German Reed Entertainment was founded in 1855 and operated by
Thomas German Reed (1817–1888)
together with his wife,
Priscilla Reed
née Horton (1818–1895). At a time when the theatre in London
was seen as a disreputable place, the German Reed family provided
family-friendly entertainments for forty years, showing that
respectable theatre could be popular.
The
entertainments were held at the intimate Royal Gallery of
Illustration
, Lower Regent Street, and later at St. George's
Hall
, Langham Place, in London. Thomas and
Priscilla German Reed usually appeared in them, together with a
small group of players. They engaged talented newcomers, such as
Frederic Clay,
W. S. Gilbert and
Arthur
Law, as well as established writers like
F. C. Burnand, to create many of the entertainments.
Thomas German Reed composed the music for many of the
entertainments himself.
The German Reed theatrical revolution
This form of entertainment consisted of musical plays "of a refined
nature". During the early
Victorian
era, visiting the theatre was considered distasteful to the
respectable public.
Shakespeare was
played, but the London stage became dominated by risque
burlesques and bad adaptations of French
operettas.
Jessie Bond
wrote,
- "The stage was at a low ebb, Elizabethan glories and
Georgian artificialities had alike faded into the past, stilted
tragedy and vulgar farce were all the would-be playgoer had to
choose from, and the theatre had become a place of evil repute to
the righteous British householder.... A first effort to
bridge the gap was made by the German Reed
Entertainers....
The German Reed Entertainments became the first respectable venue
for dramatic amusement to which the public could safely bring their
children, presenting gentle, intelligent, comic musical
entertainment. Their example showed that respectable theatre could
be popular and encouraging successors such as
Gilbert and Sullivan.
Forty years of entertainments
Early years
In 1855, the first performance of "Miss P.
Horton's Illustrative
Gatherings," took place at St. Martin's Hall
, with Thomas playing the piano. Mrs. Reed
had been a popular performer of operetta, Shakespeare and other
theatre pieces since the 1830s. The Reeds' entertainments
consisted, at first, of character sketches and songs by the Reeds.
In 1856, the entertainments moved to the more intimate Gallery of
Illustration. These eventually became "Mr. and Mrs. German Reeds
Entertainments". They called the establishment, euphemistically,
the "Gallery of Illustration," rather than a theatre, the actors
were "entertainers", and the pieces were called "entertainments" or
"illustrations", eschewing the words "play", "extravaganza",
"
melodrama" or "
burlesque". Reed himself composed the
music for many of these pieces and often appeared in them, along
with Mrs. German Reed. There was nothing else like this
establishment in London, and the Gallery rapidly achieved
popularity.
The Gallery was an intimate 500-seat theatre. The accompaniment
consisted of piano at first, and later also a harmonium and
sometimes a harp. At first, the entertainments utilized a cast of
three; but by the mid-1860s, they had expanded to pieces with a
cast of four. Often the pieces' plots involved mistaken identities
and disguises. From 1860 to 1868, the German Reeds were assisted by
John Orlando Parry, a pianist,
mimic, parodist and humorous singer (one of
George Grossmith's inspirations). He
created a new type of musical and dramatic monologue that became
popular. The earliest entertainments included
Holly Lodge
and
The Enraged Musicians (1855); William Brough's
A
Month from Home and
My Unfinished Opera (1857);
The Pyramid by
Shirley
Brooks (1864);
The Peculiar Family by Brough (1865);
The Yachting Cruise by
F.
C. Burnand (1866);
Our Quiet Chateau by
Robert Reece (1867); and
Inquire
Within by Burnand (1868).
As time went on, the Reeds added a dramatic pieces and brief
comic operas designed for a small number
of characters. Reed experimented with what he called
opera di
camera - small chamber operas by young composers. The German
Reeds were able to attract fine young composers such as Molloy,
Frederic Clay,
Arthur Sullivan,
King Hall. and
Alfred Cellier, the best scenic designers for
their tiny stage, and the best young writers from
Punch and
Fun magazines.
