List of works by Aubrey Hammond

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of works by the illustrator and theatrical designer Aubrey Hammond.

List of plays featuring scenery and/or costumes designed by Hammond[edit]

  • Oh!Hell!!, Reginald Arkell , Russell Thorndike, Jose Levy, Little Theatre (Grand Guignol), London, 1920.[1]
  • Just Fancy-A Revue, C.B. Cochran, London, 1921.[2]
  • In the Street, The Kingsway Theatre, London, 1921.[3]
  • Now and Then, The Vaudeville, London, 1921.[4]
  • The Man with a Load of Mischief, Ashley Dukes, The Haymarket, London, 1921.[5] Also New York, 1925.[6]
  • The Rose and The Ring, The Playhouse, Liverpool, 1923.[7]
  • The Magic Sword, The Playhouse, Liverpool, 1923.[8]
  • Man and the Masses, The New Theatre, London, 1924.[9]
  • Puppets, André Charlot, The Vaudeville, London, 1924.[10]
  • Husband Love, Folkestone, 1924.[11]
  • Tess of the D’Urbervilles, Barnes Theatre, 1925[12]
  • The London Review, Norman Lee, Lyceum Theatre, 1925.[13]
  • The Forcing House, The Little Theatre, London, 1926.[14]
  • The Yellow Mask, Theatre Royal, Birmingham, 1927.[15]
  • Sylvia, The Vaudeville, London, 1927.[16]
  • The White Chateau, Everyman Theatre, Hampstead, London, 1927.[17]
  • One More River, New Theatre, London, 1927.[18]
  • One Dam Thing After Another, London Pavilion, London, 1927.[19]
  • Such Men Are Dangerous, Ashley Dukes, The Duke of York's Theatre, London, 1928.[20]
  • No Other Tiger, A.E.W. Mason, Prince of Wales Theatre, Birmingham, 1928.[21]
  • The Fountain Head, Ashley Dukes, The Arts Theatre, London, 1928.[22]
  • Song of the Sea, Arthur Wimperis & Lauri Wylie, His Majesty's Theatre, London, 1928.[23]
  • A Man with Red Hair, Benn W. Levy, Little Theatre, London, 1928.[24]
  • Mr. Pickwick, Cosmo Hamilton & Frank C. Reilly, The Haymarket, London, 1928.[25]
  • Her Past, Frederick Jackson, Lewisham Hippodrome, London, 1928.[26]
  • The Devil's Host, Carl Glick/Archibald Nettlefold, The Comedy Theatre, London, 1928.[27]
  • Red Rust, Frank Vernon, Little Theatre, London, 1929.[28]
  • The Roof, John Galsworthy, Basil Dean, The Vaudeville, London, 1929.[29]
  • Coo-Ee, Laurie Wylie/Melvin Gideon, Kingston Theatre, Kinston-Upon-Thames, London, 1929.[30]
  • Measure for Measure, Haymarket, London, 1929.[31]
  • Quality Street, J. M. Barrie, Haymarket, London, 1929.[32]
  • The Ivory Door, A.A. Milne, Haymarket, London, 1929.[33]
  • Jew Suss, Ashley Dukes/Lion Feuchtwanger, Her Majesty's Opera House, Blackpool, 1929.[34]
  • Bees and Honey, H. F. Maltby, New Theatre, London, 1929.[35]
  • Yesterday's Harvest, Margaret Pedlar(?)/Gladys St. John-Loe(?), The Apollo, London, 1929,[36]
  • The Circle of Chalk, James Laver/Basil Dean, New Theatre, London, 1929.[37]
  • French Leave, Archie de Bear/Reginald Berkeley, The Vaudeville, London, 1929.[38]
  • The House that Jack Built, Jack Hulbert, Adelphi Theatre, London, 1929.[39]
  • Charivaria, Melville Gideon, Prince of Wales Theatre, Birmingham, 1929.[40]
  • The Stag, Beverley Nichols, The Globe, London, 1929.[41]
  • The First Mrs. Fraser, St. John Ervine, The Haymarket, London, 1929.[42]
  • The Co-Optimists of 1930, Greatrex Newman, The Hippodrome, London, 1930.[43]
  • Down Our Street/Belle, Ernest George, The Vaudeville, London, 1930.[44]
  • Topaze, Marcel Pagnol/Benn Levy, King's Theatre, Glasgow, 1930.[45]
  • Hamlet, Horace Watson/Shakespeare, The Haymarket, London, 1930.[46]
  • Machines, Reginald Berkeley, The Arts Theatre Club, London, 1930.[47]
  • Little Catherine, Alfred Savior/Virginia & Frank Law, The Phoenix Theatre, London, 1931.[48]
  • Colonel Satan, Booth Tarkington, The Haymarket, London, 1931.[49]
  • Off the Map, Herbert Jones/Jose Levy, The Little Theatre, London, 1931.[50]
  • Frailties, Dion Titheradge, The Phoenix, London, 1931.[51]
  • Shanghai Nights, B.A. Mayer, The Empire Theatre, London, 1931.[52]
