Ashley Dukes
Ashley Dukes (29 May 1885 – 4 May 1959) was an English playwright/dramatist, critic, theatre manager.
Ashley Dukes | |
---|---|
Born | 29 May 1885 Sandford, Devon, English, United Kingdom |
Died | 4 May 1959 (aged 73) |
Occupation | Playwright, critic, theatre manager |
Spouse(s) | Marie Rambert |
Family | Paul Dukes, Cuthbert Dukes (brothers) |
Biography
Personal Life
Ashley Dukes was born one of five children in 1885. He was the son of the Congregationalist clergyman, Rev. Edwin Joshua Dukes (1847-1930), of Kingsland, London, and his wife, the former Edith Mary Pope (1863-1898), of Sandford, Devon.
He met Marie Rambert, a ballet dancer, at a dinner party in 1917. In Rambert's autobiography she says "after four days of personal meetings, and seven months of correspondence we were married on 3 March 1918."[1]
Career
In 1933, he founded the Mercury Theatre, London and wrote plays that appeared in the West End and on Broadway. The Ashley Dukes Company was an important interwar promoter of serious drama, and a training ground for actors.[2]
Dukes mounted the first theatrical performance of Murder in the Cathedral at the Mercury, driving down to Canterbury with T. S. Eliot to collect scenery and costumes. (He rejected W. B. Yeats' dramatic oeuvre for the same stage much to Yeats' annoyance.)
Family
He was the older brother of MI6 spy Paul Dukes and pathologist Cuthbert Dukes, and grandfather of poet Aidan Andrew Dun.
References
- Marie Rambert, "Quicksilver: Autobiography" (London: St Martin's Press, 1972), p. 94. ISBN 978-0333347119
- http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_19970707/ai_n14126957
External links
- Works by Ashley Dukes at Faded Page (Canada)
- Ashley Dukes at the Internet Broadway Database
- Ashley Dukes on IMDb
- Ashley Dukes at Find a Grave