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{{Short description|British stage performer (1871– 1942)}}
[[File:Herbert Charles Pollitt (cropped).jpg|thumb|Frederick Henry Evans (1853-1943). Herbert Charles Pollitt]]
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Herbert Charles Pollitt
| image = Herbert Charles Pollitt (cropped).jpg
| alt =
| caption = Portrait by [[Frederick H. Evans]]
| birth_name =
| birth_date = {{Birth date|1871|07|20}}
| birth_place = [[Kendal]], Westmorland


| death_date = {{Death date and age|1942|08|10|1871|07|20}}<ref name="ACAD">{{Cite web |url=http://venn.lib.cam.ac.uk/cgi-bin/search-2018.pl?sur=Pollitt&suro=w&fir=Herbert&firo=c&cit=&cito=c&c=all&z=all&tex=&sye=&eye=&col=all&maxcount=50 |title=Pollitt, Herbert Charles. |website=ACAD A Cambridge Alumni Database}}</ref>
'''Herbert Charles Pollitt''' (July 20, 1871 - 1942) was an art collector and a stage female impersonator, using the name Diane De Rougy, as an homage to courtesan [[Liane de Pougy]]. His dance act was inspired by avant-garde dancer [[Loie Fuller]]. At the London Photographic Salon of 1894 Frederick Hollyer exhibited a photograph of him in drag as Diane de Rougy.
| death_place =
| resting_place =
| nationality = British
| other_names =
| known_for =
| notable_works =


| alma_mater = Trinity College, Cambridge
Pollitt was the son of the Westmoreland Gazette proprietor Charles Politt (b. 1837) of Thorny Hills, 7 Kent Terrace, Kendal, and his wife, Jane née Hutchinson (1837-1892). He attended [[Trinity College, Cambridge]] from 1889 (BA 1892, MA 1896) and was later a patron of the arts and a gentleman of leisure.<ref>Perdurabo, Revised and Expanded Edition: The Life of Aleister Crowley, By Richard Kaczynski, North Atlantic Books, Apr 10, 2012</ref>


| module = {{Infobox military person|embed=yes
[[File:Herbert Charles Jerome Politt (1872-1942) in and out of drag.jpg|thumb|left|Herbert Charles Jerome Politt (1872-1942) in and out of drag]]
| allegiance = {{Flag|United Kingdom}}
| branch = {{army|United Kingdom}}
| serviceyears = 1914–1919
| rank = [[Lance corporal]]
| battles = [[World War I]]
| unit = [[Royal Army Medical Corps]]


}}
In October 1897, while he was the president of the Cambridge University [[Footlights]] Dramatic Club, he met [[Aleister Crowley]] and the two entered into a relationship. The relationship ended because Pollitt did not share Crowley's increasing interest in Western esotericism. Crowley would later write that "I lived with Pollitt as his wife for some six months and he made a poet out of me."


}}
Politt was friend with [[Aubrey Beardsley]] and became a collector of Beardsley's work. Politt was also a collector and patron of [[James Abbott McNeill Whistler]]. In 1896 Ernest Brown of the [[Fine Art Society]] commissioned a portrait of Politt from Whistler. Sittings took place from September 1896 to Summer 1897. "The painting, which was splendidly begun in Fitzroy Street, was afterwards destroyed"<ref>''The life of James McNeill Whistler'': Pennell, Elizabeth Robins, and Pennell, Joseph, 1911</ref>. In May 1900 Whistler wrote to Brown, "I am sorry to find it now, quite impossible for me to complete the portrait of Mr Politt, begun years ago." Politt exhibited his collection of Whistler's etchings and lithographs at his home in 1910.


