Dancers in Mourning by Margery Allingham

Dancers in Mourning by Margery Allingham

published 1937




 

This is one of the few Allingham books that I have only read once, a long time ago. I remembered a lot about it, and it was so interesting to come back to it after more than 30 years. And – it was marvellous.

I recently reread Police at the Funeral, and slightly downgraded that – though it’s still an excellent book – while this one has moved up.  And I mentioned in that post a connection with this book.

A character from Police appears in Dancers, so is thus neither the murderer nor a victim. But this would only be a

 

SLIGHT SPOILER

 

if you were in the middle of reading Police at the Funeral.

 

 

If you are not: this is William Faraday – a character whom Allingham plainly softened to over time: he is not attractive at all when he first appears in the earlier book, but he turns into an amiable old buffer during the course of it, and that is definitely his role here.

Uncle William has written his memoirs, and they have proved wildly popular: the book has become a bestseller, and has been turned into a sellout West End musical. The book opens with Albert Campion being pulled, via Uncle W, into a problem at the theatre: the star lead, Jimmy Sutane, is being subjected to a campaign of harassment and Campion is going to look into this – mostly at Jimmy’s big house in the country. Other theatrical people are forever in and out of the house, there are tensions and problems, culminating in the death of a woman from the show, and then endless carnage and trouble...



Uncle William discusses matters with Campion:

‘We’ve landed ourselves among a funny crowd, my boy, haven’t we? A damned curious bandarloggy lot.’

‘Bandarloggy?’ he inquired.

‘Indian,’ explained Uncle William. ‘Means the “monkey people.” Got it out of the Jungle Book,’ he added modestly. ‘Got all my India for my memoirs out of the Jungle Book and Round the World in Eighty Days. Tried Kim but couldn’t get along with it. Funny things about those memoirs, Campion. If I’d done the decent thing and stuck to the truth no one would have read ’em. As it was, they laughed at me and I made a small fortune. I’m not a chump, you know. I can see how that happened. Better be a clown than a pompous old fool. Mother wouldn’t have realised that, though, and she was a clever woman, God rest her soul. I stumbled on it and it made me.’

I mentioned that my favourite passage in all Allingham appears in this book, and that is it. I included banderloggy into my own vocabulary after I first read it… (Rudyard Kipling has featured on the blog, see tag below)

William’s mother is the hideous Great Aunt Caroline - ‘Poor mother! No sense of comfort as we know it today’ – whom Allingham tries to present as eccentric and having a certain charm, though I am very firm in the previous post, and the comments, that I think she has sociopathic tendencies.

Something very important happens in this book: Albert Campion falls in love with Linda Sutane, Jimmy’s wife. For whatever reason, anyone who reads the series knows that he will not end up with her: Amanda Fitton hasn’t turned up yet. Let’s say Linda opens the way for Amanda…




This pic is a page of fashions of exactly the era: late on in the book Linda wears a yellow linen dress which will feature in Campion’s memory & pocket (a button falls off it & he keeps it) – I thought it might be second from the right, but all of them are the kinds of things Linda might have worn.

She was a small gold girl trimmed with brown, not very beautiful and not a vivid personality, but young and gentle and, above all, genuine...

Her gold skin was warm against the dark satin of her dress and her small face was alive and intelligent…

Her black suit with the pleated white collar was a Lelong, and the hat perched on her sleek hair gave her a new air of sophistication which he liked and found somehow comforting.

 


There aren’t many scenes in the theatre, but the musical The Buffer permeates the book, we get glimpses of numbers called The Little White Petticoats and The Leg o’Mutton Escapade. It sounds awful, the worst kind of fake Music Hall show.

There are some great bits of writing:

he was just about to walk out of his refuge when a light wind sprang up in the trees, swinging the shadows like clothes on a line.

Arch, inviting X was dead indeed. It was like the drawer closing on a last year’s hat.

 

And an absolutely wonderful scene following on from the inquest, where random people are at the house having terrible conversations, dropping bricks,  and being cringey with each other –

‘Oh, of course, you’re a relative, aren’t you?’ she said, turning round upon the other woman. ‘An aunt?’

‘Sister-in-law,’ snapped Mrs Pole, a dangerous light in her blue eyes. ‘More like a sister,’ she added defiantly.

and a description of a mourning outft – a subject we love on the blog.

There is a hint that one character, a young male dancer, is gay.

Campion’s excellent manservant Lugg appears late but is an absolute delight as he helps out in the theatrical household:.