  • Vile Bodies, Evelyn Waugh/Nigel Playfair, The Arts Club, London, 1931.[53]
  • Kong, Harold Kingsley/Oscar Ashe, Cambridge Theatre, Cambridge, 1931.[54]
  • O.H.M.S., Reginald Berkeley, The New Theatre, London, 1931.[55]
  • Max and Mr. Max, Cecil Madden/Jose Lopez Rubio, The Vaudeville, London, 1931.[56]
  • Take Two from One, Harley Granville-Barker, The Haymarket, London, 1931.[57]
  • Wild Violets, Bruno Hardt-Warden, Drury Lane Theatre, London, 1932.[58]
  • Once a Husband, Margot Neville & Brett Haye, The Haymarket, London, 1932.[59]
  • Julius Caesar and Twelfth Night, William Shakespeare, The Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford-Upon-Avon, 1932.[60]
  • Wild Violets, Hassard Short, Drury Lane Theatre, London, 1932.[61]
  • The Last of Mrs. Cheyney, Frederick Lonsdale, The Tower Arms, Iver, Buckinghamshire, 1932.[62]
  • Merchant of Venice, William Shakespeare, The Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford-Upon-Avon, 1932.[63]
  • The Dubarry, Eric Maschwitz, His Majesty's Theatre, London, 1932.[64]
  • Double Harness, Edward Poor Montgomery, Leeds Grand Theatre, Leeds, 1933.[65]
  • The Ace, Hermann Rossman/Miles Malleson, Lyric Theatre, London, 1933.[66]
  • Ballerina, Rodney Ackland, The Gaiety Theatre, London, 1933.[67]
  • After Dark, Ronald Jeans, The Vaudeville, London, 1933.[68]
  • This Side Idolatry, Talbot Jennings, The Lyric Theatre, London, 1933.[69]
  • Acropolis, Robert E. Sherwood, The Lyric Theatre, London. 1933.[70]
  • The Rats of Norway, Keith Winter, The Playhouse, 1933.[71]
  • On Approval, Frederick Lonsdale, The Strand Theatre, London, 1933.[72]
  • Mr. Whittington, Jack Waller and Jack Buchanan, The Alhambra, Glasgow, 1933.[73]
  • Before Sunset, Gerhardt Hauptmann/Miles Malleson, The Shaftesbury Theatre, London, 1933.[74]
  • The Tempest, Love's Labour Lost, Julius Caesar, Henry V, Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford-upon-Avon, 1934.[75]
  • Touch Wood, C.L. Anthony (Dodie Smith), The Haymarket Theatre, London, 1934.[76]
  • The Shinning Hour, Keith Winter, St. James's Theatre, London, 1934.[77]
  • The Wise Woman, Leslie Storm, The Criterion, London, 1934.[78]
  • Anthony and Cleopatra, The Merchant of Venice, As You Like It, Henry IV, The Tempest, All's Well That Ends Well, Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford-Upon-Avon, 1935.[79]
  • Accidentally Yours, Maurice Hennequin/Richard Grey, Theatre Royal Birmingham, 1935.[80]
  • The Ringmaster, Keith Winter, Shaftesbury, London, 1935.[81]
  • Vintage Wine, Seymour Hicks/Ashley Dukes, The Victoria Palace Theatre, London, 1935.[82]
  • Worse Things Happen at Sea, Keith Winter, Opera House, Manchester, 1935.[83]
  • Much Ado About Nothing, The Merchant of Venice, The Taming of the Shrew, Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford-Upon-Avon, 1936.[84]
  • Winter Opera Season, Sir Thomas Beecham/Music Drama Company, Convent Garden, 1936.[85]
  • Heart's Content, W. Chetham Strode/Raymond Massey, The Shaftesbury Theatre, London, 1936.[86]
  • The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse, Barré Lyndon, The Haymarket Theatre, London, 1936.[87]
  • Wise Tomorrow, Stephen Powys, The Lyric Theatre, London, 1937.[88]
  • London After Dark, Walter Hackett, The Apollo Theatre, London, 1937.[89]
  • The Laughing Cavalier, Reginald Arkell/Stafford Byrne, The Adelphi Theatre, London, 1937.[90]
  • Orchard Walls, Merton Hodge, St. James’ Theatre, London, 1937.[91]
  • Don Juan de Manara, Eugene Goossen, Convent Garden, London, 1937.[92]
  • Henry V, Shakespeare Memorial Theatre, Stratford-Upon-Avon, 1937.[93]
  • To Have and To Hold, Lionel Brown, The Haymarket, 1937.[94]
  • I Can Take It, Theatre Royal, Birmingham, 1939.[95]
  • Giving the Bride Away, St. Martin's Theatre, London, 1939.[96]
  • Come to Play, Jessie Matthews/Sonnie Hale, The Phoenix Theatre, 1940.[97]

