Gabrielle Ray

'Gabrielle Ray said, 'I am always dancing; I love it! When I don't dance, I sing. What else is there to do?'

Flying Colours – The Graphic – Saturday 23rd September 1916


“BAIRNSFATHERLAND”

IN “Flying Colours” we have a typical Hippodrome revue, with big scenes, an army of pretty girls and many catchy songs, the inimitable Little Tich figuring as the leading comedian. Miss Ray Cox, an American newcomer, gets many a laugh out of a lesson in horsemanship, but the outstanding feature of the entertainment is the “Bairnsfatherland” sketch. Countless experts have agreed that in his pictures in The Bystander Captain Bruce Bairnsfather has expressed trench life to a nicety; but in the dramatised version the whole thing assumes a strange and more gripping reality. We see the trench-dwellers doing their work, joking as if there was no such thing in the world as danger, and singing funny parodies to the accompaniment of German shells, so that, judging by their attitude towards life as they find it, we can sympathise with Bert when he explains that he joined the Army because he was “fed up with the War.” Mr. John Humphries takes the part of the familiar walrus-featured out-since-Mons (aged 800 come next Push, as we are told!) – a splendid performance; in the opinion of Captain Bairnsfather, true to the very life. Nobody, young or old, should miss seeing “Bairnsfatherland,” for it is certainly one of the most realistic things in the whole history of stagecraft.

 

The Graphic – Saturday 23rd September 1916

April 10, 2023 - Posted by | Actress, Flying Colours, Gabrielle Ray, Social History, Uncategorized | , , , , , , , , ,

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