‘There’s somethin’ chick about the stage,’ he added unexpectedly. ‘I don’t mind what I do so long as it’s not common.’

He is at his best here, every appearance a delight. Like this passing reference in a policeman’s report:

The man being discussed left ‘his other clothes strewn about for someone else to pack – your man, Mr Lugg, was very chatty on that question, by the way’

There is a tremendous atmosphere of the 1930s: the importance of theatre, the unimaginable fame of musical theatre stars, the fact that news is slow getting out on a Sunday.

The cycling club is of some importance – such clubs were very much a feature of the time.



There is a character whose first name is Squire, which has a most weird effect when the elegant upper-class  Linda says ‘You’ll be back tonight then, Squire?’, which one automatically hears in a certain, most un-Linda-ish, accent.

[Non-UK readers may not be aware that ‘squire’ is used as a mate-y nickname by Cockneys – perhaps like ‘pal’ or ‘chief’]

I had one question at the end: What about the inscription on the watch then?

I would now put this book in my top five of Allingham’s: it’s  compelling and excellent, a very good mystery, and gives a marvellous picture of its era and milieu.

Poster from Transport for London.

The black suit is by Lelong, from the Bergdorf Goodman collection at the NY Met.

Cycling cigarette card NYPL.

The dressing room photo is from the Library of NSW via Flickr, and worth reading the caption:

Notes: Unable to verify if these women are from one of the three Ballets Russes tours, or a JC Williamson musical.

Comments

  1. It's so nice to see this one here, Moira. You're not the only one who thinks it's one of Allingham's better stories. I love that passage you shared; what a look at attitudes of the time! And Campion and his love life...the course of true love, as they say. I also really like the idea of returning to a book after a long time. I know I often see books completely differently when I re-read the ones I read as a young person.

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    1. Thanks Margot, and I am glad we agree on its being a great book. And yes - fascinating to see a book through older eyes! It was particularly marked this time because there was such a gap since I last read it.

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  2. Personally, I think you are too kind in saying Great Aunt Caroline has sociopathic tendencies. I stand by my opinion that she is a monster, with no redeeming features whatsoever. I must read this book, but I am on a Josephine Tey binge at present. - I had forgotten how much I love her writing.

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  3. Christine Harding14 October 2025 at 14:02

    That was me,

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    1. Thanks Christine - that made me laugh. I'm not usually 'too kind' but perhaps this time you are right. It is interesting that Allingham doesn't seem to see her that way, she puts up a feeble claim that the descendents were inadequate and Great Aunt C was protecting them. The excuse for fascism down the ages!
      When I read authors like Allingham and Tey, I honestly feel I could go on reading old favourites forever and never bother with new ones.

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  4. I wonder if Sutane was modeled after anyone in real life? I tried to picture him as Astaire, without any luck. Uncle William and his "memoirs" were a hoot, but what an odd subject for a musical! (Kipling had died in 1936, perhaps luckily for him if he would have read this book.) Merriam-Webster defines "bandar-log" as "a vacuous chattering person" which does kind of apply to a lot of old musicals....Campion's love for Linda was touching, and made the twist at the end more poignant. And Lugg giving the little girl "useful" lessons!

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    1. I wondered if he was someone like Jack Buchanan - there was a style of musical comedy actor who doesn't exist any more, and is forgotten now, but he was a superstar in his day. He only had one really famous film that survives, Bandwagon - you need to have made great films in order to be remembered I think. Bandar log was a real HIndi phrase I believe, adopted by Kipling, and his use of it led to it coming into general use, and being used for chatterers - a bit hard on the monkeys!

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    2. Jack Buchanan did occur to me, I love that movie and he has a slightly sinister air a first.

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    3. Now I want to watch that movie again!

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  5. IIRC there's also the good ol' woman-loving-an-appalling-man trope here.

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    1. Eve, I think? Could be mis-remembering, though.

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    2. She's an odd character, not fully developed and I'm not sure her plotline adds much to the book.

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  6. Love this book. How do they get to snd from London and east anglia so fast? Ellingham bought the do tors house

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    1. It's me, Lucy, and I can't delete that terrible phone typing. Allingham bought the doctor's house and lived there. Don't know if she kept the stuffed wolf. Trope: everything breaks off while people talk about growing roses.

