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Albert Eric Maschwitz OBE (10 June 1901 – 27 October 1969),[1] sometimes credited as Holt Marvell, was an English entertainer, writer, editor, broadcaster and broadcasting executive.

Eric Maschwitz (left) with Jack Strachey

Life and work

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Born in Edgbaston, Birmingham, England,[1] the son of a Lithuanian Jewish father,[2] Eric Maschwitz was educated at Arden House preparatory school, Henley in Arden, Repton School and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge.[3]

As a lyricist, Maschwitz wrote, often credited to his pseudonym "Holt Marvell", the screenplays of several successful films in the 1930s and 1940s, but is perhaps best remembered for his lyrics to 1940s popular songs such as "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square" (music by Manning Sherwin) and "These Foolish Things" (music by Jack Strachey, reinterpreted in 1973 by Bryan Ferry on his first solo album of the same name).[1] According to the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Maschwitz had a brief romantic liaison with British cabaret singer Jean Ross, the inspiration for Sally Bowles in Christopher Isherwood's stories about 1930s Berlin, later adapted as the musical Cabaret, and their relationship inspired the lyrics for "These Foolish Things".[4][5] (Other sources have suggested that either Maschwitz's wife Hermione Gingold or American actress Anna May Wong inspired the lyrics,[6] but Maschwitz's autobiography cites "fleeting memories of [a] young love."[7])

Maschwitz started his stage acting career in the early 1920s, playing Vittoria in the first successful modern production of Webster's The White Devil (Marlowe Society, Cambridge ADC Theatre, 1920). He joined the BBC in 1926. His first radio show was In Town Tonight. While at the BBC, he wrote a radio operetta Goodnight Vienna, with the popular song of the same title co-written by George Posford. In 1932, it was adapted as a film, Goodnight, Vienna, starring Anna Neagle.[1]

Between 1927 and 1933, Maschwitz was the editor of the weekly broadcast listings magazine Radio Times.[8] Under contract to MGM in Hollywood from 1937,[9] he co-wrote the adaptation of Goodbye, Mr. Chips,[1] made by MGM-British, for which he shared an Academy Award nomination.

From August 1939, he was a postal censor in Liverpool. From November 1939, he served with the Secret Intelligence Service (SIS)/MI-6 D Section (sabotage). In 1940, he briefly worked to establish a resistance organization in Beverley, Yorkshire, and for Army Welfare in London before being assigned to the Special Operations Executive (SOE). In 1940 he was commissioned into the Intelligence Corps. He was then sent to New York City to work for the British Security Coordination (BSC). In 1942, he returned to London, briefly supervising radio programmes for the troops. He then transferred to the Political Warfare Executive (PWE). He ended the war as chief broadcasting officer with the 21st Army Group, leaving the army as a lieutenant-colonel. Maschwitz, along with Major John MacMillan (members of "No 1 Field Broadcasting Unit"), was responsible for taking over the "Reichssender Hamburg" on 3 May 1945.[10]

This requisition enabled the British occupation troops to start broadcasting programmes for their soldiers in northern Germany, and was the nucleus for the British Forces Network (BFN), inaugurated with Maschwitz's help in July 1945, eventually to become the British Forces Broadcasting Service (BFBS).[11]

In 1947, Maschwitz became chairman of the Songwriters' Guild of Great Britain, which was founded by Ivor Novello, Sir Alan Herbert, Eric Coates, Haydn Wood, Richard Addinsell and others, for the encouragement and protection of British popular music.[12] He was the first Vice Chair and Chairman from July 1948 for one year, and again between December 1954 and April 1958.[13]

In 1958, near the start of the BBC/ITV ratings wars, he rejoined the BBC as Head of Television Light Entertainment.[1]

Maschwitz left to join the rival ITV in 1963. During the course of his varied entertainment career, Maschwitz also adapted French comedies such as Thirteen For Dinner; wrote the book and lyrics for numerous musicals, amongst them Balalaika, Summer Song, which used the music of Dvorak, Happy Holiday (based on Arnold Ridley's play The Ghost Train), and Zip Goes a Million, which was written specially for George Formby;[1] and he was the creator of the radio series Café Collette. He also edited the Radio Times, and turned his hand to the detective novel: Death at Broadcasting House, co-written with Val Gielgud and published in 1931, revolves around a radio play disrupted by the murder of one of the cast.

