Media History Digital Library - Magazines

About Leslie Howard

Theatre
[Work In Progress]

Radio

Photos and Articles

Movies
[Work In Progress]

Theatre • the Show, the Producer, the Critic, the Audience

Thursday, September 8, 2016

Leslie Howard's Rules of Theatre Etiquette

[Leslie Howard as Oliver Blayds-Conway in The Truth About Blayds
by A. A. MilneBooth Theatre, New York, March 14 to June 1922,

108 Performances]

Leslie Howard's Rules of Theatre Etiquette:
  1. Don't ask the box office man if it's a good play.
  2. Don't have any faith in dramatic critics, the star system, press agents, photographs in the newspapers, or articles by actors.
  3. Don't try to buy tickets for a play an hour before the performance.

Wednesday, September 7, 2016

Real or Imagined?

[Leslie Howard with Archie Mayo
on the set of It's Love I'm After, 1937]

Leslie Howard's son, Ronald "Wink" Howard, talks about his father's shyness:

"As far as living in Hollywood was concerned Leslie had always kept a pretty low profile, not from any innate hostility to the place, but simply because he was not a very social animal. He was rarely seen 'around and

Monday, September 5, 2016

My Chronology of Leslie Howard's Life


[Leslie Howard with his children, Doodie and Wink,
at their home Stowe Maries, at Dorking in Surrey c. 1939]

I have now been working on my "Chronology of Leslie Howard's Life" for months and have just made it halfway through his professional life—to 1930, where his movie career now begins. This is monumental for me. I cannot tell you how difficult it has been to put the pieces of Howard's life together in a meaningful sequence. I have outlined the reasons this is so arduous in a note which can only be viewed by clicking the link in the Chronology, or by clicking here. I am not going to rehash all those reasons in this post, but I will talk about the most primary among them.