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    2. I knew it was you! Interesting about the house - bleak Georgian, she says, and the wall is like that of a rural factory. I really liked the wolf.
      Uncle William says Jimmy's house is 20 miles from London, so that Jimmy can easily get up to the theatre. He has a flat in London, but prefers to come to White Walls if he can.

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  7. I suppose I need to give Allingham another try? I found the first one, The Crime at Black Dudley, somewhat dull despite the nearly-always-appealing houseparty and game that turns into murder. I was, however, intrigued by this quote:
    Mary Jean DeMarr in In the Beginning: First Novels in Mystery Series believes that Campion's development as a character in later books "offers mystery readers a unique opportunity to consider what makes a mystery/adventure hero and what characteristics must be carried over from one novel to others in order to create the continuity necessary for a successful series..." and meant to track down that book (it must have been quoted in the foreword).

    Constance

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    1. I would definitely at least try another one - I don't think that's a book to make you pursue the series at all. This one, or Police at the Funeral or Flowers for the Judge of the pre-war ones. The post-war ones are different again, and also well worth a punt.
      I am fascinated by the idea of this book you mention - what a niche topic. Half my head says 'that sounds completely mad' and the other half just sent me off to look it up.
      If ever this book were to get readers, I think it would be my readers! (along with the book on insanity in GA detective novels, which totally should have been marketed here)

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    2. One of my favourite Campion books because of the theatrical milieu and the perspective of the hard work behind the glamour. Clothes and dress details(wrist watch, button etc) are essential to the characters and to the plot and Campion grows up a great deal. And who hasn't felt they were chained'to a very large slow avalanche' when we can't stop somthing bad we know will happen? Not as bad as that in the book, I hope.
      Peter Davison, better known as Dr Who, was a sturdy Campion in the 1989 BBC version but everyone was upstaged by Brian Glover as Lugg, whom he played with real Cockney relish.

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    3. I've just checked and Glover was a Yorkshireman who had taught English and French and worked as wrestler before going into acting. So not a Cockney but he makes a great Lugg.

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    4. He was also a very Yorkshire God in the Tony Harrison version of the medieval Mystery plays.

      Sovay

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    5. I wonder about that idea of the evolution of a detective hero. Campion in his first appearance was not quite the same character as in later novels, rather like Wimsey. (At least, unlike Sayers, Allingham didn't get So.Very.Serious. about her hero.) The silly-ass "disguise" can get a little tiresome after a while and the character would need to grow up a little. Given Sayers' opinion of mature men with "elfin charm," the change may have been deliberate, but I like to think it was also intuitive. The picking and choosing of certain characteristics sounds too much like modern advertisers trying to reach certain "demographics"!

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    6. Brian Glover was also memorable as the PE teacher in Kes. Reseeing it sometime in the last decade, it reminded me of my own PE teachers deciding that on cold November afternoons it was appropriate to divide the teams by having one lot play wearing the regulation school shirts and the other to play in skins.
      i did like this one because of Campion being susceptible, the Sutanes being attractive, if flawed, characters, and the last few pages worked well for me. Also, Lugg was at his best in this one.

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    7. A lovely collection of perceptive comments. I saw the TV series a long time ago and am thinking I might seek it out.
      Like Adrian, I remember him best in Kes, a scene that resonates with most people who went to school in the UK In the 60s/70s, even those of us who went to all-girl schools. It certaily captured something.
      I love the idea of Glover as a mediaeval mystery God. Rather like Andy Dalziell playing the role in a Reginald Hill book? Warren Clarke was very good as Dalziell, but maybe Glover would've been an option too.
      And yes, Jan, you sum up very well the attractions of this one.

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    8. Brian Glover was a memorable God - just checked Wikipedia, it was 40 years ago but he made an impact, as did the music by John Tams. BG would have made a good Andy Dalziell too.

      I'm glad to be reminded of the Campion series - looks like it's still available on BBC iplayer. I recall it as probably the best of the Golden Age TV adaptations outside "Poirot" and the Miss Marple series.

      Sovay

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    9. I just watched two of the Campion series - the two books I've read most recently - and was impressed, I thought they were very well done. (I've seen some of them in past but for some reason they didn't take). The theatrical setting for Dancers was done in loving detail, as was Cambridge in Police/Funeral... They stood up well considering nearly 40 years old.

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    10. I watched the TV adaptation of Dancers in Mourning last night - enjoyed it and agree that backstage at the theatre was great, but it's a shame they couldn't leave the actual lavish blockbusting West End extravaganza of a show entirely to the viewer's imagination ...

