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| image        = Lizbeth Webb Bless the Bride.jpg
| image        = Lizbeth Webb Bless the Bride.jpg
| imagesize    =
| imagesize    =
| caption      = Webb in ''[[Bless the Bride]]'' (1947)
| caption      = Webb in ''[[w:Bless the Bride|Bless the Bride]]'' (1947)
| birthname    = Betty Ethel Holton
| birthname    = Betty Ethel Holton
| birth_date    = {{birth date|1926|1|30|df=y}}
| birth_date    = {{birth date|1926|1|30|df=y}}
| birth_place  = [[Reading, Berkshire]], England
| birth_place  = [[w:Reading, Berkshire|Reading]], England
| death_date    = {{Death date and age|df=yes|2013|1|17|1926|1|30}}
| death_date    = {{Death date and age|df=yes|2013|1|17|1926|1|30}}
| death_place  = [[London]], England
| death_place  = [[w:London|London]], England
| occupation    = Soprano, actress
| occupation    = Soprano, actress
| yearsactive  = 1943–1969
| yearsactive  = 1943–1969
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'''Betty Ethel Holton''' (30 January 1926 – 17 January 2013), better known by her stage name, '''Lizbeth Webb''', was an English [[soprano]] and stage actress.  Known as "the champagne soprano", she is remembered partly for originating the song "This Is My Lovely Day".
'''Betty Ethel Holton''' (30 January 1926 – 17 January 2013), better known by her stage name, '''Lizbeth Webb''', was an English [[w:soprano|soprano]] and stage actress.  Known as "the champagne soprano", she is remembered partly for originating the song "This is My Lovely Day".


After performing as a dance band vocalist and entertaining British troops during World War II, Webb pursued a career in West End musicals, becoming known for her vivaciousness in playing such roles as Lucy Willow in ''[[Bless the Bride]]'', Linda in [[Ivor Novello]]'s ''[[Gay's the Word (musical)|Gay's the Word]]'' and Sarah Brown in ''[[Guys and Dolls (musical)|Guys and Dolls]]''.  She married Colonel [[Sir Guy Campbell, 5th Baronet|Guy Campbell]], the heir to a [[baronet]]cy, and left the stage in the late 1950s, bringing up two sons but returning for a last engagement in the title role of ''[[The Merry Widow]]'' in 1969.
After performing as a dance band vocalist and entertaining British troops during World War II, Webb pursued a career in West End musicals, becoming known for her vivaciousness in playing such roles as Lucy Willow in ''[[w:Bless the Bride|Bless the Bride]]'', Linda in [[w:Ivor Novello|Ivor Novello]]'s ''[[w:Gay's the Word (musical)|Gay's the Word]]'' and Sarah Brown in ''[[w:Guys and Dolls (musical)|Guys and Dolls]]''.  She married Colonel [[w:Sir Guy Campbell, 5th Baronet|Guy Campbell]], the heir to a [[w:baronet|baronet]]cy, and left the stage in the late 1950s, bringing up two sons but returning for a last engagement in the title role of ''[[w:The Merry Widow|The Merry Widow]]'' in 1969.


