Langford Reed
Langford Reed (11 November 1878 – 8 March 1954) was a British author, writer and collector of limericks, scriptwriter, director and actor of the silent film era.
Biography
[edit]Reed was born in Clapham in London in 1878 as Herbert Langford Reed, the son of Emma Mary née Williams (1848–) and John Herbert Reed (1834-1919), a manufacturer of hosiery.[1][2] 'Bertie' Reed[3] was educated in Clapham and at Hove College. In 1911 aged 32 he was a journalist living with his parents with the family home now being a boarding house.[4] He married the theatre and film costume designer Henrietta 'Hetty' Elizabeth Spiers (1881-1973) at Lambeth in London in 1912.[5] Their daughter, the actress Joan Mary Langford Reed (1917-1997) made her screen début aged 2 years in The Heart of a Rose (1919), written by her father. She went on to appear in Testimony (1920), The Wonderful Wooing (1925) and The Luck of the Navy (1927). She was the first winner of the ‘Navana Juvenile Beauty Competition’ in 1922 and in 1923 featured in the Glaxo Baby Food advertising campaign.[6]
During World War I Langford Reed served as a Private in the Middlesex Regiment with the British Army in France.[7] He was a prolific scriptwriter for silent film and was the author of a number of books of 'clean' or 'laundered' limericks which he collected or wrote[8] and various of which were illustrated by H. M. Bateman among others, including The Complete Limerick Book (1924); The Indiscreet Limerick Book (1925); Nonsense Verses - An Anthology (editor, c1925); Daphne Goes Down (1925), written with his wife; Further Nonsense: Verse and Prose by Lewis Carroll (editor, 1926); Nonsense Tales for the Young (1927); Who's Who in Filmland (1931) with Hetty Spiers; The Life of Lewis Carroll (1932); Limericks for the Beach, Bathroom and Boudoir (1933); Mr Punch's Limerick Book (editor, 1934); The Limerick Calendar (1935); Sausages & Sundials: A Book of Nonsense Ballads (c1935); The Complete Rhyming Dictionary (1936); My Limerick Book (1937); Another Limerick Calendar (c1939); with his wife Hetty Spiers he wrote The Mantle of Methuselah: A Farcical Novel (1939); and The Writer's Rhyming Dictionary (1961).[9]
A prolific film writer and director, he was known for The Tempest (1908); wrote the intertitles for and edited Chase Me Charlie (1918), a seven-reel montage of Charlie Chaplin's Essanay films released in Great Britain;[2] The Heart of a Rose (1919); A Lass o' the Looms (1919) and Potter's Clay (1922), the screenplay of which was adapted with his wife in to a novel in 1923.[10] A Freemason, he joined the Authors' Lodge No. 3456 in 1921.[11]
In his later years he lived at 59 Carlton Hill in St John's Wood with his wife Henrietta Elizabeth Reed.[12]
He died in Hampstead in London in 1954 and was buried in the churchyard of St John-at-Hampstead.[13] Fittingly, Reed has a limerick on his headstone:
There once was a fellow named Reed,
Who knew that the world had a need,
For limericks and fun,
And all hearts he won,
Since laughter and joy were his creed.
The laughter and joy will not die,
As angels laugh with him on high,
While we here on Earth
Should cultivate mirth.
'Tis better to laugh than to cry.[13]
In his will he left £110.[12]
Filmography
[edit]Actor
[edit]- 1906: Saved by a Lie directed by Percy Stow
- 1907: A Knight Errant directed by J. H. Martin
Scriptwriter
[edit]
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Director
[edit]- 1914: The Temptation of Joseph
- 1914: The Rival Anarchists
- 1914: The Little God
- 1914: The Catch of the Season
- 1914: The Cleansing of a Dirty Dog
- 1918: Chase Me Charlie
References
[edit]- ^ 1881 England Census for Herbert Langford Reed: London, Clapham - Ancestry.com (subscription required)
- ^ a b c Filmography of Langford Reed - British Film Institute database
- ^ 1891 England Census for Bertie Reed: London, Clapham - Ancestry.com (subscription required)
- ^ 1911 England Census for Herbert Langford Reed: London. Wandsworth. Clapham - Ancestry.com (subscription required)
- ^ Herbert L Reed in the England & Wales, Civil Registration Marriage Index, 1837-1915 - Ancestry.com (subscription required)
- ^ Hetty Spiers/Ella Langford Reed - Women and Silent British Cinema
- ^ British Army WWI Medal Rolls Index Cards, 1914-1920: Redstone, William H - Reed, James W - Ancestry.com (subscription required)
- ^ Wim Tigges (ed), Explorations in the Field of Nonsense, Rodopi Amsterdam (1987) - Google Books 117
- ^ Langford Reed - Library of Congress
- ^ Potter's Clay: A Romance (1923), - Library of Congress Copyright Office: Catalogue of Copyright Entries - Google Books p. 4725
- ^ England, United Grand Lodge of England Freemason Membership Registers, 1751-1921 for Herbert Langford Reed: United Grand Lodge of England, 1910-1921, Membership Registers: London M 3163-3404 to London N 3408-3605 - Ancestry.com (subscription required)
- ^ a b England & Wales, National Probate Calendar (Index of Wills and Administrations), 1858-1995 for Herbert Langford Reed: 1954 - Ancestry.com (subscription required)
- ^ a b Burial of Langford Reed - Find a Grave
External links
[edit]- 1878 births
- 1954 deaths
- Actors from the London Borough of Lambeth
- British Army personnel of World War I
- Freemasons of the United Grand Lodge of England
- English male film actors
- English male silent film actors
- 20th-century English male actors
- Silent film screenwriters
- Silent film directors
- Comedy fiction writers
- 20th-century English novelists
- 20th-century English screenwriters
- British anthologists
- People from Clapham