      Sovay

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    11. Oh, do you know I quite liked that, that it was pretty rough and ready!

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    12. I didn't think it fitted with the picture presented in the book, of Jimmy Sutane single-handedly supporting a huge slick glittering production on which many people's livelihoods depend, and starting to sink under the weight; nor with MA's description of him tap-dancing spectacularly on the spinning roulette wheel. A cast of a dozen or so on a small, almost bare stage made it hard to see what all the fuss was about or why it would have run to 300 performances. But I can quite see that the BBC couldn't run to anything very Busby Berkeley!

      Sovay

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    13. It wasn't as far from my imaginings as yours! Looking at pictures of 1930s theatre shows some pretty rough scenarios

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    14. The picture in my head is probably more Hollywood than Shaftesbury Avenue! All the same, I think it could have done with a bit of Wow! rather than meh …

      Sovay

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    15. BBC budgets! But also, I always think those HOllywood backstage musicals may well miselead us about just how glamorous those shows were - I bet not as good as Busby Berkeley made them.

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  8. One of my favourite of her novels - and I recently watched that BBC series and now when I read the novels I always see the wonderful Brian Glover as Lugg. He was perfect.

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    1. Sorry - keep forgetting - that was Chrissie

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    2. The Crime at Black Dudley is awful; it's the worst of the silly-ass period. Read it (if you must) last.

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    3. Chrissie - you are convincing me that I must find that TV series online...
      Shay - this refers to the preceding comment, and is absolutely correct - I would never start anyone off on that book

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  9. Yes, Dancers is a good one. So on to The Beckoning Lady? If I remember correctly, Uncle William appears in that one for the final time, as a murder victim. It's also the book that made me think that Allingham had internalised a rather strange view of women, which we can probably blame on her husband.
    Linda's button reappears in The Fashion in Shrouds, if I'm not mistaken.
    Clare

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    1. Campion threw the button out of a window at Bottle Street only for it to hit Amanda who was just about to call on him.She returned the button to him.
      There' s more but I don't want to spoil the story for anyone who hadn't read it yet

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    2. Yes, I included the button in the post as an easter egg for those in the know. I suppose appropriately as Shrouds has so much about clothes. But I was surprised when I looked it up that it was 'a yellow button with a rose painted on it' - I had not remembered the rose!

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    3. Clare: i did Beckoning Lady in the early days of the blog, asking people to suggest suitable pictures for the outfit Prunella wears at the big event... More ideas still welcome!
      https://clothesinbooks.blogspot.com/2013/03/a-challenge-beckoning-lady-by-margery.html

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  10. I haven't read this recently and it seems to be missing from my shelves but I remember enjoying it; I wonder whether recreating himself as a loveable old buffer in his memoires influenced Uncle William to adopt a similar persona in life. IIRC "Round the World in a Four-in-Hand" was another of the numbers in the musical, which seems a most unlikely contender for sell-out success (but then you never can tell - look at "Salad Days" ... )

    Campion was pretty susceptible in his early days - in love with Biddy Paget in "Mystery Mile" and hard hit when she fell for someone else. Amanda HAD already turned up before "Dancers in Mourning" though - in "Sweet Danger" four years before, though she was still in her teens and he was very conscious that any kind of romantic entanglement would be inappropriate.

    Sovay

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    1. https://www.fadedpage.com/books/20180931/html.php

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    2. Amanda is too young in Sweet Danger, Allingham is a lot clearer about that than many of her contemporaries! The progress of Campion's heart matches the general change in his character
      thanks for the link Shay - it was interesting to read the jacket copy from this edition

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  11. No subject is too strange to inspire a musical comedy - I'm thinking of Operation Mincemeat the true story of a homeless man whose dead body was used as a decoy in WW2. Apparently it is a very amusing show...
    Allingham originally wanted to be actress and studied at Regent Street Polytechni c school of Speech and Drama. In her biography of Allingham, Julia Jones says she later saw as training for a novelist, though all her family wrote so her profession was not unexpected. Thanks for reminding me of Sweet Danger.

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    1. I loved Operation Mincemeat, it is so clever and unexpected, and there is one song in it, Dear Bill, which I think is remarkable and will live on...
      I thought Julia Jones' biography was a model, very well done.

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  12. My father had an LP of reissued Jack Buchanan recordings, which I used to listen to a lot. He was described on the sleeve as 'the personification of romance and elegance' and some of the numbers were 'Goodnight Vienna,' 'You Forgot Your Gloves' and 'Who?'. In Bandwagon he's far more dynamic than he seems on the record, which I suppose reflects recording techniques of the time.