==Early life and career==
==Early life and career==
Webb was born in [[Reading, Berkshire|Reading]], Berkshire, the last of three children of Frederick Holton, a locomotive engine driver, and his wife Ethel, ''née'' Strutt (1895–1926).<ref>Webb's birth was registered at Reading (St Giles) on 10 February 1926 Reading Register Office, Vol. 2c, p. 599 as Betty Ethel Holton, and the birth certificate shows her parents' names and father's occupation. Her mother's birth was registered at the [[Headington]] registration District, Vol. 3A, p. 880, 1st QTR 1895 as Ethel Strutt. She was baptised on 5 May 1895 at St Philip & St James's Church, [[Oxford]]; her mother's parents were named as Henry Cecil Strutt and Florence Letitia Strutt. The baptism register states that her mother was born 20 February 1895; the family lived in Oxford. Later, as on Webb's birth certificate, her mother sometimes gave her maiden name as Vining.</ref> Webb's mother died in childbirth, and she was adopted by her aunt and uncle, Ethel and Alfred Wills Webber. Her sister and brother were adopted by other aunts. She attended E. P. Collier Primary School, where she was known as '''Betty Webber'''.<ref name=Get>[http://www.getreading.co.uk/news/s/2128243_lizbeth_webb_lived_life_to_the_full "Lizbeth Webb lived life to the full"], ''Reading Post'', 1 February 2013</ref> She later went on to [[Hemdean House School]] and [[Queen Anne's School]], both in [[Caversham, Berkshire|Caversham]], Reading.  As a child, she excelled at rowing, swimming and running.<ref name=Teleobit>{{cite news|title=Obituary: Lizbeth Webb|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/culture-obituaries/theatre-obituaries/9819554/Lizbeth-Webb.html|newspaper=Daily Telegraph|date=22 January 2013}}</ref> From an early age, she took singing lessons.<ref name=GuardianObit>Coveney, Michael. [https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2013/jan/27/lizbeth-webb "Lizbeth Webb obituary"], ''The Guardian'', 27 January 2013</ref>
Webb was born in [[w:Reading, Berkshire|Reading]], Berkshire, the last of three children of Frederick Holton, a locomotive engine driver, and his wife Ethel, ''née'' Strutt (1895–1926).<ref>Webb's birth was registered at Reading (St Giles) on 10 February 1926 Reading Register Office, Vol. 2c, p. 599 as Betty Ethel Holton, and the birth certificate shows her parents' names and father's occupation. Her mother's birth was registered at the [[w:Headington]] registration District, Vol. 3A, p. 880, 1st QTR 1895 as Ethel Strutt. She was baptised on 5 May 1895 at St Philip & St James's Church, [[w:Oxford|]]; her mother's parents were named as Henry Cecil Strutt and Florence Letitia Strutt. The baptism register states that her mother was born 20 February 1895; the family lived in Oxford. Later, as on Webb's birth certificate, her mother sometimes gave her maiden name as Vining.</ref> Webb's mother died in childbirth, and she was adopted by her aunt and uncle, Ethel and Alfred Wills Webber. Her sister and brother were adopted by other aunts. She attended E. P. Collier Primary School, where she was known as '''Betty Webber'''.<ref name=Get>[http://www.getreading.co.uk/news/s/2128243_lizbeth_webb_lived_life_to_the_full "Lizbeth Webb lived life to the full"], ''Reading Post'', 1 February 2013</ref> She later went on to [[w:Hemdean House School|Hemdean House School]] and [[w:Queen Anne's School|Queen Anne's School]], both in [[w:Caversham, Berkshire|Caversham]], Reading.  As a child, she excelled at rowing, swimming and running.<ref name=Teleobit>{{cite news|title=Obituary: Lizbeth Webb|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituaries/culture-obituaries/theatre-obituaries/9819554/Lizbeth-Webb.html|newspaper=Daily Telegraph|date=22 January 2013}}</ref> From an early age, she took singing lessons.<ref name=GuardianObit>Coveney, Michael. [https://www.theguardian.com/stage/2013/jan/27/lizbeth-webb "Lizbeth Webb obituary"], ''The Guardian'', 27 January 2013</ref>


