...with a side of towel boys:
"Hutch" Hutchinson: Gigolo Par Excellence
When the hit television series Downton Abbey* added Jack Ross, a jazz cabaret singer, to its cast, few viewers on this side of the pond realized that the role of Jack Ross was based on a real-life personage, Leslie “Hutch” Hutchinson (1900-1969), an immensely talented black man who made a fortune as a cabaret singer and pianist, while insinuating himself into the upper echelons of high society in Paris and London. He moved about in a chauffeur-driven Rolls Royce to and from his grand house in Hampstead, exquisitely dressed in custom tailored finery. Equally spectacular was his crash landing after falling out of favor, ending his life on the cusp of penury.
*I must be the last person on earth who has not seen a single episode.
Hutch was a philanderer, seducer, gigolo and a pathological liar, constantly reinventing himself and overstating his credentials. He was also handsome, talented, devastatingly charming and notoriously well endowed – not to mention rabidly bisexual, possessed of a voracious sexual appetite. Among his male lovers were Cole Porter and Ivor Novello; among females he was intimate with Tallulah Bankhead and Merle Oberon, not to mention nobles, royals and the merely rich, but it was his torrid affair with Countess Edwina Mountbatten (wife of bisexual Lord Louis Mounbatten) that brought him down. Afterward, although Edwina’s name was cleared (the plaintiffs wrongly assumed that the Negro with whom she was having sexual relations was Paul Robeson), Buckingham Palace refused to have Hutch participate in Royal Command performances, and Lord Beaverbrook insisted that Hutch's name was never to be mentioned again in any of his newspapers. As a result, Hutch’s professional and social decline was precipitous.
Leslie Hutchinson was born of mixed parentage on the island of Grenada, making him a British citizen. He attended the best schools and was celebrated as a piano prodigy. While in his mid teens his father sent him to study medicine in Nashville, TN, at one of the few schools that allowed black students, but his heart was not in it. He stole away to NYC, settling in Harlem, where he became a successful stride pianist; soon Fats Waller and Duke Ellington were included in his circle of friends, and among his patrons were the Vanderbilts, who hired him to play piano for private functions. One of the reasons he was not well known in the US is that he departed from NYC after a stay of only five years.
Hutch left New York for Paris, where he started his climb to the world of high society, but it was in London that his career reached its peak during the late twenties and thirties. Primarily just a pianist prior to settling into London, he began singing while accompanying himself on the piano. As a cabaret singer, he reigned supreme, much like Bobby Short in NYC a generation later. Hutch became a favorite cabaret singer of the then Prince of Wales (later King Edward VIII) and was regularly heard on BBC radio.
Although Hutch had a wife and child at home, most visitors assumed that the woman of the house was his servant. A black Anglo-Chinese woman, wife Ella was always excluded from Hutch’s professional and social life, which tended toward scandal. Hutch fathered seven more children with six different mothers, all of them white. And that's not counting the many lovers who elected to have abortions.
Few entertainers could blow through money at the pace set by Hutch. Accustomed to being pampered and gifted by legions of high-born women, his finances took a nose dive after his fall from society. After the changes in musical style and tastes that took place after WW II, Hutch eventually had to live on receipts from occasional jobs in small venues, and he often had to borrow money to pay his bills. He let himself go physically, and his trademark slim physique and good looks were forever lost. After Hutch died from pneumonia in 1969, only 42 mourners attended his funeral service. Ironically, it was Lord Mountbatten who offered to pay for the burial costs.
High Society’s Favorite Gigolo, a one-hour documentary on the life of Leslie Hutchinson, was broadcast on British television in 2008, and Hutch, a biography by Charlotte Breese, was published in 1999.
His incomparable rendition of The Way You Look Tonight (music by Jerome Kern with lyrics by Dorothy Fields):
Cole Porter wrote I'm a Gigolo for -- and about -- Hutch Hutchinson:
Hooray, a biography after a long layoff. Nice, Terry.
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ReplyDeleteMan these two guys have me in a fizzy and uncontrolled they are so f-end hot.