Ben Landeck
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Ben Landeck (1864–1928) was a prolific British playwright, who wrote melodramas often in collaboration with Arthur Shirley. Several of his plays were made into early films.


Early life

Landeck was born in
London London is the capital and List of urban areas in the United Kingdom, largest city of England and the United Kingdom, with a population of just under 9 million. It stands on the River Thames in south-east England at the head of a estuary dow ...
on 24 October 1846.


Career

Landeck wrote plays alone and in collaboration with other playwrights, in particular Arthur Shirley; their collaboration lasted from 1892 until 1923. One of his earliest successes was ''My Jack''. Plays written with Shirley include ''A King of Crime'', ''Saved from the Sea, Tommy Atkins, Jack Tar, A Lion's Heart, Women and Wine, The Women of France,'' and ''The Savage and the Woman.'' A number of the plays were made into movies between 1908 and 1928. In 1898 ''Going the Pace'' by Landeck and Shirley was first performed in Wolverhampton and later London. The staging featured horses, foxhounds and a hansom cab. In 1923 the Lyceum Theatre in London produced the melodrama ''What Money can Buy'' by Landeck and Shirley. Although it was described as a "drama of modern life" the plot owed its dramatic roots to nineteenth-century melodrama which was enhanced by being performed against a background of music. In a collaboration with Oswald Brand he wrote ''The Adventures of Dr Nikola'' which was performed in London in 1902.


Personal life

In 1909 he married the actress Valerie Crespin, who died in April 1934. Landeck died in London on 6 January 1928.


References


External links


Plays by Landeck and by Landeck and George Bellamy on Great War Theatre


{{DEFAULTSORT:Landeck, Ben 1864 births 1928 deaths 20th-century British dramatists and playwrights 19th-century British dramatists and playwrights