'''Herbert Charles Pollitt''' (July 20, 1871 – 1942), also known as '''Jerome Pollitt''', was a patron of the arts and on-stage female impersonator who performed as '''Diane de Rougy''' (an homage to [[Liane de Pougy]]). He became notorious as a Cambridge undergraduate due to his taste for [[Decadent movement|Decadent art and literature]], and was immortalised as the eponymous hero of an [[E.F. Benson]] novel (''The Babe B.A.'') in 1896. He became a very close friend of the artist [[Aubrey Beardsley]], and had a brief but significant relationship with the occultist [[Aleister Crowley]]. Following his time at Cambridge, Pollitt moved to London and saw service in the First World War as a lance-corporal. He died in 1942.
Pollitt was the original of the Babe in [[E. F. Benson]]’s "The Babe, B.A.": "The Babe was a cynical old gentleman of twenty years of age, who played the banjo charmingly. In his less genial moments he spoke querulously of the monotony of the services of the Church of England, and of the hope-less respectability of M. Zola. His particular forte was dinner parties for six, skirt dancing and acting, and the performances of the duties of half-back at Rugby football. His dinner parties were selected with the utmost carelessness, his usual plan being to ask the first five people he met, provided he did not know them too intimately. With a wig of fair hair, hardly any rouge, and an ingenue dress, he was the image of Vesta Collins, and that graceful young lady might have practised before him, as before a mirror... The furniture of his rooms was as various and as diverse as his accomplishments. Several of Mr. Aubrey Beardsley's illustrations from the Yellow Book, clustering round a large photograph of Botticelli's Primavera, which the Babe had never seen, hung above one of the broken sofas, and in his bookcase several numbers of the Yellow Book, which the Babe declared bitterly had turned grey in a single night, since the former artist had ceased to draw for it, were ranged side by side with Butler's Analogies, Mr. Sponge's Sporting Tour, and Miss Marie Corals Barabbas."<ref>The babe, B.A, by Benson, E. F. (Edward Frederic), 1867-1940, Publication date 1911</ref>


==Early life and education==
In 1901 Politt was living in Marylebone and was described in the London's 1901 census as a "medical servant own means." He served during WWI as a Lance-Corporal in the Royal Army Medical Corps, entering the 9159th regiment on August 27, 1914.<ref>[https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=173582013 "Herbert Charles Jerome Pollitt"]</ref>
Pollitt was the son of Charles Pollitt, the proprietor of ''[[The Westmorland Gazette]]'' and his wife, Jane. He attended [[Heversham]] school, then went on to [[Trinity College, Cambridge]] in 1889.<ref name="ACAD" /> He gained his BA in 1892 and his MA in 1896.<ref name=perdurabo>{{cite book|last1=Kaczynski |first1=Richard |title=Perdurabo, Revised and Expanded Edition: The Life of Aleister Crowley |date=2012 |publisher=North Atlantic Books |isbn=9781583945766 |pages=37–45 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_A23t1hGFwUC&pg=PA37|language=en}}</ref>

At Cambridge, he became president of [[Footlights]], the Cambridge University Dramatic Club.<ref name=bogdan>{{cite book|last1=Bogdan |first1=Henrik |last2=Starr |first2=Martin P. |title=Aleister Crowley and Western Esotericism |date=2012 |publisher=OUP USA |isbn=9780199863099 |page=37 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=za9BM0BvmkMC&pg=PA37 |language=en}}</ref> He was described as one of the most notorious and talked-about undergraduates of his tenure, his rooms furnished with pictures by Beardsley, [[James Abbott McNeill Whistler]], and [[Félicien Rops]], and his bookshelves stocked with [[Decadent movement|Decadent]] works.<ref name=perdurabo/> Ultimately, he failed to qualify as a doctor.<ref name=macdonald>{{cite web |last1=MacDonald |first1=Margaret |title=Biography: Herbert Charles Jerome Pollitt, 1871–1942|url=http://etchings.arts.gla.ac.uk/catalogue/biog/?nid=PollHC|website=Whistler Etchings: A Catalogue Raisonné|publisher=University of Glasgow|accessdate=20 July 2017|language=en-UK}}</ref> In late 1897, he decided to be known as Jerome Pollitt.<ref name=perdurabo/>