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    1. I can imagine a romantic and elegant Buchanan in his youth, before he became more of a character actor than a leading man. I suppose that Cordova was written as a pretty dynamic character, and Buchanan certainly played him to the hilt! Especially in those scenes where he's pitching the play to potential backers! (In that film I think that Astaire too was more forceful than he'd been in the Ginger era--as you say, different times and different styles.) Oddly enough, though, I saw on IMDB that Buchanan had the lead in a silent Bulldog Drummond film!

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    2. Christine: just the names of the songs are enough!
      Marty: I am checking out how I can watch Bandwagon online...
      Both: it's hard to grasp the character of an actor/singer when there isn't a huge amount on film, I am quite intrigued by him.

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    3. Another possible inspiration for the Sutanes as a husband and wife team is Jack Hulbert and Cicely Courtneige, who seem to have been about as popular as Buchanan in the 1930s. Maybe always best as a writer to cherry-pick characteristics from a lot of different people to avoid accidental libel. A bit like borrowing selectively from ten books is research, while borrowing from one is plagiarism.

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    4. Yes, good advice. And I remember a writer who said it was a libel on their creative powers to assume characters were based on real people.
      I have heard of the pair you mention, but have no real take on them - as I keep saying about stars who were primarily stage performers.
      What about Alfred Lunt and Lynn Fontanne, but perhaps they were more actors than musical comedy...?

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    5. In one of the Jeeves and Wooster episodes, Bertie's friend is said to be like Jack Buchanan when he sings. (Spoiler - he is not!)

      from Nerys

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    6. In reply to Adrian Dominic: Jimmy Sutane and Linda weren't dancing partners. She was his wife, and had no theatrical experience. She just had the whole cast of the show descending on her in the country house she had inherited from an uncle, and this is where the murder takes place. I always get the impression that Jimmy danced solo a lot, though he also partners Slippers Bellew, who is described as the lesser talent.

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    7. Oh, that was Clare

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    8. Nerys: thanks, that made me laugh!

      Clare: I got the impression he had a regular partnership with Slippers, without being a double act. She is hilariously without personality or sex appeal when she is not on stage, very useful to rule her out in the plot stakes, but I can't find where she is described as a 'lesser talent'?
      I suppose she is the opposite of Chloe Pye, who has minimal talent but comes across well.
      I love that so many people have nicknames in this book, I wondered if it was an injoke, what with Slippers and Socks..

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    9. Maybe their relationship was somewhat like Astaire and Rogers--he was considered the great artist and she was "the lesser talent." Maybe she didn't do everything he did (even though she did it in high heels), but she was as important to their partnership as he was. I believe Fred's nickname for her was "Feathers" (from the Dancing Cheek to Cheek number).

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    10. My view on Rogers was that she was the best actress Fred danced with even if she wasn't the best dancer. The much quoted remark attributed to Hepburn about class and sex appeal wouldn't have stung so much if it hadn't had an element of truth.
      In most of their movies, there would be a dance where her face could convey moving from disdain to amusement and then to a look of let see where it goes,

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    11. thanks for perceptive comments both.
      Yes, she was a good actress, and she certainly danced elegantly. I thought the famous comment was fair enough - 'He gives her class, she gives him sex' for anyone not familiar. I often think of it, or variations, in relation to other partnerships.
      In the 1980s there was a series of documentaries made (I think about RKO films) which included long interviews with Ginger Rogers, where she went over some of their great dances in detail. It was absolute solid gold, I would love to see them again, i wonder if they are online somewhere...

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    12. And re: acting - I totally agree about Rogers being the best. Rita Hayworth is a startlingly good dancer, and does so well with Astaire, but she really was not a good actress at all, she only had about two expressions. Eleanor Powell does one of my favourite ever routines with Astaire - Begin the Beguine - but you don't need to watch any other part of the films of either Powell or Hayworth. Rogers you can enjoy in other scenes.

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  13. Hulbert seems to have done a fair number of films in the 1930s and early 1940s, and YT throws a selection of clips.
    Lunt and Fontanne seem to have been more US-based and more light comedy than musical theatre (a lot of Noel Coward, apparently), but I'm afraid most of what I half remember about them comes from Arthur Marshall's autobiography, Life's Rich Pageant, who recalled them with huge affection.
    Thinking about it, explaining the appeal of Arthur Marshall and Frank Muir on Call My Bluff to younger people is not a challenge I would willingly accept.