List of cinema and television productions designed by Hammond[edit]

  • Hyde Park Corner, Walter C. Hackett/Sinclair Hill, Grosvenor Films, Welwyn Studios, U.K., 1935.[98]
  • The Cardinal, D.B. Wyndham-Lewis/Sinclair Hill, Grosvenor Films, Welwyn Studies, U.K., 1936.[99]
  • Mr. Pickwick, Albert Coates, BBC, Alexandra Palace, London, 1936.[100]
  • Housemaster, Ian Hay, The Apollo Theatre, London, 1936.[101]
  • Take A Chance, Sinclair Hall/D.B. Wyndham-Lewis, Grosvenor Films, 1936.[102]
  • The Gay Adventure, Monty Banks/D.B. Wyndham-Lewis, Grosvenor Films, 1936.[103]
  • Books Containing Illustrations and/or Covers Designed by Hammond
  • Louis Golding, Seacoast of Bohemia, 1923.
  • Lewis Melville, Beau Brummell: His Life and Letters, 1924.[104]
  • Lewis Melville, The London Scene, 1926.[105]
  • Lewis Melville, Regency Ladies, 1926.[106]
  • Lewis Melville, The Star of Piccadilly, 1927.[107]
  • Lewis Melville, Maids of Honour, 1927.[108]
  • Lewis Melville, The Windsor Beauties, 1928.[109]
  • Lewis Melville, Not All the Truth, 1928.[110]
  • Hayter Preston, Collisions, 1924.[111]
  • Peter Triall, Under the Cherry Tree, 1926.[112]
  • Magdalen King-Hall, I Think I Remember, 1927.[113]
  • Nash's and Pall Mall, Magazine, Illustrations by Hammond, 1926.[114]
  • Annual Stage Guild Ball, (Programme Illustrations)), 1927.[115]
  • Malcolm Douglas Lyon, A Village Match and After, (London: Eveleigh, Nash & Grayson) 1929.
  • Henry Savage, How to Manage Our Women, (London: Humphrey Toulmin) 1930.[116]
  • Reginald le May, Siamese Tales: Old and New, (London: Noel Douglas) 1930.[117]
  • William Henry Leverton, Through the Box-Office Window: Fifty Years at the Haymarket Theatre,(London: T.W. Laurie Ltd), 1932.[118]
  • Maynard Greville, A Diary of Mister Niggs, (London: Ivor Nicholson & Watson), 1932.[119]