She began her career as a teenage band vocalist and on [[BBC radio]] under the name Betty Webb, singing to the troops during World War II and freelancing with British bands, often for [[Jack Payne (bandleader)|Jack Payne]], who discovered her, and also for Albert Sandler, [[Henry Hall (bandleader)|Henry Hall]], [[Louis Levy]] and [[Geraldo (bandleader)|Geraldo]].  She generally performed two or three live broadcasts daily during the height of the German air-raids.  She was also a regular on programmes such as ''Happidrome'', ''[[Workers' Playtime (radio programme)|Workers Playtime]]'', ''[[Kaleidoscope (TV series)|Kaleidoscope]]'', "Music Hall", ''[[Variety Bandbox]]'', ''Four and Twenty'', ''The Forces Show'' with [[Diana Dors]], [[Jack Buchanan]] and [[Bob Monkhouse]], ''Follies of the Air'' with [[Sonnie Hale]], ''Home at Eight'' with [[Hermione Gingold]] and [[Richard Attenborough]], and ''[[Friday Night Is Music Night]]''.<ref name=GuardianObit/> Among the conductors she sang with were George Melachrino, [[Mantovani]], [[Richard Tauber]], Harry Rabinowitz, Stanley Black, [[Max Jaffa]], [[Charles Mackerras]], both Eric and [[Stanford Robinson]] and [[Vilém Tauský]].<ref name=Teleobit/><ref name=GuardianObit/>
She began her career as a teenage band vocalist and on [[w:BBC radio|BBC radio]] under the name Betty Webb, singing to the troops during World War II and freelancing with British bands, often for [[w:Jack Payne (bandleader)|Jack Payne]], who discovered her, and also for Albert Sandler, [[w:Henry Hall (bandleader)|Henry Hall]], [[w:Louis Levy|Louis Levy]] and [[w:Geraldo (bandleader)|Geraldo]].  She generally performed two or three live broadcasts daily during the height of the German air-raids.  She was also a regular on programmes such as ''Happidrome'', ''[[w:Workers' Playtime (radio programme)|Workers Playtime]]'', ''[[w:Kaleidoscope (TV series)|Kaleidoscope]]'', "Music Hall", ''[[w:Variety Bandbox|Variety Bandbox]]'', ''Four and Twenty'', ''The Forces Show'' with [[Diana Dors]], [[Jack Buchanan]] and [[Bob Monkhouse]], ''Follies of the Air'' with [[w:Sonnie Hale|Sonnie Hale]], ''Home at Eight'' with [[w:Hermione Gingold|Hermione Gingold]] and [[w:Richard Attenborough|Richard Attenborough]], and ''[[w:Friday Night Is Music Night|Friday Night Is Music Night]]''.<ref name=GuardianObit/> Among the conductors she sang with were George Melachrino, [[w:Mantovani|Mantovani]], [[w:Richard Tauber|Richard Tauber]], Harry Rabinowitz, Stanley Black, [[w:Max Jaffa|Max Jaffa]], [[w:Charles Mackerras|Charles Mackerras]], both Eric and [[w:Stanford Robinson|Stanford Robinson]] and [[w:Vilém Tauský|Vilém Tauský]].<ref name=Teleobit/><ref name=GuardianObit/>


In addition to entertaining the Allied troops, she took part in propaganda broadcasts of German light music, often in German, working with [[Mischa Spoliansky]], and sketches with upbeat tales of life in Britain.  This placed her on potential Nazi death lists.<ref name=Teleobit/>
In addition to entertaining the Allied troops, she took part in propaganda broadcasts of German light music, often in German, working with [[w:Mischa Spoliansky|Mischa Spoliansky]], and sketches with upbeat tales of life in Britain.  This placed her on potential Nazi death lists.<ref name=Teleobit/>


