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Leslie Hutchinson
Grenadian musician

Leslie Hutchinson

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Intro
Grenadian musician
Places
Work field
Gender
Male
Place of birth
Gouyave
Age
69 years
Leslie Hutchinson
The details (from wikipedia)

Biography

Leslie Arthur Julien Hutchinson, known as "Hutch" (7 March 1900 – 18 August 1969), was one of the biggest cabaret stars in the world during the 1920s and 1930s.

Early life

Born in Gouyave, Grenada, in 1900 to George Hutchinson and Marianne (née Turnbull), Hutch took piano lessons as a child.

He moved to New York City in his teens, originally to study for a degree in medicine as he had won a place due to his high aptitude, and began playing the piano and singing in bars.

Career

In New York City, Hutch joined a black band led by Henry "Broadway" Jones, who often played for white millionaires such as the Vanderbilts, attracting the wrath of the Ku Klux Klan. In 1924 Hutch left America for Paris, where he had a residency in Joe Zelli's club and became a friend and lover of Cole Porter.

Encouraged by Edwina Mountbatten, he came to England in 1927 to perform in a Rodgers and Hart musical, and soon became the darling of society and the population in general. Hutch was a favourite singer of the then Prince of Wales (later King Edward VIII). Hutch was one of the biggest stars in Britain during the 1920s and 1930s, and was, for a time, the highest paid star in the country. He was regularly heard on air with the BBC. One of his greatest hits was "These Foolish Things".

In spite of his popularity, Hutch could not escape racial prejudice:

Hutch recorded several of Cole Porter's songs, including "Begin the Beguine" and Porter's list song "Let's Do It (Let's Fall in Love)", to which he supposedly made up some 70 new verses.

Hutch was "one of the first stars in Britain" to volunteer to entertain the troops at home and abroad during World War II, but he received no formal recognition for his service, and his name would never appear in any Honours list.

Personal life

He married Ella Byrd, a woman of African, English, and Chinese ancestry, in 1923 or 1924 in New York City. Their daughter, Lesley Bagley Yvonne, was born on 9 April 1926. He fathered seven further children with six different mothers. Gordon was born in August 1928, Gabrielle in September 1930, Jennifer in October 1939, Gerald and Chris in 1948, and Graham (Chris's full brother) in 1953, and Emma in April 1965.

In 1930, one of Hutch's mistresses, British debutante Elizabeth Corbett, was discovered to be pregnant with his child. Her family tried to hush up the affair, hastily marrying Corbett off to an army officer, and attempting to pass off the child as his. When the child was born, however, and discovered to be of mixed race, Corbett's husband refused to acknowledge her as his own. She (Gabrielle) was put up for adoption and Corbett's outraged father sued Hutch.

Hutch is rumoured to have had a lengthy affair in the mid-1930s with Edwina Mountbatten. The rumour scandalized the British upper classes, becoming the subject of tabloid news, and an embarrassment to Lady Mountbatten's royal in-laws. The Mountbattens sued the tabloids for libel. As a result of the scandal, Hutch was shunned by many of his former patrons.

Another of his reported mistresses was actress Tallulah Bankhead — an openly bisexual Golden Age Hollywood actress.

Hutch may have been bisexual and was alleged to have had relationships with Cole Porter, Ivor Novello, and Merle Oberon.

Death

Hutchinson's grave in Highgate Cemetery

Leslie Hutchinson suffered from ill-health in his later years and died in London from pneumonia on 19 August 1969. Forty-two people attended his funeral.

Legacy

On 12 October 2012, an English Heritage blue plaque in commemoration of Hutch was unveiled by his daughter Gabrielle Markes at 31 Steele's Road, Belsize Park, his home from 1929 to 1967.

In November 2016, Hutch was featured in episode four of the BBC series Black and British: A Forgotten History, titled The Homecoming, presented by historian David Olusoga. On the occasion of the programme, a plaque was unveiled by his children and extended family at Mayfair restaurant Quaglino's, where he used to perform later in his career.

Filmography

  • Actor:
    • Big Business (1930) .... Pianist
    • Beloved Imposter (1936)
    • Brass Monkey (1948) (aka Lucky Mascot) (as Leslie A. Hutchinson) .... Hutch
    • The Treasure of San Teresa (1959) (aka Hot Money Girl (UK) (US), aka Long Distance (US), aka Rhapsodie in Blei (West Germany)) (as Hutch) .... Piano Player at Billie's
  • Soundtrack:
    • Big Business (1930) (performer: "Always Your Humble Slave")
    • Brass Monkey (1948) (aka Lucky Mascot) (performer: "To-Morrow's Rainbow")
  • As self:
    • Cock o' the North (1935)
    • Starlight (1936) TV series
    • Happidrome (1943) (uncredited)

Cultural references

  • Evelyn Waugh satirised him, or is at least believed to have satirised him, as Chokey in Decline and Fall.
  • Kenneth Williams regularly performed impersonations of him, including one at the Mingaladon RAF station in 1947.
  • On 25 November 2008, Channel 4 TV in the UK showed a documentary on his life called High Society's Favourite Gigolo.
  • The musical play Hutch opened at the Riverside Studios on 14 May 2013. written by Joe Evans, adapted from the biography by Charlotte Breese, and featuring the music of Cole Porter.
  • The character Jack Ross in the ITV drama Downton Abbey, written by Julian Fellowes, is based on Leslie Hutchinson.
    The contents of this page are sourced from Wikipedia article. The contents are available under the CC BY-SA 4.0 license.
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