Maschwitz was married twice: first to Hermione Gingold, who was granted a divorce in 1945, and then immediately to Phyllis Gordon, they lived at 12 Dorset House, Gloucester Place, London NW1. She remained his wife until his death at an Ascot Nursing Home in Sunninghill, Berkshire.

His autobiography, No Chip On My Shoulder, was published by Herbert Jenkins in 1957.[14][15]

He was created an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in 1936.

Selected filmography

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References

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Bibliography

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from Grokipedia
Albert Eric Maschwitz OBE (10 June 1901 – 27 October 1969) was a prolific British lyricist, playwright, broadcaster, and intelligence officer whose multifaceted career spanned theatre, radio, film, and wartime espionage, most notably through his enduring song lyrics such as "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square" and "These Foolish Things."[1][2] Born in Edgbaston, Birmingham, to a Lithuanian Jewish father in the toilet fixture business and an Australian mother, Maschwitz grew up in a middle-class family and received a classical education.[2] He attended Arden House preparatory school from 1909, Repton School from 1915, and Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, from 1919, where he earned a degree in modern languages on a scholarship.[2] Early in his career, Maschwitz acted on stage, worked as an assistant stage manager at His Majesty's Theatre, and contributed to publishing as an assistant editor, before transitioning to broadcasting.[2] Maschwitz joined the BBC in 1926, quickly rising to become Director of Variety from 1933 to 1937, during which he created popular radio programs like In Town Tonight and wrote under the pseudonym Holt Marvell.[1] His songwriting achievements included the lyrics for "These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)" (1935, music by Jack Strachey) and "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square" (1940, music by Manning Sherwin), both standards in the Great American Songbook despite their British origins.[1] He also co-authored successful musicals such as Balalaika (1936, with 569 performances) and screenplays including Goodbye, Mr. Chips (1939).[2] During World War II, Maschwitz served as a lieutenant colonel in British intelligence, working with the Special Operations Executive (SOE) from 1939, heading propaganda efforts at British Security Coordination in New York in 1940, and later managing Station M in Toronto before joining the Psychological Warfare Branch of SHAEF.[2] Postwar, he spent time in Hollywood with MGM, returned to the BBC in 1958 as Head of Television Light Entertainment until 1961, and subsequently held a similar role at a commercial ITV network until his retirement.[3] Maschwitz married actress Hermione Gingold in 1926 (divorced) and later wed actress Phyllis Gordon in 1945; he died in an Ascot hospital following a long illness.[3]

Early life and education

Family background

Eric Maschwitz was born on 10 June 1901 in Edgbaston, Birmingham, England.[2] His father, a Lithuanian Jew born in 1860, was a supplier of toilet fixtures who traveled extensively for business and spoke multiple languages, including at least five.[2] Maschwitz's mother was Australian and twenty years younger than his father, who was already forty-one at the time of his son's birth; she was described by Maschwitz as pretty.[2] Maschwitz's father was an eccentric and remarkable figure, known for his love of storytelling, gourmet tastes, and worldly experiences that enriched the family environment. One notable anecdote recounted by Maschwitz involved his father being arrested in the Louvre for attempting to straighten a crooked painting, an incident that underscored the family's exposure to international culture and art.[2] The elder Maschwitz's multilingualism and frequent travels fostered a home atmosphere in Birmingham where languages were spoken fluidly, contributing to young Eric's early linguistic aptitude and cosmopolitan perspective. Additionally, his father's enthusiasm for theater, including music hall performances, introduced Maschwitz to entertainment from a young age, sparking his interests in that domain.[4] The family's Jewish heritage, rooted in the father's Lithuanian origins, subtly shaped Maschwitz's outlook, emphasizing a broad, international worldview amid the disciplined yet joyful Victorian simplicity of their household. Maschwitz later reflected on this period as a "golden childhood," marked by nannies, governesses, a Spartan diet, and the warmth of servants as companions, all under his father's influence of happiness and resilience.[2] In 1909, this family-centered upbringing transitioned as Maschwitz entered Arden House preparatory school.[2]