==West End success==
==West End success==
After an introduction from Geraldo, in 1946, the impresario [[Charles B. Cochran]] engaged her to work for him and changed her name to Lizbeth Webb.  She first understudied and then took over the lead, Grace Green, in [[Vivian Ellis]] and [[A. P. Herbert]]'s parliamentary satire ''Big Ben'' at the [[Adelphi Theatre]] in London and on tour (1946).<ref name=GuardianObit/><ref name=Stage>"A star still shining", ''The Stage'', 12 February 2004</ref> Ellis and Herbert wrote a leading role for her the next year, Lucy Willow, in the hit musical ''[[Bless the Bride]]'',<ref>[https://www.amazon.com/Bless-Bride-Original-London-Cast/dp/B001QEIHWW "'Bless the Bride' original cast recording"']. Amazon, retrieved 16 March 2010</ref><ref>Green, p. 35</ref> in which her character leaves a stuffy English fiancé, who she does not love, to elope with a brave and dashing Frenchman, played by [[Georges Guétary]].  One of her songs with Guétary, "This Is My Lovely Day", became one of the BBC's most requested songs of all times,<ref name=GuardianObit/> and the song's popularity, and that of the show, were increased by their association with the wedding in 1947 of [[Elizabeth II|Princess Elizabeth]] and Lt. [[Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh|Philip Mountbatten]] (now, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip).<ref name=Teleobit/> The show's sweeping score also included another popular song for Webb and Guétary, "I Was Never Kissed Before".  ''[[Oklahoma!]]'' opened in the West End the same year as ''Bless the Bride'', but the British musical was not overshadowed by the American hit, enjoying a good reception from the critics<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.musical-theatre.net/html/recordcabinet/vivianellis/blessthebride.html |title=Profile of ''Bless the Bride'' from Record Cabinet |access-date=28 January 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010227205856/http://www.musical-theatre.net/html/recordcabinet/vivianellis/blessthebride.html |archive-date=27 February 2001 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref> and audiences and running for more than two years and 886 performances.<ref name=GuardianObit/> Webb became known as "The Champagne Soprano", and she was admired on stage for her "vibrancy and vivacity".<ref name=GuardianObit/>
After an introduction from Geraldo, in 1946, the impresario [[w:Charles B. Cochran|Charles B. Cochran]] engaged her to work for him and changed her name to Lizbeth Webb.  She first understudied and then took over the lead, Grace Green, in [[w:Vivian Ellis|Vivian Ellis]] and [[w:A. P. Herbert|A. P. Herbert]]'s parliamentary satire ''Big Ben'' at the [[w:Adelphi Theatre|Adelphi Theatre]] in London and on tour (1946).<ref name=GuardianObit/><ref name=Stage>"A star still shining", ''The Stage'', 12 February 2004</ref> Ellis and Herbert wrote a leading role for her the next year, Lucy Willow, in the hit musical ''[[w:Bless the Bride|Bless the Bride]]'',<ref>[https://www.amazon.com/Bless-Bride-Original-London-Cast/dp/B001QEIHWW "'Bless the Bride' original cast recording"']. Amazon, retrieved 16 March 2010</ref><ref>Green, p. 35</ref> in which her character leaves a stuffy English fiancé, who she does not love, to elope with a brave and dashing Frenchman, played by [[w:Georges Guétary|Georges Guétary]].  One of her songs with Guétary, "This Is My Lovely Day", became one of the BBC's most requested songs of all times,<ref name=GuardianObit/> and the song's popularity, and that of the show, were increased by their association with the wedding in 1947 of [[w:Elizabeth II|Princess Elizabeth]] and Lt. [[w:Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh|Philip Mountbatten]] (now, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip).<ref name=Teleobit/> The show's sweeping score also included another popular song for Webb and Guétary, "I Was Never Kissed Before".  ''[[w:Oklahoma!|Oklahoma!]]'' opened in the West End the same year as ''Bless the Bride'', but the British musical was not overshadowed by the American hit, enjoying a good reception from the critics<ref>{{Cite web |url=http://www.musical-theatre.net/html/recordcabinet/vivianellis/blessthebride.html |title=Profile of ''Bless the Bride'' from Record Cabinet |access-date=28 January 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20010227205856/http://www.musical-theatre.net/html/recordcabinet/vivianellis/blessthebride.html |archive-date=27 February 2001 |url-status=dead |df=dmy-all }}</ref> and audiences and running for more than two years and 886 performances.<ref name=GuardianObit/> Webb became known as "The Champagne Soprano", and she was admired on stage for her "vibrancy and vivacity".<ref name=GuardianObit/>


