Editing Dan Leno
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Leno's stage partner Herbert Campbell died in July 1904, shortly after the pantomime, following an accident at the age of fifty-seven. The death affected Leno deeply, and he went into a decline. At that time, he was appearing at the [[London Pavilion]], but the show had to be cancelled owing to his inability to remember his lines.<ref name=Brandreth84/> So harsh were the critics that Leno wrote a statement, published in ''The Era'', to defend the show's originality.<ref>"Mr Dan Leno. Pavilion, where I am singing Two New Songs of my own, copied from no one. The "Boy" song, which an unkind critic compared to another, I beg to say I wrote and Sang in Glasgow Thirty-one years ago. Who is copying now? All my Thirty-four Minutes' Gags are copied from no one." "Dan Leno", ''The Era'', 22 October 1904, p. 7</ref> On 20 October 1904, Leno gave his last performance in the show. Afterwards, he stopped at the [[Belgrave Hospital for Children]] in [[Kennington]], of which he was vice-president, to leave a donation.<ref>Anthony, p. 197; and Wood, p. 241</ref> |
Leno's stage partner Herbert Campbell died in July 1904, shortly after the pantomime, following an accident at the age of fifty-seven. The death affected Leno deeply, and he went into a decline. At that time, he was appearing at the [[London Pavilion]], but the show had to be cancelled owing to his inability to remember his lines.<ref name=Brandreth84/> So harsh were the critics that Leno wrote a statement, published in ''The Era'', to defend the show's originality.<ref>"Mr Dan Leno. Pavilion, where I am singing Two New Songs of my own, copied from no one. The "Boy" song, which an unkind critic compared to another, I beg to say I wrote and Sang in Glasgow Thirty-one years ago. Who is copying now? All my Thirty-four Minutes' Gags are copied from no one." "Dan Leno", ''The Era'', 22 October 1904, p. 7</ref> On 20 October 1904, Leno gave his last performance in the show. Afterwards, he stopped at the [[Belgrave Hospital for Children]] in [[Kennington]], of which he was vice-president, to leave a donation.<ref>Anthony, p. 197; and Wood, p. 241</ref> |
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Leno died at his home in London on 31 October 1904, aged 43, and was buried at [[Lambeth Cemetery]], London.<ref name=Brandreth91>Brandreth, p. 91</ref><ref>"Death of Dan Leno", ''Western Times'', 1 November 1904, p. 5</ref>{{refn| [[Arthur Roberts (comedian)|Arthur Roberts]], a close friend, commented after Leno's death: "It seems an extraordinary thing to say, but I really believe that King Edward's kindness was the unconscious means of hastening Dan Leno's mind over the borderline of insanity ... Poor Dan had been fluttering outside the cage of the madhouse for some years, and the great honour and dignity which he received at the hands of the King just tilted the scales of divine injustice. He went inside".<ref name=Brandreth81/>|group= n}} The cause of death is not known.{{refn|1=No medical records survive. At least three theories for the cause of death have been given by various sources: ''[[The New York Times]]'' stated he had died of heart disease.<ref>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1904/11/01/101241446.html?pageNumber=9 "Dan Leno Dead"], ''The New York Times'', 1 November 1904, p. 9</ref> ''The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', on the other hand, states that he died of [[tertiary syphilis]].<ref name=dnb/> Finally, his biographer Gyles Brandreth argued that Leno had succumbed to a brain tumour, which Brandreth thought would help explain his erratic behaviour. Leno stated in 1904: "the cause of my brain trouble was attributed to a fall off my bicycle".<ref name=Brandreth80/>|group= n}} His death and funeral were national news. |
Leno died at his home in London on 31 October 1904, aged 43, and was buried at [[Lambeth Cemetery]], London.<ref name=Brandreth91>Brandreth, p. 91</ref><ref>"Death of Dan Leno", ''Western Times'', 1 November 1904, p. 5</ref>{{refn| [[Arthur Roberts (comedian)|Arthur Roberts]], a close friend, commented after Leno's death: "It seems an extraordinary thing to say, but I really believe that King Edward's kindness was the unconscious means of hastening Dan Leno's mind over the borderline of insanity ... Poor Dan had been fluttering outside the cage of the madhouse for some years, and the great honour and dignity which he received at the hands of the King just tilted the scales of divine injustice. He went inside".<ref name=Brandreth81/>|group= n}} The cause of death is not known.{{refn|1=No medical records survive. At least three theories for the cause of death have been given by various sources: ''[[The New York Times]]'' stated he had died of heart disease.<ref>[https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1904/11/01/101241446.html?pageNumber=9 "Dan Leno Dead"], ''The New York Times'', 1 November 1904, p. 9</ref> ''The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', on the other hand, states that he died of [[tertiary syphilis]].<ref name=dnb/> Finally, his biographer Gyles Brandreth argued that Leno had succumbed to a brain tumour, which Brandreth thought would help explain his erratic behaviour. Leno stated in 1904: "the cause of my brain trouble was attributed to a fall off my bicycle".<ref name=Brandreth80/>|group= n}} His death and funeral were national news. The ''Daily Telegraph'' wrote in its obituary: "There was only one Dan. His methods were inimitable; his face was indeed his fortune ... Who has seen him in any of his disguises and has failed to laugh?"<ref>"Obituary", ''Daily Telegraph'', 1 November 1904, p. 2</ref> [[Max Beerbohm]] later said of Leno's death: "So little and frail a lantern could not long harbour so big a flame".<ref name= Beerbohm349>Beerbohm, p. 349</ref>{{refn|Leno's memorial is maintained by the [[The Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America|Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America]] and was restored by the [[Grand Order of Water Rats]] in 2004.<ref>Anthony, p. 10</ref>|group= n}} |
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Leno is commemorated by the Dan Leno Gardens on Patmos Road in London, situated behind [[St John the Divine, Kennington]], which are designated for use by disabled people.<ref>[https://www.lambeth.gov.uk/places/mostyn-olive-morris-and-dan-leno-gardens "Lambeth Parks, Dan Leno Gardens"], www.lambeth.gov.uk, accessed 28 June 2020</ref> |
Leno is commemorated by the Dan Leno Gardens on Patmos Road in London, situated behind [[St John the Divine, Kennington]], which are designated for use by disabled people.<ref>[https://www.lambeth.gov.uk/places/mostyn-olive-morris-and-dan-leno-gardens "Lambeth Parks, Dan Leno Gardens"], www.lambeth.gov.uk, accessed 28 June 2020</ref> |