The Life of Robert Loraine: The Stage, the Sky, and George Bernard Shaw

Robert Loraine was born in a period when technology exploded into a world whose keyword was Progress. Both he and his lifelong friend George Bernard Shaw believed they were in an evolutionary period of humanity. Born into a theatrical family, he understood its clashes of temperament and competition for the attention of the audience. He was fortunate to be playing in London by age twenty-one, and secured lead roles two years later. Thus, it was incomprehensible to his peers when he volunteered to fight in the Boer War.

After his year of service, he heeded his father’s advice: first conquer London, and then America. He accepted a contract from Daniel Frohman in New York. Four years of dusty old plots made him yearn for something new, something he found in Shaw’s Man and Superman. A two year tour in the role of John Tanner led him to professional and financial success.

The lust for something new also led him into pioneer aviation. Visualizing the aeroplane’s unlimited potential, he challenged the theory that flight could only take place in calm weather by flying through a raging thunderstorm. Ever of a military mind, he also demonstrated the machine’s capacity for scouting in military maneuvers. With political stormclouds closing in again in 1914, Robert volunteered six days before his country declared war on Germany. Dispatched to the Royal Flying Corps, he served all four years of the war, rose to the highest rank of any civilian, and was gravely wounded twice.

Robert married at age forty-five, but the compromises of domesticity did not come easily to him. His young wife, Winifred, suffered through the downward spiral of an aging actor. The 1930s brought the Great Depression and he returned to the United States, attempting to make money on Broadway or in Hollywood. When he finally returned to England in November, 1935, he died two days before Christmas.

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The Life of Robert Loraine: The Stage, the Sky, and George Bernard Shaw

Robert Loraine was born in a period when technology exploded into a world whose keyword was Progress. Both he and his lifelong friend George Bernard Shaw believed they were in an evolutionary period of humanity. Born into a theatrical family, he understood its clashes of temperament and competition for the attention of the audience. He was fortunate to be playing in London by age twenty-one, and secured lead roles two years later. Thus, it was incomprehensible to his peers when he volunteered to fight in the Boer War.

After his year of service, he heeded his father’s advice: first conquer London, and then America. He accepted a contract from Daniel Frohman in New York. Four years of dusty old plots made him yearn for something new, something he found in Shaw’s Man and Superman. A two year tour in the role of John Tanner led him to professional and financial success.

The lust for something new also led him into pioneer aviation. Visualizing the aeroplane’s unlimited potential, he challenged the theory that flight could only take place in calm weather by flying through a raging thunderstorm. Ever of a military mind, he also demonstrated the machine’s capacity for scouting in military maneuvers. With political stormclouds closing in again in 1914, Robert volunteered six days before his country declared war on Germany. Dispatched to the Royal Flying Corps, he served all four years of the war, rose to the highest rank of any civilian, and was gravely wounded twice.

Robert married at age forty-five, but the compromises of domesticity did not come easily to him. His young wife, Winifred, suffered through the downward spiral of an aging actor. The 1930s brought the Great Depression and he returned to the United States, attempting to make money on Broadway or in Hollywood. When he finally returned to England in November, 1935, he died two days before Christmas.

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The Life of Robert Loraine: The Stage, the Sky, and George Bernard Shaw

The Life of Robert Loraine: The Stage, the Sky, and George Bernard Shaw

by Lanayre D Liggera
The Life of Robert Loraine: The Stage, the Sky, and George Bernard Shaw

The Life of Robert Loraine: The Stage, the Sky, and George Bernard Shaw

by Lanayre D Liggera

Hardcover

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Overview

Robert Loraine was born in a period when technology exploded into a world whose keyword was Progress. Both he and his lifelong friend George Bernard Shaw believed they were in an evolutionary period of humanity. Born into a theatrical family, he understood its clashes of temperament and competition for the attention of the audience. He was fortunate to be playing in London by age twenty-one, and secured lead roles two years later. Thus, it was incomprehensible to his peers when he volunteered to fight in the Boer War.

After his year of service, he heeded his father’s advice: first conquer London, and then America. He accepted a contract from Daniel Frohman in New York. Four years of dusty old plots made him yearn for something new, something he found in Shaw’s Man and Superman. A two year tour in the role of John Tanner led him to professional and financial success.

The lust for something new also led him into pioneer aviation. Visualizing the aeroplane’s unlimited potential, he challenged the theory that flight could only take place in calm weather by flying through a raging thunderstorm. Ever of a military mind, he also demonstrated the machine’s capacity for scouting in military maneuvers. With political stormclouds closing in again in 1914, Robert volunteered six days before his country declared war on Germany. Dispatched to the Royal Flying Corps, he served all four years of the war, rose to the highest rank of any civilian, and was gravely wounded twice.

Robert married at age forty-five, but the compromises of domesticity did not come easily to him. His young wife, Winifred, suffered through the downward spiral of an aging actor. The 1930s brought the Great Depression and he returned to the United States, attempting to make money on Broadway or in Hollywood. When he finally returned to England in November, 1935, he died two days before Christmas.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781611494587
Publisher: University of Delaware Press
Publication date: 08/15/2013
Pages: 280
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Lanayre D. Liggera holds an M.A. in literature from Tufts University and another from Goddard-Cambridge Women’s Studies. She was a member of a feminist band, the New Harmony Sisterhood, which researched the women’s history, finding old songs, or writing new ones, using song as the most mnemonic device. Later, her childhood fascination with early aviation re-emerged, which led to a study of the Great War. In 1994 she was appointed chairman of the New England-New York Chapter of the Western Front-U.S. Branch, serving for fourteen years, arranging conferences in different locations each year, including London.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
List of Illustrations
Foreword
Introduction
1. From Childhood Days
2. The Lights of London
3. A Horseman of the Veldt
4. An Actor Again
5. Enter the Superman
6. A Season of Acclaim
7. The Sound of Wings
8. The Happy Warrior
9. The Eternal Note of Sadness
10. A Land for Heroes
11. The Transatlantic Life
12. Last Flight
Bibliography
Index
About the Author

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