Webb played in [[pantomime]], including the role of [[Dick Whittington]] in 1950, and starred as [[Cinderella]] opposite the stars of ''[[The Goon Show]]'' in 1951 on ''[[BBC Light Programme|The Light Programme]]''.  [[Ivor Novello]] wrote the role of Linda especially for Webb in his last musical, ''[[Gay's the Word (musical)|Gay's the Word]]''.<ref name=Eden>Eden, Richard. [https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/9813209/Champagne-Soprano-Lizbeth-Webb-bows-out.html "''Champagne Soprano' Lizbeth Webb bows out"], ''The Telegraph'', 20 January 2013</ref><ref>Green, pp. 145–46</ref> The show began with performances in [[Manchester]] in 1949 and came to the West End in 1951, where it was another hit.  Webb was praised for her singing of the ballads in the show.<ref name=GuardianObit/> She also played Sarah Brown in the first London production of ''[[Guys and Dolls (musical)|Guys and Dolls]]'' at the [[London Coliseum]] in 1953, which was broadcast as a [[Royal Variety Performance]].<ref name=GuardianObit/> The same year, she was also featured in the [[Royal Command Performance]] given in the presence of the newly crowned [[Elizabeth II|Queen Elizabeth]].  Webb continued to entertain the troops between West End engagements, in Austria after the war, in Korea in 1953 (while under enemy attack) and in Cyprus and Libya in 1956, where she met her second husband, who was head of the British military force in [[Tripoli]].<ref name=Teleobit/>
Webb played in [[w:pantomime|pantomime]], including the role of [[w:Dick Whittington|Dick Whittington]] in 1950, and starred as [[Cinderella]] opposite the stars of ''[[The Goon Show]]'' in 1951 on ''[[w:BBC Light Programme|The Light Programme]]''.  [[w:Ivor Novello|Ivor Novello]] wrote the role of Linda especially for Webb in his last musical, ''[[w:Gay's the Word (musical)|Gay's the Word]]''.<ref name=Eden>Eden, Richard. [https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/celebritynews/9813209/Champagne-Soprano-Lizbeth-Webb-bows-out.html "''Champagne Soprano' Lizbeth Webb bows out"], ''The Telegraph'', 20 January 2013</ref><ref>Green, pp. 145–46</ref> The show began with performances in [[w:Manchester|Manchester]] in 1949 and came to the West End in 1951, where it was another hit.  Webb was praised for her singing of the ballads in the show.<ref name=GuardianObit/> She also played Sarah Brown in the first London production of ''[[w:Guys and Dolls (musical)|Guys and Dolls]]'' at the [[w:London Coliseum|London Coliseum]] in 1953, which was broadcast as a [[w:Royal Variety Performance|Royal Variety Performance]].<ref name=GuardianObit/> The same year, she was also featured in the [[w:Royal Command Performance|Royal Command Performance]] given in the presence of the newly crowned [[w:Elizabeth II|Queen Elizabeth]].  Webb continued to entertain the troops between West End engagements, in Austria after the war, in Korea in 1953 (while under enemy attack) and in Cyprus and Libya in 1956, where she met her second husband, who was head of the British military force in [[w:Tripoli|Tripoli]].<ref name=Teleobit/>


Webb toured the British provinces in ''Jubilee Girl'' (1956), a troubled production that she, the director, the choreographer and others abandoned before it arrived in London.<ref name=GuardianObit/> She next appeared as Giulietta in a 1959 television production of the musical ''Carissima'', by [[Eric Maschwitz]] with music by [[Hans May]], starring [[Ginger Rogers]].{{cn|date=August 2022}}
Webb toured the British provinces in ''Jubilee Girl'' (1956), a troubled production that she, the director, the choreographer and others abandoned before it arrived in London.<ref name=GuardianObit/> She next appeared as Giulietta in a 1959 television production of the musical ''Carissima'', by [[w:Eric Maschwitz|Eric Maschwitz]] with music by [[w:Hans May|Hans May]], starring [[w:Ginger Rogers|Ginger Rogers]].{{cn|date=August 2022}}


==Family and later years==
==Family and later years==
Webb was engaged briefly to [[Peter Sellers]] in 1951 after appearing with him on ''The Light Programme''.<ref name=Teleobit/> Her first husband was Donald H. Parker, an RAF pilot, from whom she was divorced after several years.  On 17 August 1956, Webb married Colonel [[Sir Guy Campbell, 5th Baronet|Guy Campbell]], OBE, MC, the heir to a [[baronet]]cy.  Campbell earned the [[Military Cross]] and, upon his father's death in 1960, inherited his family title. Webb and Campbell had two sons, Sir Lachlan Philip Kemeys Campbell, Bt., an artist and illustrator (''Eton Colours, When It Happened in Scotland,'' and ''When It Happened in Britain''), born in 1958, who has three children, Archie, Georgia and Ivo; and Rory Charles Fitzgerald Campbell, a classical singer and musical theatre actor who owns the entertainment company Encore Entertainment Ltd., born in 1961, who has a daughter, Olivia.<ref>Dewar, Peter Beauclerk. Sir Guy Campbell at ''Burke's landed gentry of Great Britain'', p. 153, Burke's Peerage, 2001 {{ISBN|0-9711966-0-5}}</ref>
Webb was engaged briefly to [[Peter Sellers]] in 1951 after appearing with him on ''The Light Programme''.<ref name=Teleobit/> Her first husband was Donald H. Parker, an RAF pilot, from whom she was divorced after several years.  On 17 August 1956, Webb married Colonel [[w:Sir Guy Campbell, 5th Baronet|Guy Campbell]], OBE, MC, the heir to a [[w:baronet|baronet]]cy.  Campbell earned the [[w:Military Cross|Military Cross]] and, upon his father's death in 1960, inherited his family title. Webb and Campbell had two sons, Sir Lachlan Philip Kemeys Campbell, Bt., an artist and illustrator (''Eton Colours, When It Happened in Scotland,'' and ''When It Happened in Britain''), born in 1958, who has three children, Archie, Georgia and Ivo; and Rory Charles Fitzgerald Campbell, a classical singer and musical theatre actor who owns the entertainment company Encore Entertainment Ltd., born in 1961, who has a daughter, Olivia.<ref>Dewar, Peter Beauclerk. Sir Guy Campbell at ''Burke's landed gentry of Great Britain'', p. 153, Burke's Peerage, 2001 {{ISBN|0-9711966-0-5}}</ref>