Later years

Gilbert's last German Reed
Entertainment, 1875
The dramatist
W. S. Gilbert wrote
the librettos for six entertainments presented by the German Reeds
from 1869 to 1875, some of them with music by Reed himself,
including
No Cards,
Ages Ago,
Our
Island Home,
A Sensation
Novel,
Happy
Arcadia, and
Eyes and No
Eyes. Several of these pieces had ideas in embryonic form
that would later re-appear in the Savoy Operas.
Ages Ago,
for instance, had a gallery of portraits that come to life, an idea
re-used in
Ruddigore.
Mrs. German Reed's performances
inspired Gilbert to create some of his famous contralto roles.
German Reed also mounted the first professional production of
Arthur Sullivan and
F. C.
Burnand's
Cox and Box and commissioned a second opera
from the pair,
The
Contrabandista. Given the German Reeds' role in both
Gilbert's and Sullivan's first operatic successes, one wag
commented that the
Gilbert and
Sullivan operas were "cradled among the Reeds."
Arthur Cecil joined the German Reeds in
No Cards in 1869, remaining for five years.
Fanny Holland first performed at the Gallery
in 1869 in
Ages Ago and appeared in scores of the
entertainments continuously until 1895, except for two years at
other theatres. In 1870,
Richard
Corney Grain, a clever, refined, and humorous society
entertainer (a great friend and rival of Grossmith's), appeared in
his first Gallery entertainment,
Our Island Home, soon
performing his own sketches, taking over where Parry had left off.
He also remained with the German Reeds until 1895 Annie Sinclair,
and later Carlotta Carrington, were also a frequent players with
the German Reeds.

Corney Grain and Alfred Reed both died
in 1895
Other German Reed entertainments included
Our Quiet
Chateau (1868) by Reece with music by Virginia Gabriel;
Inquire Within (1868, Parry's last entertainment);
Beggar My Neighbour (1870) and
Number 204, by
Burnand;
Near Relations (1871) by Arthur Sketchley;
King Christmas (1871, the first appearance by the German
Reeds' son, Alfred);
Charity Begins at Home (1872);
My
Aunt's Secret (1872);
Very Catching (1872);
Milord's Well (1873);
Dora's
Dream, with music by
Alfred
Cellier and words by Arthur Cecil (1873);
Once in a
Century by
Gilbert a Beckett;
In Possession;
Babel and Bijouand;
Back from
India by
Henry Pottinger
Stephens;
Our New Doll’s House by W. Wye.
After the retirement of Thomas, in 1871, his son, Alfred German
Reed (1846-1895), also an actor, carried on the business in
partnership with his mother and then with Grain. In 1874, they
moved the entertainments to the
St.
George's Hall, Regent Street, and the German Reeds also took
the entertainments on provincial tours. In 1874,
Leonora Braham (who created several of the
soprano heroine roles in the
Savoy Operas in the 1880s) joined the German
Reeds. Fanny Holland's husband
Arthur Law
also joined the company and wrote, as well as acted in, many of the
entertainments. Some of Law's pieces for the Gallery included
Enchantment,
A Night Surprise,
A Happy
Bungalow (1877),
Cherry Tree Farm (1881) and
Nobody’s Fault (1882), both with music by
Hamilton Clarke, and
All at Sea
(1881).
Mrs. German Reed retired in 1879. The deaths of Alfred German Reed
and Grain, both in 1895, ended the entertainments.
Notes
- Introduction to Jessie Bond's memoir
- Adams, p. 573
- The Times obituary of Grossmith, 2 March, 1912
- "Thomas German Reed" in the Dictionary of National
Biography, Lee, Sidney Ed. (1896) London: Smith, Elder &
Co., p. 395
- Charles King Hall was a British composer and organist who
supplied the music for at least nine of the entertainments,
including The Happy Bungalow in 1877 and Missing
in 1894.
- The Times, 2 June 1881, p. 8
- Review of Nobody’s Fault
- St George's Hall, Langham Place, Regent Street,
London", at the ArthurLloyd theatres website
References
External links