Lily Morris (born Lilles Mary Crosby; 30 September 1882 ā 3 October 1952)Richard Anthony Baker, British Music Hall: an illustrated history, Pen & Sword, 2014, , pp. 252ā253 was an English music hall performer, who specialised in singing comedic songs, notably "Why Am I Always the Bridesmaid" and "Don't Have Any More, Missus Moore".
She made a successful transition from child to adult performer, and built a formidable and lengthy career. She developed a particularly strong reputation as a principal boy in pantomimes.Raymond Mander and Joe Mitchenson, British Music Hall: A story in pictures, Studio Vista, 1965, p. 158 A review of her role in pantomime in Bristol in 1907 described her as having "plenty of spirit" and "the necessary amount of dash and 'go'." The Stage, London, Thursday, 2 January 1908, pp. 5eā6b, reprinted at Footlight Notes. Retrieved 9 February 2021 Her most successful songs included "Why Am I Always the Bridesmaid", written for her in 1917 by Fred W. Leigh and Charles Collins, and "Don't Have Any More, Missus Moore", written in 1926 by Harry Castling and James Walsh. She made recordings of several of her songs, for various including Columbia and Regal Recordings.
Her career included several successful international tours. She had a particularly successful run at the Palace Theatre in New York City in 1928. She also appeared in the musical revue film Elstree Calling (1930), co-directed by Alfred Hitchcock. Roger Wilmut wrote of Morris:
Her performance of "Why Am I Always the Bridesmaid" in Elstree Calling shows the sort of polish that could only be obtained by taking the same act round the halls for years, improving it, tightening it up, and producing a performance where every line has a suitable little visual gag or facial expression; it is one of the funniest pieces of film in existence.Roger Wilmut, Kindly Leave the Stage: The Story of Variety 1919ā1960, Methuen, 1985, , p. 77
Morris appeared in the film Radio Parade of 1935 as a charlady alongside fellow music hall performer Nellie Wallace. In 1941 she appeared as the formidable "Lady Randall" in the Arthur Askey comedy I Thank You but reverts to type in the final scene where she gives a rendition of the old music hall standard "Waiting at the Church" at an impromptu concert in a tube station Air-raid shelter. IMDb: I Thank You She retired from the stage in 1940, but briefly replaced Wallace in Don Ross's show Thanks for the Memory in 1948. Times obituary. Ross had wanted to include both Morris and Wallace in the show, but the two women refused to appear on the same bill together.
Morris married Archibald McDougall in 1907. She died in London in 1952, six weeks after her husband's death.
Song hits
Selected filmography
Further reading
External links
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