Schooling and university

Maschwitz began his formal education in 1909 at Arden House, a preparatory boarding school in Henley-in-Arden, where he experienced significant loneliness as a young boy away from home, often crying at night during his first year.[2] His parents visited infrequently, only on special occasions like birthdays or school sports events, which underscored the emotional challenges of early boarding life.[2] In 1915, at the age of 14, Maschwitz entered Repton School in Derbyshire, arriving amid the hardships of World War I, when the institution operated under the shadow of war with sparse rations such as vegetable pie and glucose porridge.[2] The school was led by headmaster Geoffrey Fisher, who had assumed the role in 1914 and enforced strict discipline, including frequent canings; Maschwitz himself recalled being beaten regularly once or twice a week during his first year in the Hall boarding house.[2] Despite the rigors, including initial unpopularity of Fisher's leadership, Maschwitz developed scholarly interests influenced by notable masters like Victor Gollancz in classics and David Somervell in history, and he remained at Repton until 1919.[2] That year, Maschwitz secured a scholarship in Modern Languages at Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge, where he immersed himself in academic studies while actively participating in university theater.[2] He joined the Cambridge University theatre group and took on acting roles, notably portraying the female character Vittoria Corombona in John Webster's The White Devil, an experience that ignited his passion for performance and writing.[2] As a member of the Footlights Dramatic Club, he contributed poems and even published his first novel, The Passionate Clowns, during his time there, blending his linguistic training with creative pursuits in drama.[2] Following his graduation from Cambridge in the early 1920s, Maschwitz pursued initial acting opportunities by taking a position as assistant stage-manager at His Majesty's Theatre in London, marking his early professional forays into the theater world before transitioning to broadcasting.[2]

Professional career

Broadcasting roles

Maschwitz joined the BBC in 1926 as an announcer and producer, earning an annual salary of £300, where he contributed to early innovations in radio content, including the development of engaging variety programming.[2] He quickly advanced, serving as editor of the Radio Times from 1927 to 1933, during which he shaped the magazine's format to promote diverse broadcasts and attract wider audiences.[5] In 1933, Maschwitz created the landmark radio show In Town Tonight, a Saturday evening variety program that featured interviews with ordinary Londoners and celebrities, running successfully for over two decades and exemplifying his talent for blending live reportage with entertainment.[2] Appointed Director of Variety at the BBC in 1933, Maschwitz oversaw the expansion of light entertainment, including dance music, vaudeville, operettas, and feature programs, effectively doubling the output of such content to meet growing listener demand.[5] He left the BBC in 1937 but returned after World War II, playing a key role in founding the British Forces Network (BFN) in 1945 to provide entertainment programming for British troops in Europe, which later evolved into the British Forces Broadcasting Service.[6] In 1958, Maschwitz rejoined the BBC as Head of Television Light Entertainment, where he managed the production of early TV variety and comedy shows amid the competitive emergence of ITV.[7] During this tenure, he initiated the development of Doctor Who in 1962 by commissioning a feasibility report on science fiction programming, marking a foundational step in the creation of the long-running series.[8] After departing the BBC in 1961, Maschwitz expanded into ITV, serving as executive producer of special projects for Associated-Rediffusion, where he contributed to innovative television formats in the burgeoning commercial sector.[9]

Writing and songwriting

Eric Maschwitz was a prolific lyricist and writer who frequently used the pseudonym Holt Marvell for his songwriting credits. Under this name, he co-authored the jazz standard "These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)" in 1935 with composer Jack Strachey; the lyrics were reportedly penned in a single Sunday morning at his London flat, drawing inspiration from a list-song style akin to Cole Porter's "You're the Top," and possibly influenced by his past relationships with actresses Anna May Wong or Jean Ross.[10] The song quickly became a hit after its debut in the BBC revue Spread It Abroad, later popularized by recordings from artists like Billie Holiday and Frank Sinatra. Another notable contribution was the 1940 lyric for "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square," set to music by Manning Sherwin, which evoked wartime London romance and was featured in the revue New Faces. Maschwitz's theatre output included successful musicals that blended light opera with contemporary wit. He wrote the book and lyrics for Balalaika in 1936, with music by George Posford and Bernard Grun, a romantic tale set in revolutionary Russia that premiered at London's Adelphi Theatre and ran for 569 performances before transferring to His Majesty's Theatre.[2] The production's success led to a 1939 MGM film adaptation. Later, in 1951, Maschwitz collaborated again with Posford on Zip Goes a Million, a comedic musical based on Brewster's Millions starring George Formby at the Palace Theatre; it incorporated broadcasting-inspired humor in its radio contest plot, running for over 500 performances.[11] In film, Maschwitz contributed screenplays that adapted stage works for the screen. He co-wrote Goodnight, Vienna (1932), directed by Herbert Wilcox and starring Jack Buchanan and Anna Neagle, based on his own 1931 operetta of the same name with Posford's music, which explored pre-World War I romance in Vienna. More significantly, he shared screenplay credit on the 1939 MGM adaptation of Goodbye, Mr. Chips, directed by Sam Wood and starring Robert Donat and Greer Garson; the script, co-authored with R.C. Sherriff and Claudine West, earned an Academy Award nomination for Best Screenplay at the 12th Oscars.[12] Maschwitz also ventured into prose, producing novels that reflected his media insider knowledge. His debut, the detective novel Death at Broadcasting House (1931), co-written with Val Gielgud, depicted a murder during a live BBC radio play, drawing directly from their experiences at Broadcasting House. In his 1957 autobiography No Chip on My Shoulder, Maschwitz chronicled his multifaceted career, offering anecdotes on his creative process and collaborations while emphasizing his aversion to self-pity.

