A bust of Gus originally topped this exuberant monument.
Brompton Cemetery

Sir Augustus Henry Glossop Harris (1852-1896)

The actor and impresario who was ‘the father of modern pantomime’.

Augustus Harris monument

The monument to Augustus ‘Gus’ Harris, being saluted by an elegantly robed woman, is one of the most eye-catching in in the cemetery’s Great Circle. It’s as flamboyant as the man himself.

After a short period working in commerce, Gus entered the theatre. He began as an actor, but found much greater success as a stage manager. In 1879, aged just 27, he took over the vacant Drury Lane theatre in London and was soon filling the seats. His lavish and extravagant pantomimes and melodramas became hugely popular, and he co-wrote, produced and sometimes even acted in them too. He then turned his attention to opera, transforming the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden into a great success as well.

Augustus Harris bust
Credit: Eluveitie / Wikimedia Commons
Gus was affectionately caricatured in Vanity Fair magazine in 1889.
Credit: Vanity Fair / Wikimedia Commons
Gus was affectionately caricatured in Vanity Fair magazine in 1889.

Theatre manager

Gus was sometimes managing three or four of the city’s premier theatres at once. Somehow he also found time to become a London County Councillor and sheriff of London. Tragically, his hugely successful but hectic career took its toll. He died, aged just 43, of exhaustion, diabetes and cancer in a hotel in Folkestone in 1896.


 

Augustus Harris
Credit: © National Portrait Gallery, London

Further information:

Museum of Music History
Wikipedia