Selected exhibitions[edit]

  • Poster Exhibition, Solo, Bond Street,[120]
  • Poster Exhibition, Solo, Derby Art Gallery, 1927.[121]
  • Poster Exhibition, Contributor, Victoria and Albert Museum, 1931.[122]
  • Exhibition of Stage and Costume Designs, The Redfern Gallery, Cork Street, London, 1938.[123]
  • International Theatre Art, Imperial Palace, Vienna, Austria, 1936.[124]
  • The Theatre Art Exhibition, Winnipeg, Canada, 1938.[125]

Selected posters and advertising[edit]

  • Ramsgate, Hoarding and Rail tourism advertisement, 1926.[126]
  • Bolshewitches, Unionist Party,[127]
  • Advert for London Underground- To the Concert Hall,[128]
  • Curtain for the Lyceum Theatre, 1925, caricatures of well-known men and women, including Lloyd George, Churchill, Balfour, and Lady Astor and Oxford. Illustrated in the Sphere[129]
  • Advert for Sarony Cigarettes (graphic illustration of dancers)[130]
  • Surround Window Poster, James Moon’s shop, London, 1925.[131]
  • Canadian Club Whiskey, Newspaper Advertisement Series, ‘In Victoria’s Days’, 1926.[132] And Others.
  • Barclay’s Lager, Print Advertisement, 1925.[133]
  • Illustrations for The Bystander,[134]
  • Illustrations for The Graphic,[135]
  • Canadian Club Whiskey, 27 Cockspur Street, ‘distinctive to the nth degree’ [136]
  • Model Scenery and Costume Design, Blackfriars Theatre, London, 1927.[137]
  • The Pow-Pow, (Hector Powe Ltd), Illustrations, 1930.[138]
  • Ideal homes Exhibition, ‘Famous Rooms from Literary Fiction.’, Olympia, London, 1931.[139]
  • Theatre Advertising Poster, ‘Millie’ and ‘The Queen’s Husband’, London Underground, 1931.[140]
  • Cadbury’s Chocolate Box Design, 1932.[141]
  • Sands Across the Sea, Southern Railway Company. Holiday Guide/Travel Guide, 1938.[142]
  • Brighton Official Handbook, Brighton Corporation Publicity Department, 1938-9.[143]

References[edit]

