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Prince Littler : ウィキペディア英語版
Prince Littler
Prince Frank Littler (9 September 1903 – 23 January 1985) CBE, born Prince Frank Richeux, was an English theatre proprietor, impresario and television executive.
==Life and career==
Littler was born in Ramsgate, Kent, in the south east of England, the elder son in the family of five children of Jules Richeux (1863–1911), a cigar importer, and his wife, Agnes May, ''née'' Paisey (b. 1874). Richeux became a theatrical proprietor, leasing the Ramsgate Victoria Pavilion from 1906, while Agnes Richeux leased the Artillery Theatre, Woolwich, from 1909. After Richeux's death, his widow married, in 1914, the theatre manager Frank Rolison Littler (1879–1940), who adopted the five children, all of whom took his surname.〔Morley, Sheridan, ("Littler, Prince Frank (1901–1973)" ), ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'', Oxford University Press, 2004, online edition, October 2009, retrieved 5 August 2014 〕
The younger son Emile, and one of the daughters, Blanche, also went into theatrical management.〔
With Blanche, Littler started a theatrical career in 1927, assembling small companies for provincial tours.〔 After a stint as resident manager of his parents' theatre in Woolwich, he became an independent theatre owner in 1931, buying two theatres in Leicester. The following year he married a widow, Annie Leonora Maclachlan, an actress, professionally known as Norah Delaney. There were no children of the marriage. Over the following years he bought theatres in Manchester and Norwich. His first London productions were pantomimes at the Coliseum, the Prince's, and Drury Lane.〔"Mr Prince Littler", ''The Times'', 14 September 1973, p. 18〕
Littler's West End shows included ''Glamorous Night'' (1936), ''Brigadoon'' (1950); ''Carousel'', (1951); ''Guys and Dolls'' (1953, ''Can-Can'' (1954), ''The Black and White Minstrel Show'' and ''Fiddler on the Roof '' (both 1966).〔 He presented more than 200 pantomimes in the provinces, but unlike his younger brother, Emile, he played no part in writing any of his pantomimes, and concentrated wholly on the business side of the theatre.〔
Littler was chairman and managing director of three major theatre groups, chairman of a fourth (Moss Empire), and from the beginning of commercial television in the UK he was a major shareholder in Associated Television.〔 He was a member of the council of the Theatrical Managers' Association, and vice-president of the boards of the Society of West End Theatre Managers, Denville Home for Aged Actors and Actresses and the Variety Artistes Benevolent Fund.〔 He served on the boards of the South Bank Theatre and the Royal Opera House.〔
in 1957 Littler was appointed CBE.〔Gaye, pp. 884–885〕 He retired from production in 1966, and died at his home in Sussex at the age of 72.〔

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