Dame Gracie Fields, DBE (9 January 1898–27 September 1979), born Grace Stansfield, was an English singer and comedian who became one of the greatest stars of both cinema and music hall.
She met comedian Archie Pitt and they began working together. Pitt would come to serve as her manager and the two married in 1923. Their first revue in 1915 was called Yes I think so and the two continued to tour Britain together until 1922 in the revue Mr Tower of London.
One of her most successful productions was at the Alhambra Theatre in 1925. The show, booked by Sir Oswald Stoll, was a major success and toured for ten years. She made the first of ten appearances in Royal Variety Performances in 1928, gaining a devoted following with a mixture of self-deprecating jokes, comic songs and monologues, as well as cheerful "depression-era" songs all presented in a "no-airs-and-graces" northern, working class style. Fields had a great rapport with her audience, which helped her become one of Britain's highest paid performers, playing to sold out theatres across the country.
Her most famous song, which became her theme, Sally, was worked into the title of her first cinema film, Sally in Our Alley (1931), which was a major box office hit. She went on to make several films initially in Britain and later in the United States (for which she was paid a record fee of US$200,000 for four films), despite never enjoying the process of performing without a live audience.
She donated her exclusive house, "The Towers" in London's The Bishop's Avenue, which she had not much cared for and which she had shared with her husband Archie Pitt, to a Maternity Hospital after the marriage broke down. In 1939, however, she became seriously ill with cervical cancer. The public sent over 250,000 goodwill messages and she retired to her villa in Capri to recover.
She did a great deal of charity work, and established a permanent home on Capri in Italy. Monty Banks died in 1950. Fields was married again, to Boris Alperovici, two years later. After then she began to work even less but still sold out theatres even into her seventies.
In 1978, she opened the Gracie Fields Theatre in Rochdale. She made a final appearance at the Royal Variety Show at the age of eighty, her last performance. The following year she was created a Dame Commander of the British Empire (DBE) not long before her death at her home in Capri, aged 81.
Despite having the same name and both of them being born in Rochdale, she is not related to the singer Lisa Stansfield.
1898 births | 1979 deaths | English female singers | Dames Commander of the Order of the British Empire | English actors | English comedians | Natives of Lancashire | Rochdale | Capri | Gracie Fields | Gracie Fields
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