  1. ^ The Stage, 26 August 1920, 14
  2. ^ Commercial Art and Industry, September 1924, 109.
  3. ^ Daily Herald , 14 October 1921, 5
  4. ^ The Stage, 8 September 1921
  5. ^ Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News, 20 December 1921, 788
  6. ^ Sporting Times, 26 September 1925, 3
  7. ^ The Era, 4 January 1923, 14
  8. ^ Liverpool Echo, 28 December 1923, 9
  9. ^ Gloucester Citizen, 30 April 1924, 4
  10. ^ The Era, 2 January 1924, 18
  11. ^ Nottingham Journal, 23 October 1924, 3
  12. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 12 August 1925, 5
  13. ^ West London Star, 14 August 1925, 2.
  14. ^ The Stage, 28 January 1926, 16.
  15. ^ The Era, 23 November 1927, 5.
  16. ^ The Stage, 22 December 1927, 16.
  17. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 31 March 1927, 12.
  18. ^ The Era, 2 February 1927, 8.
  19. ^ Sporting Times , 28 May 1927, 11.
  20. ^ The Stage, 27 September 1928, 18
  21. ^ Birmingham Gazette, 24 November 1928, 5
  22. ^ The Era, 24 October 1928, 1
  23. ^ Sporting Times, 15 September 1928, 7.
  24. ^ The Era, 15 February 1928, 6.
  25. ^ Yorkshire Post, 17 December 1928, 13
  26. ^ The Stage, 29 November 1928, 18.
  27. ^ The Era, 29 August 1928, 1.
  28. ^ The Stage, 28 February 1929, 14.
  29. ^ The Stage, 7 November 1929, 18.
  30. ^ Surrey Advertiser and County Times, 17 August 1929, 9.
  31. ^ Sporting Times, 6 April 1929, 10.
  32. ^ The Era, 6 February 1929, 6.
  33. ^ The People, 21 April 1929, 12.
  34. ^ The Era, 31 July 1929, 4.
  35. ^ The Era, 7 August 1929, 6.
  36. ^ The Bystander, 18 September 1929, 598.
  37. ^ Sporting Times, 23 March 1929, 10.
  38. ^ Sporting Times, 21 December 1929, 7.
  39. ^ Sporting Times, 16 November 1929, 11.
  40. ^ The Stage, 7 March 1929, 22.
  41. ^ The Stage, 4 April 1929, 16.
  42. ^ The Tatler, 24 July 1929, 18.
  43. ^ The Era, 9 April 1930, 6.
  44. ^ The Era, 9 April 1930, 6.
  45. ^ The Era, 24 September 1930, 6.
  46. ^ The Era, 9 April 1930, 9.
  47. ^ The Era, 12 November 1930, 1.
  48. ^ The Era, 25 November 1931, 11.
  49. ^ Birmingham Daily, 19 January 1931, 5.
  50. ^ The People, 13 September 1931, 12.
  51. ^ Birmingham Daily Gazette, 30 January 1931, 7.
  52. ^ Nottingham Journal, 21 November 1931, 3.
  53. ^ The Era, 23 September 1931, 11.
  54. ^ Daily Herald, 23 January 1931, 6.
  55. ^ The Stage, 19 March 1931, 14.
  56. ^ The Stage, 24 December 1931, 12.
  57. ^ The Sphere, 26 September 1931, 27.
  58. ^ The Stage, 3 November 1932, 14.
  59. ^ The Stage, 3 November 1932, 14.
  60. ^ Birmingham Daily Gazette , 29 February 1932, 1. Daily Herald, 23 April 1932, 3.
  61. ^ The Era, 2 November 1932, 11.
  62. ^ Middlesex County Times, 6 February 1932, 13.
  63. ^ Daily Herald, 30 May 1932, 9.
  64. ^ The Bystander, 27 April 1932, 184.
  65. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 6 June 1933, 4.
  66. ^ The Stage, 31 August 1933, 10.
  67. ^ The Stage, 12 October 1933, 10.
  68. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 8 July 1933, 16
  69. ^ Nottingham Journal, 20 October 1933, 7.
  70. ^ Sheffield Independent, 27 November 1933, 6.
  71. ^ Daily Herald, 7 April 1933, 11.
  72. ^ The Stage, 6 April 1933, 12.
  73. ^ The Stage, 7 December 1933, 15.
  74. ^ The Stage, 5 October 1933, 12.
  75. ^ The Stage - Thursday 8 March 1934, 8
