Douglas Byng
Douglas Coy Byng (17 March 1893 – 24 August 1987) was an English comic singer and songwriter in
Early life
Byng was born on 17 March 1893 in
In 1914 Byng answered an advertisement for a light comedian for a seaside concert party and made his first appearance on stage at Hastings. At the age of 21, playing a middle-aged diplomat, he toured more than a hundred towns in the musical comedy The Girl in the Taxi. He continued his theatre work throughout the war, playing character parts in touring comedies and eventually achieving a juvenile lead in 1920.
Between the wars
In the 1920s he took to pantomime, playing the Grand Vizier in Aladdin at the London Palladium in 1921, and in 1924 creating the first of his many pantomime dames as Eliza in Dick Whittington and His Cat at the New Theatre Oxford.[3] In 1925 Byng appeared at the London Pavilion in C. B. Cochran's revue On with the Dance, written by Noël Coward. Byng remained with Cochran for five years in a succession of revues. During this period he opened his own nightclub, The Kinde Dragon, off St Martin's Lane in central London,[2] where he first performed the cabaret drag songs for which he is best remembered, described by the critic Sheridan Morley as "a curious mixture of sophistication, schoolboy humour and double entendre."[3] An example is his Mexican Minnie:
- Come where the heat from the sun's burning rays
Gets you so gaga you tear off your stays!
I'm Mexican Minnie, all jolly and ginny
I loll in the mountains all day.
Though I'm well off the map, I'm just covered in slap,
Luring brigands to come and play ha'penny nap.
But they get very reckless, and will stay to breakfast
Then go off refusing to pay.
I say, "Well you can go,
"I'm sick of the gang, so
"You shan't see my tango today!"[4]
Byng's skill in performance was said to vanquish prudery, but in reality his material was never crude. His famous numbers included: "Sex Appeal Sarah", "Milly the Messy Old Mermaid" and "The Lass who Leaned against the Tower of Pisa". His "Doris, the Goddess of Wind" was revived in
In 1931 Byng appeared in cabaret at the Club Lido, in
During the
Later years
Byng never really retired from the stage and was working in his late eighties. His career was revived when he made a guest appearance on the BBC's Parkinson show in 1977 with Carol Channing.
In the last years of his life he briefly teamed up with another veteran variety artiste, Billy Milton, in the touring revue Those Thirties Memories, directed by Patrick Newley. He made his last appearance in 1987 in a one-man show at the National Theatre in London at the age of 93.[1] He also wrote an autobiography, As You Were (1970). He features prominently in Patrick Newley's autobiographical memoir The Krays and Bette Davis (2005).
Byng finally moved to
, England. He composed his own epitaph:- So here you are, old Douglas, a derelict at last.
Before your eyes what visions rise of your vermilion past.
Mad revelry beneath the stars, hot clasping by the lake.
You need not sigh, you can't deny, you've had your bit of cake.
He died on 24 August 1987 aged 94. His ashes were scattered outside his former home in Arundel Terrace, Brighton. A Brighton bus is named after him.
Notes
- ^ a b Simon Callow, Review of "Bawdy But British" by Patrick Newley
- ^ ISBN 978-1-78340-066-9, pp.155-157
- ^ a b c d e f Morley, pp. 57–58
- ^ Zonophone record Zono 5672, January 1930
- ^ Coveney, Michael. "The Habit of Art" Archived 31 January 2010 at the Wayback Machine, What's on Stage, accessed 8 May 2010
- ^ The Times, 7 July 1938, p. 14
References
- Massingberd, Hugh. The very best of The Daily Telegraph Obituaries, p. 20, Pan, 2001.
- Morley, Sheridan. The Great Stage Stars, Angus & Robertson, London, 1986. ISBN 0-8160-1401-9.