Brooks, Helen and Hanna, Emma (2019) 'A Night in the West End, 1914-1918': A Lecture-Concert. [Performance]
'A Night in the West End, 1914-1918': A Lecture-Concert (Download) ... (446kB)
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'A Night in the West End, 1914-1918': A Lecture-Concert (Download) ... (49kB)
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| Type of Research: | Performance | ||||
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| Creators: | Brooks, Helen and Hanna, Emma | ||||
| Description: | In August 1914 theatre managers were worried about the impact of the war on their businesses. Yet rather than causing a decline in theatre-going, the war provided a much-needed boost to the British theatre industry. Across the country theatres played a vital role in the war effort: encouraging recruitment, raising money for various war charities, and, maintaining the morale of both civilians and service personnel. London theatres, with their proximity to the train stations at which men would disembark for their short periods of leave, had a particular role to play. To men on leave from the front, as B. F. Findon wrote, ‘a good entertainment is one of the best panaceas for the physical and mental stress to which they are subjected [when] they are ‘facing the music' in the trenches. Two hours and a half in a London theatre is a fine tonic. It makes them, for the time being, forget the past, enjoy the present, and provides pleasurable reminiscences when they have to endure the grim realities of war’. It was a sentiment echoed across both the media and in official announcements. ‘The people’s amusements’ as Lord Derby announced in January 1917 ‘should go on’ and ‘those who come home should be met with cheerful faces, and their time away from the trenches made amusing’. In this lecture-concert Dr Emma Hanna and Dr Helen Brooks bring together their respective expertise in the histories of wartime music and wartime theatre to explore the story of the wartime West End. With the Invicta Concert Band and professional singers bringing the songs to life, this is a unique opportunity to experience the music and stories from some of the biggest hits of the war years, including Chu Chin Chow, A Little Bit of Fluff, and The Bing Boys Are Here. |
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| Official Website: | https://kar.kent.ac.uk/73664/ | ||||
| Keywords/subjects not otherwise listed: | music, musicals, First World War, Great War, theatre, West-End, London, wartime, culture | ||||
| Publisher/Broadcaster/Company: | Gateways to the First World War, AHRC Centre for Public Engagement with the First World War Centenary | ||||
| Your affiliations with UAL: | Colleges > Central Saint Martins | ||||
| Date: | 2019 | ||||
| Locations / Venues: | Location From Date To Date Westgate Hall, Canterbury 27 April 2019 |
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| Date Deposited: | 12 Mar 2026 15:37 | ||||
| Last Modified: | 12 Mar 2026 15:37 | ||||
| Item ID: | 25927 | ||||
| URI: | https://ualresearchonline.arts.ac.uk/id/eprint/25927 | ||||
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