World War II service

At the outbreak of World War II in 1939, Eric Maschwitz was recruited by the Special Operations Executive (SOE) despite an initial rejection by the War Office, leading to his commission into the Intelligence Corps in 1940.[2] He underwent training in explosives and demolition at a secret establishment in Hertfordshire, where he learned to handle plastic explosives and fuses through unconventional methods, such as biting the end of a Bickford fuse to light it during sabotage operations like rail disruption.[2] This preparation equipped him for covert activities, though his BBC duties were temporarily paused to accommodate his new role.[2] In 1940, Maschwitz was assigned to British Security Coordination (BSC) in New York under William Stephenson, where he oversaw Station M, a forgery facility in Toronto's Casa Loma, producing deceptive documents to counter Nazi influence in the Americas.[13][14] Key efforts included the creation of a forged "Secret Map" in just 48 hours, depicting fictional German plans for a "New World Order" in South America, which was leaked to the press and cited by President Franklin D. Roosevelt in his 1941 Navy Day address to sway U.S. public opinion against isolationism.[15][13] Other propaganda items from Station M, such as the Belmonte Letter exposing a fabricated Nazi-backed coup in Bolivia and the LATI Airline Letter leading to the shutdown of an Italian airline in Brazil, successfully disrupted Axis operations and bolstered Allied support.[15] Maschwitz held roles across MI6 (via Section D), SOE (as officer G.106), and the Political Warfare Executive (PWE), rising to the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel after the U.S. entry into the war in late 1941.[2][14] During his time in New York, he encountered notable figures through BSC networks, including author Upton Sinclair, who communicated covertly by tying notes to his police dog's collar.[2] Following his return to London, Maschwitz contributed to psychological warfare as part of the PWE's Psychological Warfare Branch under Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (SHAEF). After D-Day in June 1944, Maschwitz served as an intelligence liaison officer, coordinating large-scale leaflet drops over occupied France to demoralize German troops and encourage defections.[2] His PWE efforts included producing the fake German newspaper Nachrichten für die Truppe and operating a bogus radio station to spread disinformation, sowing confusion among Nazi forces and supporting Allied advances.[2]

Personal life

Marriages and relationships

Maschwitz married actress Hermione Gingold in 1926. Their union was marked by shared artistic interests and frequent travels, reflecting Maschwitz's emerging cosmopolitan outlook shaped by his partnerships.[2] However, the marriage strained under the pressures of wartime separation during World War II, leading them to live in separate London flats by the early 1940s; they discussed divorce as early as 1944 and formalized it in 1945.[2][16] In the same year as his divorce, Maschwitz proposed to actress Phyllis Gordon in 1944 while still legally married to Gingold, and they wed immediately after the divorce proceedings concluded in 1945.[2][16] This second marriage endured until Maschwitz's death, providing a stable personal foundation amid his post-war professional endeavors and continued international sojourns, such as trips to Hollywood for scriptwork.[2] The couple resided at 12 Dorset House in London, embodying a settled yet worldly lifestyle influenced by Gordon's acting career.[16] Beyond his marriages, Maschwitz maintained associations with notable figures in the entertainment world, including Chinese-American actress Anna May Wong during her time in London in the 1930s, a connection that contributed to his exposure to global cultural scenes and transatlantic travels.[17] He was also romantically involved with British singer and actress Jean Ross in the mid-1930s, whose bohemian existence in Berlin cabarets aligned with Maschwitz's own peripatetic interests. These relationships underscored his vibrant, jet-setting personal life across Europe and America, fostering a network that enriched his creative output. Maschwitz and both wives had no children.[18] Wong and Ross have been cited as possible muses for Maschwitz's 1936 lyric "These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)," highlighting how his romantic entanglements directly informed his songwriting.[2]