Webb effectively retired from the stage by the late 1950s to bring up her children,<ref name=Eden/> although she continued to make guest appearances on radio and on television comedy shows of [[Charlie Drake]] and [[Dickie Henderson]].  She also did casting work.<ref name=GuardianObit/> In 1969, she starred in the title role of ''[[The Merry Widow]]'' on tour and then at the [[Cambridge Theatre]] in London.<ref name=GuardianObit/><ref>Green, p. 285</ref> She and her husband moved to [[Marbella]], Spain, where they lived for a few years in the 1970s before returning to England and living in [[Cheltenham]]. Her husband died there in 1993, and Webb moved to London to spend her last two decades.<ref name=GuardianObit/>
Webb effectively retired from the stage by the late 1950s to bring up her children,<ref name=Eden/> although she continued to make guest appearances on radio and on television comedy shows of [[Charlie Drake]] and [[Dickie Henderson]].  She also did casting work.<ref name=GuardianObit/> In 1969, she starred in the title role of ''[[w:The Merry Widow|The Merry Widow]]'' on tour and then at the [[w:Cambridge Theatre|Cambridge Theatre]] in London.<ref name=GuardianObit/><ref>Green, p. 285</ref> She and her husband moved to [[w:Marbella|Marbella]], Spain, where they lived for a few years in the 1970s before returning to England and living in [[w:Cheltenham|Cheltenham]]. Her husband died there in 1993, and Webb moved to London to spend her last two decades.<ref name=GuardianObit/>


In 2004, a CD of her songs, entitled ''My Lovely Day With Lizbeth Webb – The Champagne Soprano'', was issued.<ref>[http://castalbums.org/recordings/My-Lovely-Day-with-Lizbeth-Webb-The-Champagne-Soprano-Lizbeth-Webb/9545 "My Lovely Day with Lizbeth Webb: The Champagne Soprano"]. Castalbums.org, accessed 8 August 2011</ref> The following year, another CD was released called ''Lizbeth Webb: With a Song In My Heart''.<ref>[http://castalbums.org/recordings/With-A-Song-In-My-Heart-Lizbeth-Webb/15624 "Lizbeth Webb: With a Song In My Heart'']. Castalbums.org, accessed 8 August 2011</ref>
In 2004, a CD of her songs, entitled ''My Lovely Day With Lizbeth Webb – The Champagne Soprano'', was issued.<ref>[http://castalbums.org/recordings/My-Lovely-Day-with-Lizbeth-Webb-The-Champagne-Soprano-Lizbeth-Webb/9545 "My Lovely Day with Lizbeth Webb: The Champagne Soprano"]. Castalbums.org, accessed 8 August 2011</ref> The following year, another CD was released called ''Lizbeth Webb: With a Song In My Heart''.<ref>[http://castalbums.org/recordings/With-A-Song-In-My-Heart-Lizbeth-Webb/15624 "Lizbeth Webb: With a Song In My Heart'']. Castalbums.org, accessed 8 August 2011</ref>

Revision as of 11:24, 4 September 2022

Lizbeth Webb
Lizbeth Webb Bless the Bride.jpg
Webb in Bless the Bride (1947)
Born
Betty Ethel Holton

(1926-01-30)30 January 1926
Reading, England
Died17 January 2013(2013-01-17) (aged 86)
London, England
Occupation(s)Soprano, actress
Years active1943–1969
Spouse(s)Donald H. Parker
Col. Sir Guy Campbell, Bt. (deceased 19 July 1993)

Betty Ethel Holton (30 January 1926 – 17 January 2013), better known by her stage name, Lizbeth Webb, was an English soprano and stage actress. Known as "the champagne soprano", she is remembered partly for originating the song "This is My Lovely Day".