  76. ^ The Era, 9 May 1934, 23.
  77. ^ Sheffield Independent, 31 August 1934, 6.
  78. ^ The Stage, 1 November 1934, 8.
  79. ^ Leamington Spa Courier, 22 February 1935, 3.
  80. ^ The Era, 5 June 1935, 2.
  81. ^ The Stage, 14 March 1935, 10.
  82. ^ The Stage, 27 June 1935, 10.
  83. ^ The Stage, 21 March 1935, 10.
  84. ^ Warwick and Warwickshire Advertiser, 2 May 1936, 4. Warwick and Warwickshire Advertiser, 4 July 1936, 4. The Scotsman, 13 June 1936, 17.
  85. ^ Belfast Telegraph, 22 July 1936, 7.
  86. ^ The Stage, 31 December 1936, 20.
  87. ^ The Stage, 13 August 1936, 10.
  88. ^ The Stage, 25 February 1937, 11.
  89. ^ The Era, 1 April 1937, 6.
  90. ^ Daily Herald, 20 October 1937, 9.
  91. ^ Birmingham Daily Gazette, 4 February 1937, 9.
  92. ^ Daily Herald, 25 June 1937, 5.
  93. ^ The Stage, 8 April 1937, 11.
  94. ^ The Stage, 10 June 1937, 10.
  95. ^ Coventry Herald, 6 May 1939, 12.
  96. ^ The Sphere, 16 December 1939, 36.
  97. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 21 March 1940, 6.
  98. ^ https://www.bfi.org.uk/films-tv-people/4ce2b6accdf02. Archived 2019-10-31 at the Wayback Machine
  99. ^ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cardinal_(1936_film), Nottingham Evening Post, 4 December 1935, 6.
  100. ^ Northern Whig, 12 November 1936, 6.
  101. ^ The Stage, 19 November 1936, 10.
  102. ^ The Era, 12 August 1936, 3.
  103. ^ The Era, 15 April 1936, 7.
  104. ^ The Bystander, 3 December 1924, 745.
  105. ^ The Sphere, 20 November 1926, 4.
  106. ^ Dundee Courier, 6 April 1926, 3.
  107. ^ Illustrated London News, 12 November 1927.
  108. ^ Illustrated London News, 3 September 1927, 370
  109. ^ The Yorkshire Post, 16 May 1928, 4.
  110. ^ The Era, 12 December 1928, 10
  111. ^ Northern Whig, 16 August 1924, 9.
  112. ^ The Sphere, 10 July 1926, 10.
  113. ^ Sheffield Independent, 3 December 1927, 3.
  114. ^ Lichfield Mercury, 17 December 1926, 4.
  115. ^ The Era , 23 February 1927, 9.
  116. ^ Daily Herald, 4 September 1930, 6.
  117. ^ Daily Herald, 6 November 1930, 6.
  118. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 2 March 1932, 6.
  119. ^ Warwick and Warwickshire Advertiser, 19 November 1932, 1.
  120. ^ Lincolnshire Echo, 11 December 1924, 3
  121. ^ Derby Daily Telegraph, 5 August 1927, 1.
  122. ^ The Stage, 10 September 1931, 13.
  123. ^ Yorkshire Post and Leeds Intelligencer, 3 February 1938, 8.
  124. ^ The Age, 24 October 1936, 6.
  125. ^ The Winnipeg Tribune, 14 May 1938, 22.
  126. ^ Thanet Advertiser, 6 November 1926, 2.
  127. ^ Lincolnshire Echo, 22 October 1924, 3.
  128. ^ Dublin Evening Telegraph, 30 January 1924, 2
  129. ^ The Sphere, 29 August 1925, 256
  130. ^ Birmingham Daily , 14 October 1924.
  131. ^ Buckinghamshire Examiner, 22 May 1925, 2.
  132. ^ The Tatler, 9 June 1926, 27
  133. ^ The Tatler, 13 May 1925, 14
  134. ^ The Bystander, 3 June 1925, 732
  135. ^ The Graphic, 4 July 1925, 12
  136. ^ The Tatler, 16 November 1927, 28.
  137. ^ The Stage, 30 June 1927, 15
  138. ^ Belfast Telegraph, 4 November 1930, 9. Nottingham Evening Post, 28 April 1931, 4.
  139. ^ Staffordshire Sentinel, 6 April 1931, 6.
  140. ^ The Bioscope, 8 April 1931, 23.
  141. ^ Nottingham Journal, 21 December 1932, 3.
  142. ^ Exeter and Plymouth Gazette, 18 March 1938, 8.
  143. ^ Mid Sussex Times, 26 April 1938, 3.