Later years and death

After World War II, Maschwitz returned to the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC), where he had worked extensively before the war, and in 1947 became chairman of the Songwriters' Guild of Great Britain. He continued in broadcasting, rejoining the BBC in 1958 as Head of Television Light Entertainment during the early years of competition with Independent Television (ITV), overseeing popular programs such as Juke Box Jury and The Black and White Minstrel Show. In 1961, he left the BBC and took on a freelance production role with Rediffusion, an ITV contractor, in 1963, contributing to series like Our Man at St. Mark's and The Rat Catchers. Maschwitz retired from full-time work in the mid-1960s, later reflecting on his multifaceted career by describing himself as "a man who had worked too hard at too many things." Despite scaling back, he remained active in creative pursuits, including revising classic operettas such as The Count of Luxembourg and The Chocolate Soldier for amateur productions and collaborating on a new stage musical in 1965. Maschwitz died on 27 October 1969 at the Ascot Nursing Home in Sunninghill, Berkshire, at the age of 68; the cause of death was not publicly disclosed.

Legacy

Awards and honors

Maschwitz was appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire (OBE) in the 1936 King's Birthday Honours for his contributions to broadcasting, including his innovative work at the BBC.[9] In recognition of his screenwriting, Maschwitz shared a nomination for the Academy Award for Best Screenplay at the 12th Academy Awards in 1940, alongside R. C. Sherriff and Claudine West, for their adaptation of Goodbye, Mr. Chips.[12] His leadership in the music industry was honored through his appointment as chairman of the Songwriters’ Guild of Great Britain in 1947, a position he held to advocate for British composers amid growing American influences.[19] In 1961, Maschwitz received the Ivor Novello Award for outstanding services to British popular music.[20] The enduring impact of Maschwitz's songwriting received posthumous acknowledgment, with compositions like "These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)" (1935) established as a jazz standard, ranking among the most recorded tunes in the genre and appearing in influential compilations and performances by artists such as Billie Holiday and Ella Fitzgerald.[21]

Cultural influence

Maschwitz's lyric for "These Foolish Things (Remind Me of You)," co-written with Jack Strachey in 1935, has endured as a quintessential jazz standard, its melancholic evocation of lost love resonating across generations and genres.[22] Initially introduced in the revue Spread It Abroad, the song gained transatlantic appeal, entering the Great American Songbook despite its British origins and becoming a staple in jazz repertoires for its lyrical sentimentality and melodic sophistication.[22] Billie Holiday's 1936 recording, which reached No. 5 on the Billboard Pop Songs chart, exemplified its early jazz interpretation, while later covers by artists such as Frank Sinatra in 1961, Ella Fitzgerald, and Bryan Ferry on his 1973 album of the same name underscore its lasting interpretive flexibility and cultural permeation.[22] The song's inspiration from Maschwitz's muse, actress Anna May Wong, highlights personal narratives that infused his work with authentic emotional depth, contributing to its timeless allure.[23] In British television, Maschwitz's tenure as Head of Light Entertainment at the BBC from 1958 profoundly shaped programming formats, particularly by championing innovative genre explorations that blended education with entertainment.[19] His 1962 memorandum requesting a survey on science fiction possibilities directly initiated the development of Doctor Who, positioning him as a foundational figure in the series' creation and influencing the BBC's approach to long-form, family-oriented sci-fi serials.[8] This oversight extended to light entertainment staples, where his production strategies emphasized versatile, audience-engaging content that set precedents for subsequent British TV formats.[19] Maschwitz's World War II service in psychological operations provided a blueprint for media-based propaganda, demonstrating the efficacy of scripted narratives and forged materials in influencing public opinion and morale.[24] As part of British Security Coordination in New York and later the Special Operations Executive, he oversaw Station M's production of deceptive documents, including a fabricated Nazi map of South America that swayed U.S. policy toward intervention in 1941.[24] His efforts in the Political Warfare Executive, including radio scripting and morale subversion, modeled integrated media strategies for postwar psychological operations, emphasizing narrative control and cross-cultural persuasion. Maschwitz's multifaceted career—as lyricist, broadcaster, producer, and intelligence operative—embodied a "Renaissance man" archetype in entertainment, inspiring later multi-hyphenate figures who bridged creative and executive roles across media.[19] His seamless navigation of stage, screen, radio, and television not only filled gaps in coverage of personal influences like his muses but also exemplified adaptive versatility that encouraged interdisciplinary careers in British arts.[19]
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