After performing as a dance band vocalist and entertaining British troops during World War II, Webb pursued a career in West End musicals, becoming known for her vivaciousness in playing such roles as Lucy Willow in Bless the Bride, Linda in Ivor Novello's Gay's the Word and Sarah Brown in Guys and Dolls. She married Colonel Guy Campbell, the heir to a baronetcy, and left the stage in the late 1950s, bringing up two sons but returning for a last engagement in the title role of The Merry Widow in 1969.

Early life and career

Webb was born in Reading, Berkshire, the last of three children of Frederick Holton, a locomotive engine driver, and his wife Ethel, née Strutt (1895–1926).[1] Webb's mother died in childbirth, and she was adopted by her aunt and uncle, Ethel and Alfred Wills Webber. Her sister and brother were adopted by other aunts. She attended E. P. Collier Primary School, where she was known as Betty Webber.[2] She later went on to Hemdean House School and Queen Anne's School, both in Caversham, Reading. As a child, she excelled at rowing, swimming and running.[3] From an early age, she took singing lessons.[4]

She began her career as a teenage band vocalist and on BBC radio under the name Betty Webb, singing to the troops during World War II and freelancing with British bands, often for Jack Payne, who discovered her, and also for Albert Sandler, Henry Hall, Louis Levy and Geraldo. She generally performed two or three live broadcasts daily during the height of the German air-raids. She was also a regular on programmes such as Happidrome, Workers Playtime, Kaleidoscope, "Music Hall", Variety Bandbox, Four and Twenty, The Forces Show with Diana Dors, Jack Buchanan and Bob Monkhouse, Follies of the Air with Sonnie Hale, Home at Eight with Hermione Gingold and Richard Attenborough, and Friday Night Is Music Night.[4] Among the conductors she sang with were George Melachrino, Mantovani, Richard Tauber, Harry Rabinowitz, Stanley Black, Max Jaffa, Charles Mackerras, both Eric and Stanford Robinson and Vilém Tauský.[3][4]

In addition to entertaining the Allied troops, she took part in propaganda broadcasts of German light music, often in German, working with Mischa Spoliansky, and sketches with upbeat tales of life in Britain. This placed her on potential Nazi death lists.[3]

West End success

After an introduction from Geraldo, in 1946, the impresario Charles B. Cochran engaged her to work for him and changed her name to Lizbeth Webb. She first understudied and then took over the lead, Grace Green, in Vivian Ellis and A. P. Herbert's parliamentary satire Big Ben at the Adelphi Theatre in London and on tour (1946).[4][5] Ellis and Herbert wrote a leading role for her the next year, Lucy Willow, in the hit musical Bless the Bride,[6][7] in which her character leaves a stuffy English fiancé, who she does not love, to elope with a brave and dashing Frenchman, played by Georges Guétary. One of her songs with Guétary, "This Is My Lovely Day", became one of the BBC's most requested songs of all times,[4] and the song's popularity, and that of the show, were increased by their association with the wedding in 1947 of Princess Elizabeth and Lt. Philip Mountbatten (now, Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip).[3] The show's sweeping score also included another popular song for Webb and Guétary, "I Was Never Kissed Before". Oklahoma! opened in the West End the same year as Bless the Bride, but the British musical was not overshadowed by the American hit, enjoying a good reception from the critics[8] and audiences and running for more than two years and 886 performances.[4] Webb became known as "The Champagne Soprano", and she was admired on stage for her "vibrancy and vivacity".[4]

Webb played in pantomime, including the role of Dick Whittington in 1950, and starred as Cinderella opposite the stars of The Goon Show in 1951 on The Light Programme. Ivor Novello wrote the role of Linda especially for Webb in his last musical, Gay's the Word.[9][10] The show began with performances in Manchester in 1949 and came to the West End in 1951, where it was another hit. Webb was praised for her singing of the ballads in the show.[4] She also played Sarah Brown in the first London production of Guys and Dolls at the London Coliseum in 1953, which was broadcast as a Royal Variety Performance.[4] The same year, she was also featured in the Royal Command Performance given in the presence of the newly crowned Queen Elizabeth. Webb continued to entertain the troops between West End engagements, in Austria after the war, in Korea in 1953 (while under enemy attack) and in Cyprus and Libya in 1956, where she met her second husband, who was head of the British military force in Tripoli.[3]

