Stage Property thumbnail 1
Not currently on display at the V&A

Stage Property

ca.1950 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

This property piano is one of two originally created by Frank Mumford as a property for his marionette piano player Professor Fyodor Lethetinsky, and used by him and his wife Maisie with their company, the Mumford Puppets. Professor Lethetinsky was the short-tempered Russian pianist who accompanied the glamorous cabaret chanteuse Mademoiselle Zizi, occasionally threatening her to toe the line with his miniature revolver.

Frank Mumford was born in North London in July 1918 and created his first puppet theatre aged six while ill in bed. At the age of 11 he entered a schoolboy craft contest at London's Alexandra Palace and won first prize, along with an apprenticeship at Edmonds of Wood Green to learn window display where he created a puppet troupe and performed afternoon shows and a Christmas show. Originally billed as 'Master Mum ford and his Marionettes', he played the Wood Green Empire aged 24. It was partly thorough the British Puppet and Model Theatre Guild that he made contact with other puppeteers. He became a tea boy at the Lanchester puppet theatre and, with other puppeteers and his future wife Maisie Tierney, formed his first puppet company that performed in London theatres including the Players' Theatre, the Grove, the Gate, Kew, Little, the Arts, 20th Century and the Grafton amongst others. The company disbanded due to war in 1939 when Frank served in the 16th Parachute Surgical Team Field Ambulance. He was taken prisoner in Arnhem in 1944 and returned to the UK in 1945. Shortly afterwards he was transferred to the Central Pool of Artists and put together the two-hour touring show Stars on Strings for the Army and Navy Air Force's Stars in Battledress organisation. The show toured air bases for six months, manned by 11 staff with a large cast of puppets, until Frank was demobbed in 1946 and the show was converted into a commercial enterprise. The Mumford Puppets, featuring Frank, Maisie and occasionally other operators, played their first performance in Littlehampton in 1946.

Since large-scale shows were expensive to tour, the Mumfords created shorter acts with larger puppets, designing and building practically everything themselves including their stage costumes. The result was a slick, glamorous, fast-paced international cabaret act that they continued to perform for audiences all over the world until Maisie's death in 1985. They regularly played top London nightclubs including the Coconut Grove, Churchill's, Governor House, Ciros, the Embassy, Dorchester and the Savoy Hotels, and the Starlight Room,. This led to engagements abroad - a three-month contract in 1949 in a revue at Le Boeuf Sur le Toit in Paris; and performances for the Duke and Duchess of Windsor; Prince Rainier and Grace Kelly, for Madame and General Franco, and for the Sultan of Oman. The Mumford Puppets appeared on television, and after Maisie's death in 1985 Frank continued to perform, giving his last show at the Leeds Variety Theatre in 2004, aged 86.



Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Wood, foam, textile, metal fixings
Brief description
Miniature imitation piano and integral piano stool made for the marionette Professor Fyodor in his act with the marionette Mlle. Zizi of Mumford Puppets. Wood, fabric and metal. Made by the puppeteer Frank Mumford.
Physical description
Miniature imitation piano and integral piano stool made for the marionette Professor Fyodor to accompany the marionette Mlle Zizi. Painted MDF and plywood piano and seat on base. The piano has pencilled major and foam minor keys and supports in the shape of two volutes joined in a scroll. The seat is covered in red fabric and has lighter (golden) edge banding.
Dimensions
  • Height: 71.0cm
  • Width of open arms, from longest fingertip of each hand width: 63.0cm
Credit line
Given by Jennifer Allen
Associations
Summary
This property piano is one of two originally created by Frank Mumford as a property for his marionette piano player Professor Fyodor Lethetinsky, and used by him and his wife Maisie with their company, the Mumford Puppets. Professor Lethetinsky was the short-tempered Russian pianist who accompanied the glamorous cabaret chanteuse Mademoiselle Zizi, occasionally threatening her to toe the line with his miniature revolver.

Frank Mumford was born in North London in July 1918 and created his first puppet theatre aged six while ill in bed. At the age of 11 he entered a schoolboy craft contest at London's Alexandra Palace and won first prize, along with an apprenticeship at Edmonds of Wood Green to learn window display where he created a puppet troupe and performed afternoon shows and a Christmas show. Originally billed as 'Master Mum ford and his Marionettes', he played the Wood Green Empire aged 24. It was partly thorough the British Puppet and Model Theatre Guild that he made contact with other puppeteers. He became a tea boy at the Lanchester puppet theatre and, with other puppeteers and his future wife Maisie Tierney, formed his first puppet company that performed in London theatres including the Players' Theatre, the Grove, the Gate, Kew, Little, the Arts, 20th Century and the Grafton amongst others. The company disbanded due to war in 1939 when Frank served in the 16th Parachute Surgical Team Field Ambulance. He was taken prisoner in Arnhem in 1944 and returned to the UK in 1945. Shortly afterwards he was transferred to the Central Pool of Artists and put together the two-hour touring show Stars on Strings for the Army and Navy Air Force's Stars in Battledress organisation. The show toured air bases for six months, manned by 11 staff with a large cast of puppets, until Frank was demobbed in 1946 and the show was converted into a commercial enterprise. The Mumford Puppets, featuring Frank, Maisie and occasionally other operators, played their first performance in Littlehampton in 1946.

Since large-scale shows were expensive to tour, the Mumfords created shorter acts with larger puppets, designing and building practically everything themselves including their stage costumes. The result was a slick, glamorous, fast-paced international cabaret act that they continued to perform for audiences all over the world until Maisie's death in 1985. They regularly played top London nightclubs including the Coconut Grove, Churchill's, Governor House, Ciros, the Embassy, Dorchester and the Savoy Hotels, and the Starlight Room,. This led to engagements abroad - a three-month contract in 1949 in a revue at Le Boeuf Sur le Toit in Paris; and performances for the Duke and Duchess of Windsor; Prince Rainier and Grace Kelly, for Madame and General Franco, and for the Sultan of Oman. The Mumford Puppets appeared on television, and after Maisie's death in 1985 Frank continued to perform, giving his last show at the Leeds Variety Theatre in 2004, aged 86.

Associated objects
Collection
Accession number
S.606-2016

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Record createdAugust 8, 2016
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