Queen of The Savoy: The Extraordinary Life of Helen DOyly Carte 1852-1913
By (Author) Elisabeth Kehoe
Unicorn Publishing Group
Unicorn Publishing Group
10th June 2025
26th May 2022
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Biography: business and industry
Hospitality, sports, leisure and tourism industries
792.023092
Hardback
224
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Born in 1852 in a small coastal town in Scotland, Helen DOyly Carte, through academic brilliance and an incredible talent for managing chaos, developed and ran the worlds foremost top entertainment and hospitality organisation with her husband, Richard DOyly Carte (known as DOyly). By the age of 30, she was running five Gilbert & Sullivan companies for the Savoy Group in the United States, crossing the Atlantic thirty times, and for the next three decades she ran the Savoy Theatre, the Savoy Hotel, Claridges and Simpson's-in-the-Strand. She was the only one trusted by the prickly, brilliant William Gilbert and Arthur Sullivan, to keep them from breaking apart, as they so regularly wanted to do. From a conventional upbringing, she chose to remain in London after the emigration of her family to Australia, first as an actress, then working alongside DOyly she took over the reins as he became ill in the late 1880s. Until her death in 1913, she flourished and was famous, interviewed and admired, in a competitive, vibrant London that was the centre of world power and commerce. Queen of The Savoy charts Helens course from Wigtown to the West End, where running a company with hundreds of employees, led to her fame and fortune. The artists Whistler and Sickert were friends and immortalised her in portraits. She was known in her time as the true founder of the Gilbert and Sullivan franchise and this biography will bring to light, some 110 years after her death, the extraordinary role that she played in one of Britains greatest success stories.
This lively account of the life of Helen DOyly Carte is an extraordinary journey through the arts and business in Victorian and Edwardian Britain, as seen through the eyes of the Queen of the Savoy. Surfacing the stories of women who have often been rendered invisible is dependent on painstaking research. Elisabeth Kehoe has left no stone unturned in her excavation of the life story of this exceptional woman - an act of tenacity by the author that matches the essence of the subject of this fascinating book. - Professor Jo Fox, Pro Vice Chancellor (Research and Engagement) and Dean of the School of Advanced Study, University of London
Written by the writer and broadcaster Elisabeth Kehoe, Senior Research Fellow of the Institute of Historical Research and author of the acclaimed biographies of the famous Jerome sisters (including Jennie Churchill, Winstons American mother), Kitty OShea - wrongly blamed for destroying Irelands chances of independence in 1890 - and other works on talented and overlooked women of the Victorian and Edwardian eras.