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    1. Oh we are twin souls! I was wondering whether to mention Arthur Marshall - I too get much of my 1930s theatre/musical comedy vibe from his books. I have recently seen an old epi of Call My Bluff and it left me rather straight-faced. But I still enjoy AM's writing. I loved it when he had a column in the New Statesman, completely unlike everything else there, till he was swept out by a new editor who was NOT enjoying the vibe...

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  14. I wonder if the Sutanes were partly "inspired" by Fred and Adele Astaire? They were a big success in London, and Adele was said to be very appealing. I think she even married a duke? Anyhow, I was reading the intro to the Julia Jones book and saw a quote from Allingham that she "distilled" personal experiences but would never put anything from real life "whole or undigested" into her work. She was talking about the episode(s) of the button, which in real life she had apparently taken from a garment of the man she was infatuated with! I'm gonna have to buy that book, I guess--too intriguing!

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    1. I don't think the Astaires lived the Sutane life when they were in London: huge stars but very much visitors from the US. She married the second son of the Duke of Devonshire, becoming Lady Charles (just like Harriet Vane becoming Lady Peter). Deborah Mitford married into the same family, and ended up as the Duchess of Devonshire.
      Adele retired entirely from the stage, and then Fred went to Hollywood. He used to say she had the real talent of their double act, and that she was his favourite partner of all...

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  15. I've been thinking of getting the Julia Jones bio, having read a few chapters in a Google Books "preview"--but will I end up hating her husband? I'm sure he had good points, but I'm not liking what I've read about him so far. I noticed that Jones thinks Sutane's little daughter in this book was a version of Allingham's own childhood memories, although her own mother didn't sound nearly as nice as Linda!

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    1. I don't think he was a wonderful person, but they did seem to manage some happiness. the end of her life was not comfortable, but it is very well conveyed by Jones.
      Childcare ways change a lot: no doubt Linda was 'of her time' but I thought her very neglectful! Rather like the mother in Five LIttle Pigs (Christie) who gives all her energy to keeping her husband happy. (and possibly like Christie herself)

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    2. I've found my copy of the book, and I'm not sure Linda's parenting style is "of its time" - the doctor who looks after Sarah when she's accidentally nipped by her pet dog clearly thinks Linda should be there dealing with that incident, and paying a lot more attention to Sarah generally. But the life Linda's married into is hard to cope with and she doesn't get much support - when the butler walks out after one insult too many, Sutane just assumes this will make no difference to the household at all.

      Sovay

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    3. I think that doctor would be unusual. everything you hear and read about that era - including parenting books - encourages a combination of benign neglect and leaving it to the servants.
      She loses a servant who doesnt sound that great anyway, and Campion immediately solves the programme by supplying an indentured serf, oh sorry, his man Lugg. It brings out the bolshevik in me. Linda has a deal with her husband whereby they do their own jobs.

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    4. Division of labour is fair enough but I think each party should have some understanding of what will make the other's role easier or more difficult, and try to take this into account! White Walls and its faithful servants and nosy neighbours does seem to be something of a millstone round her neck. I have to say I was a little surprised by the doctor's attitude to childcare - he's in his 70s but not at all Victorian in that respect. It's sad that Linda recognises that Sarah's not having a good upbringing but has done nothing about it - let's hope the move to America that's planned at the end of the book will change things.

      Sovay

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    5. Perhaps she should have ditched Jimmy and run off with Campion. If she brought the child with her Lugg could be her primary carer. That would change the course of Campion-life a lot - no joy for Amanda

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  16. I guess in the memoirs-publishing contest, Uncle W beats Galahad Threepwood, whose promised reminiscences strike fear into the hearts of doddering dukes and respectable squires, his companions of youth; for Galahad was "A man, in a word, who should never have been taught to write and who, if unhappily gifted with that ability, should have been restrained by Act of Parliament from writing his Reminiscences." But the Reminiscences are fated, if I recall, never to see the light of day. Much to the relief of many. -- Your blogfriend, Trollopian

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    1. Lovely quote! Memoirs feature a lot in mid-20th century fiction, often with the kind of fears that Galahad provoked: while there are still far too many of them, I don't think they hold the same rold now that they did....

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    2. These days the media are so intrusive that people have a harder time keeping secrets, so maybe there is less for a "tell-all" to tell?

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    3. A good point! nobody has secrets now.

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