Evelyn Laye OBE (10 July 1900 – 17 February 1996) was a
British actress and singer who had a career that nearly spanned 80
years. Between the two world wars Evelyn was London’s most successful star of
stage musicals and operettas.
Born Elsie Evelyn Lay in Bloomsbury, London, England,
Laye
made her first stage appearance in August 1915 at the Theatre Royal,
Brighton as Nang-Ping in Mr. Wu, and her first London appearance at the East
Ham Palace on 24 April, 1916, in the revue Honi Soit, in which she subsequently
toured. She appeared in a minor role at The Gaiety Theatre in The Beauty Spot
(1917), but the following year she achieved stardom in Going Up!, one of the
first aviation musicals.

In 1920 she was Bessie Brent in a revival of the first
Gaiety musical-comedy, The Shop Girl. Among her successes during the 1920s were
Madame Pompadour (1923), The Dollar Princess and Lilac Time. She made her
Broadway debut
in 1929 in Noel Coward's Bitter Sweet and became a favourite both sides of the Atlantic.
in 1929 in Noel Coward's Bitter Sweet and became a favourite both sides of the Atlantic.
In 1925 Laye fell in love with and married the light
comedian Sonnie Hale, much against the wishes of her parents, who refused to
attend her wedding or to give her a reception afterwards. Since she had never
before been separated from them, her deep distress soon led to a
reconciliation, but it may well have been the strain that this must have
imposed on the marriage that led Hale to abandon her in 1928 for another
emerging talent, Jessie Matthews. The break-up led to the greatest mistake of
her career.
Imported to Hollywood by producer Samuel Goldwyn in 1930,
Evelyn Laye immediately laid an egg. It wasn't her fault, though;
she was
extremely pretty and competently sang "Along the Road of Dreams" but
One Heavenly Night's libretto was totally manufactured and leading man John
Boles stiff as a board. As a consequence of the operetta failure, Goldwyn
refused to ever cast Laye, Boles, Lilyan Tashman, and even comedian Leon Errol
in any future ventures. There would be several subsequent Hollywood films and
she was back on Broadway in Sweet Aloes (1936) and Between the Devil but she
was never as successful in America as in London's West End.

On the outbreak of war, she immediately volunteered to
sing for the troops, and, on the formation of Ensa, she was put in command of
all entertainments for the Navy. She also did her last Cochran show, Lights Up, at the Savoy, as
well as three musicals, all of which were adversely affected by the wartime
bombing.
When the war finished, she made a success, even if it was not a smash
hit, of the Yvonne Printemps roles in Oscar Straus's Three Waltzes (Prince's
1945), and, for the next nine years, developed her acting skills, largely in a
series of touring versions of West End successes.

She acted several times opposite her second husband, the
actor Frank Lawton, including in the 1956 sitcom My Husband and I. Her other
stage successes included Silver Wedding (1957) with Lawton, and The Amorous
Prawn (1959) and Phil the Fluter (1969).
Awarded an OBE in 1973, Laye continued acting well into
her
nineties. One of her last appearances was in Sondheim's A Little Night
Music in 1979.It was reported after Laye's death that Queen Elizabeth, the
Queen Mother had planned to try to get her knighted (created a DBE) even though
Laye was already in her 90s.

Her acting career ranks as one of the longest in British
theatre. During a tribute in 1992 at the London Palladium the actor Sir John
Mills described her as "the fairest prima donna this side of heaven".
She died in London from respiratory failure at the age of
95.
(info various sources, mainly Wikipedia)
2 comments:
Hi Bob, I just came across this. I'm a great operetta fan. Any chance of a re-up on this if you still have it? Thanks for all of your great uploads
Hello RayK, Sorry but I just cannot find the album in question. Mind you a lot of albums have come and gone in the 9 years since I posted it! But hopefully this double CD from Avid will cheer you up!
For “Evelyn Laye - Queen Of Musical Comedy (2009 Avid Entertainment)” go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/ZeeSfLLA
1. I'll See You Again
2. The Guards' Brigade
3. Vilia
4. Maxim's
5. I Love You So (The Merry Widow Waltz)
6. Love Me Now
7. Do I Do Wrong? (with Geoffrey Gwyther)
8. Lover, Come Back To Me
9. The Girl on the Prow
10. Wanting You (with Howett Worster)
11. One Kiss
12. The Call of Life
13. Dear Little Café
14. Zigeuner
15. Heavenly Night (with John Boles)
16. A Glass of Golden Bubbles (Champagne Song) (with George Baker)
17. Butterfly Song
18. The Princess's Awakening
19. Near and Yet So Far
20. Brave Hearts
21. Love is a Song
22. My Home in Tralee
23. I Wait for You
24. Brindisi (Libiamo, ne' lieti calici) (with Browning Mummery)
25. The Night is Young (with Ramon Novarro)
26. When I Grow Too Old to Dream
27. Land of Hope and Glory
28. Let the People Sing
29. I See Your Face Before Me
30. My Nicolo
31. Love Never Comes Too Late (with Richard Tauber)
32. Love Live For Ever (And Rule My Heart)
33. Nobody Could Love You More (with Richard Tauber)
34. Our Love
35. My Life Belongs to You
36. If I Should Fall in Love Again (with John McCormack)
37. Only a Glass of Champagne
38. You've Done Something to My Heart
39. I'm Going to See You Today
40. Love is My Reason
41. Forever (The Second Waltz)
42. How Can Words Content A Lover? (The Third Waltz)
43. A Man is a Man
44. In the Pink
45. They Don't Make Them Like That Anymore
46. And You Like It with Mark Wynter
47. Liaisons
48. I Remember It Well (with Harry Secombe)
49. If You Were the Only Girl in the World (with Roy Hudd)
50. Where Have I Put My Glasses?
51. Where Are the Songs We Sung?
52. Mrs Worthington
53. Thank You
54. When I Grow Too Old to Dream (reprise)
55. I'll See You Again
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