Cyril Francis Maude (24 April 1862 — 20 February 1951) was an English actor-manager.
He studied acting under Charles Cartwright and Roma Le Thiere, but was forced to leave the country again for health reasons. He travelled to Canada and America, fulfilling his acting ambition with Daniel Bandman's company in Denver, Colorado in 1884.
Between 1896 until 1905 he was co-manager of the Haymarket Theatre in London with Frederick Harrison. There he became known for his quietly humorous acting in many parts. However in 1900 he managed the production of the Little Minister at the Regent Theatre in Salford.
In 1906 he went into Actor-manager on his own account, and in 1907 he opened the Playhouse, also in London. Between 1911 and 1919 he acted largely in the United States where he played new comedies. He returned to London in 1919 and established himself at the Criterion Theatre.
Maude became very well known for his role in Grumpy as a spoilt old man, who as a retired lawyer solved a crime to keep his loved ones happy. Maude took this play to Australia and toured Adelaide, Melbourne, Brisbane and Sydney where it was immensely popular. In 1923 he toured America with Lydia Bilbrook and Mabel Terry-Lewis in If Winter Comes, playing at Chicago in April and New York in the autumn."Dramatis Personae", The Observer, 25 February 1923, p. 11
In 1888, Maude married actress Winifred Emery, the daughter of Samuel Anderson Emery and granddaughter of John Emery, both well-known actors in their day. Their children included Margery Maude, who became an actress; Pamela Cynthia Maude (1893–1975); and John Cyril Maude, who became a barrister, judge and Member of Parliament. The family of Winifred Emery on thepeerage.com, accessed 8 June 2011 Pamela Maude married Major Billy Congreve Victoria Cross, DSO, Military Cross on 1 June 1916. He was killed in action on 20 July 1916 during World War I, for which he was posthumously awarded the Victoria Cross. Eton College – Rolls of Honour, accessed 8 June 2011 On 22 December 1919 she married the Hon. William Fraser, DSO, Military Cross (1890–1964), who later became a Brigadier. Lord Saltoun of Abernethy on cracroftpeerage.co.uk, accessed 8 June 2011
They also brought up a niece, Winifred Isabel Emery (1890–1972), Gascoyne, David, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, accessed 2 June 2011Dark, Sidney and Rowland Grey. W. S. Gilbert: His Life and Letters, Methuen & Co Ltd, London (1923), pp. 222–223 after the girl was abandoned by Emery's brother in 1895. This niece, together with her pupil Patricia Preece, was present when dramatist W. S. Gilbert died in his lake at Grim's Dyke in May 1911.Goodman, Andrew. Grim's Dyke: A Short History of the House and Its Owners, Glittering Prizes , pp. 17–18 Winifred Isabel Emery was the mother of poet David Gascoyne.
Films
Personal life
Actors' Orphanage Fund
Death
Filmography
Sources
External links
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