 1891, a full 20 years before
Charlie Chaplins appearance, the CPR built an entertainment
palace called the Vancouver Opera House. In a town of 13,000 people
this awesome edifice had 2,000 seats. It was an astonishingly grand
theatre for such a tiny town, but an indication of the CPRs
optimistic view of the future. The optimism was justified: The Opera
House became the centre of the citys social life and a whole
galaxy of glittering stars trod its boards.
Warning:
some of these names are no longer familiar, but they were BIG in
their time. The first production at the Opera House, for example,
was Wagners Lohengrin, starring the famous Vienna-born soprano
Emma Juch. Tetrazzini sang here, so did Mary Garden,
Schumann-Heink and John McCormack (right). Violinist
Mischa Elman played here, as did Paderewski, and Rachmaninoff,
and John Philip Sousa brought his band.
Sarah Bernhardt performed
in this place. Attendance dropped off drastically after the first
performance when it was realized she performed only in French.
In
1910 famed ballerina Anna Pavlova (left)danced here, and
was so taken with her receptionthe critics went beyond enthusiasm
into something approaching worshipshe wrote about it in a
memoir.
Around
1910 an English-born actor named William Pratt was looking for stage
work here, and finding only fitful success. He took a part-time
job as a carpenter helping to build what we know today as the PNE.
He later went to Hollywood, changed his name to Boris Karloff
and became a monstrous star. Another future Hollywood star was here
about the same time: his name was Victor McLaglen and in
1909 he was a boxer. He fought world heavyweight champion Jack Johnson
in Johnsons first fight after winning the championship, and
that bout was in Vancouver. It was a non-title fight, and McLaglen,
26, was a non-winner, but he made up for it by going down to Hollywood,
appearing in more than 100 movies, and winning an Oscar in 1935
in The Informer. (He was also terrific in The Quiet Man.)
One of the few comics to make it
big on stage, and on radio, and on television, was Jack Benny.
He was in Vancouver in the early 1920s, appearing on the same bill
as the Marx Brothers, and met his future wife here. Her name
was Sadie Marks (Seattle-born, but she grew up here), but when they
later married she changed it to Mary Livingstone. Jack Bennys
connection with Vancouver and the Orpheum Theatre was a warm and
genuine one, and spanned nearly 60 years. He played a major part
in raising funds in the 1970s to help save the Orpheum from conversion
to a cinema multiplex.
Speaking
of comedians and the Orpheum, Bob Hope appeared on stage
at the earlier theatre of that name. When he came back to town many
years later, this time in the present Orpheum, Hope spoke of his
earlier visit and told the audience hed come back to apologize.
Bing Crosby visited often,
even officially opening Vancouvers Sunset Community Centre.
(Bing was once refused a room at the Hotel Vancouver when he walked
in with a few days growth of beard and very informally dressed
to be met by a reservation clerk who didnt recognize him.)
The first U.S. president to visit
Canada was Warren Harding, who chose Vancouver as the place
to touch down. That was in 1923, and 50,000 of us turned out to
hear him speak in Stanley Park. Theres a monument at the very
spot to this day. It went up in remembrance of Harding, who died
in San Francisco exactly one week after his visit here. Another
presidential visit was in 1993 when Bill Clinton and Russian
president Boris Yeltsin held the Vancouver Summit
here.
In 1933 the American entertainer
Texas Guinan, a big star in her dayin 1926 she made
$700,000died of amoebic dysentery at Vancouver General Hospital,
failing to rally after an operation. She was just 43, was in town
with her show. Texas was a singer and nightclub owner, famous in
the 1920s for greeting her club patrons with Hello, sucker!
Her clubs were continually being shut down and she was continually
being arrested. "Im natures gift to the padlock
makers," she once said. Somehow in Prohibition days you could
always get a drink at Texas's clubs. When he came here in 1959 Errol
Flynn mentioned Texas Guinan, and told reporters that Vancouver
would be a good city to die in. He was as good as his word, dying
here a few days after his arrival.
In 1936 a future superstar, appearing
in a touring show with other gifted up-and-comers, sat down and
wrote his mom in Hoboken, New Jersey. Frank Sinatra was one
of the singing Hoboken Four, and he was feeling homesick for the
town and his Mom who was, reputedly, a very good cook.
Another
entertainment icon, Gary Cooper, was the subject of one of
Orpheum Theatre manager Ivan Ackerys funnier stories.
Cooper came to Vancouver often and became friends with Ackery. One
night, after a staff party at the theatre, the two came stumbling
out onto Seymour Street very early one morning and Cooper hitched
a ride to the Hotel Vancouver on a street-cleaning machine!
Province
writer David Spaner has written extensively on famous visitors
to Vancouver, and may even write a book on the subject. In The
Greater Vancouver Book, he cites a 1989 visit by boxer Mike
Tyson. The boxer arrived in Vancouver, David writes,
where his estranged wife Robin Givens was shooting
a TV movie called The Penthouse. When he arrived at her lodgings,
the Hotel Vancouver, he was greeted by newspaper and television
cameras. He grabbed a camera from a Vancouver Sun photographer
and threw it against the wall, then lunged at a BCTV camera, ripping
away its viewfinder and smashing it to the floor. Tyson tried to
grab the television camera, but the cameraman escaped through a
revolving door.
David would have a lot to work with
for that book: besides all the people cited above, weve been
visited by Elvis Presley, the Beatles, the Rolling
Stones, Lenny Bruce, Bob Dylan, Howard Hughes,
Brooks Robinson (he played here briefly in the PCL, would
later become the only member of baseballs Hall of Fame to
have played in Vancouver), writer Malcolm Lowry (who wrote
much of Under the Volcano in a squatters shack on the
North Vancouver mud flats), music hall star Marie Lloyd (who
in 1914 was banned from the stage here for performing a song called
The Ankle Watch, during which she lifted her floor length
gown two inches, just enough to show her ankle, the brazen hussy)
and a whole galaxy of opera stars like Joan Sutherland, Richard
Bonynge, Marilyn Horne and Jessye Norman.
Then there is a whole galaxy of
rock stars, pop and folk and country and jazz performers . . . and
the artists brought in by impresario Lily Laverock. During
the 1920s, 1930s and part of the 1940s, she brought in an eye-popping
array of world-level performers. To name them all would double the
length of this article!
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