Webb toured the British provinces in Jubilee Girl (1956), a troubled production that she, the director, the choreographer and others abandoned before it arrived in London.[4] She next appeared as Giulietta in a 1959 television production of the musical Carissima, by Eric Maschwitz with music by Hans May, starring Ginger Rogers.[citation needed]

Family and later years

Webb was engaged briefly to Peter Sellers in 1951 after appearing with him on The Light Programme.[3] Her first husband was Donald H. Parker, an RAF pilot, from whom she was divorced after several years. On 17 August 1956, Webb married Colonel Guy Campbell, OBE, MC, the heir to a baronetcy. Campbell earned the Military Cross and, upon his father's death in 1960, inherited his family title. Webb and Campbell had two sons, Sir Lachlan Philip Kemeys Campbell, Bt., an artist and illustrator (Eton Colours, When It Happened in Scotland, and When It Happened in Britain), born in 1958, who has three children, Archie, Georgia and Ivo; and Rory Charles Fitzgerald Campbell, a classical singer and musical theatre actor who owns the entertainment company Encore Entertainment Ltd., born in 1961, who has a daughter, Olivia.[11]

Webb effectively retired from the stage by the late 1950s to bring up her children,[9] although she continued to make guest appearances on radio and on television comedy shows of Charlie Drake and Dickie Henderson. She also did casting work.[4] In 1969, she starred in the title role of The Merry Widow on tour and then at the Cambridge Theatre in London.[4][12] She and her husband moved to Marbella, Spain, where they lived for a few years in the 1970s before returning to England and living in Cheltenham. Her husband died there in 1993, and Webb moved to London to spend her last two decades.[4]

In 2004, a CD of her songs, entitled My Lovely Day With Lizbeth Webb – The Champagne Soprano, was issued.[13] The following year, another CD was released called Lizbeth Webb: With a Song In My Heart.[14]

Webb died in 2013, two weeks before her 87th birthday.[9]

Notes

  1. ^ Webb's birth was registered at Reading (St Giles) on 10 February 1926 Reading Register Office, Vol. 2c, p. 599 as Betty Ethel Holton, and the birth certificate shows her parents' names and father's occupation. Her mother's birth was registered at the w:Headington registration District, Vol. 3A, p. 880, 1st QTR 1895 as Ethel Strutt. She was baptised on 5 May 1895 at St Philip & St James's Church, [[w:Oxford|]]; her mother's parents were named as Henry Cecil Strutt and Florence Letitia Strutt. The baptism register states that her mother was born 20 February 1895; the family lived in Oxford. Later, as on Webb's birth certificate, her mother sometimes gave her maiden name as Vining.
  2. ^ "Lizbeth Webb lived life to the full", Reading Post, 1 February 2013
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Obituary: Lizbeth Webb". Daily Telegraph. 22 January 2013.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Coveney, Michael. "Lizbeth Webb obituary", The Guardian, 27 January 2013
  5. ^ "A star still shining", The Stage, 12 February 2004
  6. ^ "'Bless the Bride' original cast recording"'. Amazon, retrieved 16 March 2010
  7. ^ Green, p. 35
  8. ^ "Profile of Bless the Bride from Record Cabinet". Archived from the original on 27 February 2001. Retrieved 28 January 2013.
  9. ^ a b c Eden, Richard. "Champagne Soprano' Lizbeth Webb bows out", The Telegraph, 20 January 2013
  10. ^ Green, pp. 145–46
  11. ^ Dewar, Peter Beauclerk. Sir Guy Campbell at Burke's landed gentry of Great Britain, p. 153, Burke's Peerage, 2001 ISBN 0-9711966-0-5
  12. ^ Green, p. 285
  13. ^ "My Lovely Day with Lizbeth Webb: The Champagne Soprano". Castalbums.org, accessed 8 August 2011
  14. ^ "Lizbeth Webb: With a Song In My Heart. Castalbums.org, accessed 8 August 2011

References

  • Green, Stanley. Encyclopedia of the Musical Theatre, Da Capo Press, 1980, ISBN 0-306-80113-2
  • "Bless the Bride" feature. Theatre World Magazine, No. 270, July 1947

External links

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