John Norman Hulbert (24 April 189225 March 1978) was a British actor, director, screenwriter and singer, specializing primarily in comedy productions, and often working alongside his wife (Dame) Cicely Courtneidge.
After Cambridge, he earned recognition and fame performing in musicals and light comedies.D. Pepys-Whiteley, ‘Hulbert, John Norman (Jack) (1892–1978)’, rev., Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004. However the First World War delayed his rise to fame; on 14 February 1916, while still an actor, he married Cicely Courtneidge, the daughter of Robert Courtneidge, a theatrical manager, in Hampstead. In June 1916 Hulbert and Courtneidge were appearing together in a sketch called “A Lucky Mistake”,"MISS CICELY COURTNEIDGE AND MR. JACK HULBERT In a Farcical Sketch, entitled A LUCKY MISTAKE" in Leicester Daily Post, 24 June 1916, p. 2 and in December 1916 he was appearing at the Comedy Revue in "See-Saw"."THE PLAYHOUSES. SEE-SAW." in Illustrated London News, 23 December 1916, p. 19 In May 1917, he opened at the Comedy in "Bubbly", and the Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News commented that "Mr. Jack Hulbert, Miss Winnie Melville, and Miss Irene Greville also stay on at this same munition factory for high explosives of laughter"."OUR CAPTIOUS CRITIC: BUBBLY, AT THE COMEDY THEATRE" in Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, 26 May 1917, p. 22 Under the Military Service Act 1916 Hulbert was conscripted into the army, serving from 1917 to 1919. After the war, he continued his career in the theatre.Hartley, 2013, A Historical Dictionary of British Women. p. 120
Hulbert made his film debut in Elstree Calling (1930); appearing opposite his wife and frequent stage and screen co-star Cicely Courtneidge. His career went through a successful period during the 1930s when he appeared in several films, including The Ghost Train (1931), Love on Wheels (1932) and Bulldog Jack (1935), a tongue-in-cheek homage to the popular Bulldog Drummond films in which Jack was supported by Claude Hulbert.
In 1931 Courtneidge and Hulbert suffered a serious setback when they discovered that their financial manager had been speculating with their money, suffering heavy losses and putting their business into liquidation. Hulbert accepted responsibility for all the business's debts and undertook to repay every creditor.
He had a hit record in 1932 "The Flies Crawled Up the Window", which was originally sung in the film Jack's the Boy. In 1934 he was voted the most popular male British star at the box office.
In 1936 exhibitors voted him the third most popular British film star.
Hulbert's popularity waned as the 1930s came to an end, and after the war he and his wife continued to entertain chiefly on stage. In 1951 he appeared in the West End in The White Sheep of the Family and the following year directed his brother in Lord Arthur Savile's Crime. In 1958 he starred with Yvonne Arnaud in Ronald Millar's The Big Tickle. In 1962 he appeared in the BBC radio sitcom Discord in Three Flats, along with Courtneidge and Vic Oliver.
In 1975, Hulbert published his autobiography, The Little Woman's Always Right. Hulbert died, at the age of 85, at his home in Westminster, London on 25 March 1978.
1930 | Elstree Calling | Himself | His film debut |
1931 | The Ghost Train | Teddy Deakin | |
Sunshine Susie | Herr Hasel | Released as The Office Girl in USA | |
1932 | Jack's the Boy | Jack Brown | Released as Night and Day in USA |
Happy Ever After | Willie | Released as A Blonde Dream in USA | |
Love on Wheels | Fred Hopkins | ||
1933 | Falling for You | Jack Hazeldon | |
1934 | Jack Ahoy | Jack Ponsonby | |
The Camels Are Coming | Jack Campbell | ||
1935 | Bulldog Jack | Jack Pennington | Released as Alias Bulldog Drummond in USA |
1936 | Jack of All Trades | Jack Warrender | Alternative title: The Two of Us |
1937 | Take My Tip | Lord George Pilkington | |
Paradise for Two | Rene Martin | Released as Gaiety Girls in USA | |
1938 | Kate Plus Ten | Inspector Mike Pemberton | Released as Queen of Crime in USA |
1940 | Under Your Hat | Jack Millett | |
1950 | Into the Blue | John Fergusson | Released as Man in the Dinghy in USA |
1951 | The Magic Box | 1st Holborn Policeman | |
1955 | Miss Tulip Stays the Night | Constable Feathers | Released as Dead by Midnight in USA |
1960 | The Spider's Web | Sir Rowland Delahaye | |
1973 | Not Now Darling | Commander Frencham | |
1974 | The Cherry Picker | Sir Hugh Fawcett | |
1951 | The Golden Year | John Radlett | Musical play for BBC TV |
1961 | Kraft Mystery Theater – "The Spider's Web" | TV Episode | |
1962 | Compact | Smith | TV series |
1970 | Party Games | (TV) - Waiter | |
1913 | The Pearl Girl | Shaftesbury Theatre | with Cicely Courtneidge |
1921 | Pot Luck! | Vaudeville Theatre, London | Green, 2009, Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre, p. 201 |
Ring Up | Vaudeville Theatre, London | ||
1924 | Second Little Revue Starts at Nine | Little Theatre | |
1925 | By The Way | Apollo Theatre and Shaftesbury Theatre | Revue |
1926 | By The Way | Gaiety Theatre, London | with Cicely Courtneidge |
1926-27 | Lido Lady | Gaiety Theatre, London | |
1927-29 | Clowns in Clover | Adelphi Theatre and Strand Theatre | with Cicely Courtneidge |
1930 | Follow A Star | Liverpool Empire | with Sophie Tucker |
1951-52 | The White Sheep of the Family | Piccadilly Theatre | with Rona Anderson |
1952 | Lord Arthur Savile's Crime | Royal Court Theatre | Director, with Claude Hulbert, Peter Haddon |
1958 | The Big Tickle | Duke of York's Theatre | with Yvonne Arnaud |
1959 | Not in the Book | Touring | With David Conville |
1960 | The Bride Comes Back | Vaudeville Theatre, London | Cicely Courtneidge, Jack Hulbert |
1973 | The Hollow | Everyman Theatre, Cheltenham | with Cicely Courtneidge |
1974 | Breath of Spring | Everyman Theatre, Cheltenham | with Cicely Courtneidge |
1976 | Once More With Music | Theatre Royal, Brighton | with Cicely Courtneidge |
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