==Diane de Rougy==

[[File:Herbert Charles Jerome Pollitt as Diane de Rougy, 1890s.jpg|thumb|upright|Pollitt as Diane de Rougy, mid 1890s. Photograph by Scott & Wilkinson, Cambridge]]The name of Pollitt's female alter-ego, Diane de Rougy, was inspired by [[Liane de Pougy]], a [[vedette (cabaret)|vedette]] at the [[Folies Bergère]] who also had a reputation as one of Paris's most beautiful and notorious courtesans.<ref name=perdurabo/> In performance, however, de Rougy's noted scarf-dancing was more like that of the American dancer [[Loie Fuller]].<ref name=perdurabo/><ref name=kooistra>{{cite book|last1=Kooistra|first1=Lorraine Janzen|authorlink1=Lorraine Janzen Kooistra|editor1-last=Fredeman|editor1-first=William Evan|editor2-last=Latham|editor2-first=David|title=Haunted Texts: Studies in Pre-Raphaelitism in Honour of William E. Fredeman|date=2003|publisher=University of Toronto Press |isbn=9780802036629 |pages=178–183 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=R81qhmUO2BoC&pg=PA182|language=en|chapter=Sartorial Obsessions: Beardsley and Masquerade}}</ref>

As the Footlights were largely a masculine establishment, female impersonation was not uncommon, but de Rougy became particularly renowned for her performances and as much a local Cambridge celebrity as Pollitt himself.<ref name=perdurabo/><ref>{{cite book |last1=Sutin |first1=Lawrence |title=Do What Thou Wilt: A Life of Aleister Crowley|date=2014|publisher=St. Martin's Press |isbn=9781466875265 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=p9iZAwAAQBAJ&pg=PT61|language=en}}</ref> She danced in two plays by Arthur Pilkington Shaw for Footlights, and it was claimed that her performances made women jealous.<ref name=perdurabo/> In 1894, [[Frederick Hollyer]] exhibited a photographic portrait of de Rougy at the London Photographic Salon.<ref name=macdonald/>

==As patron==
[[File:Herbert Charles Pollitt by James McNeill Whistler, 1896.jpg|thumb|upright|Whistler's lithograph of Pollitt, 1896]]
Pollitt was a close friend of [[Aubrey Beardsley]] and became a collector of his art alongside other examples of erotica. He was also close to [[Leonard Smithers]], Beardsley's publisher, from whom he purchased pornography for his collection. In his last letter, written on his deathbed, Beardsley begged Smithers and Pollitt to destroy all his erotic drawings and work, a request which both men ignored.<ref name=kooistra/><ref name=perdurabo/>

Pollitt was also a collector and sometime patron of [[James Abbott McNeill Whistler]], and held an at-home exhibition of the artist's etchings in 1910.<ref name=macdonald/> While Whistler began painting a portrait of Pollitt in 1896–1897, the painting was unfinished and ultimately destroyed.<ref name=macdonald/> However, Whistler's [[lithograph]]ic portrait of Pollitt from 1896 and a drawing survive in the collection of the [[Art Institute of Chicago]].<ref name=macdonald/><ref>{{cite news |title=Whistler's portraits of H.C. Pollitt in the Art Institute of Chicago |url=http://www.artic.edu/aic/collections/artwork-search/results/Pollitt |newspaper=The Art Institute of Chicago|publisher=Art Institute of Chicago |accessdate=20 July 2017 |language=en}}</ref>

==Personal life==
In October 1897, following his return to Footlights to perform as Diane de Rougy, Pollitt met [[Aleister Crowley]], and the two swiftly entered into a relationship.<ref name=perdurabo/><ref name=bogdan/> Crowley wrote that "I lived with Pollitt as his wife for some six months and he made a poet out of me."<ref name=perdurabo/> The relationship ultimately failed through Pollitt's unwillingness to take part in Crowley's interest in mysticism.<ref name=perdurabo/> This led to a quarrel, in which Crowley informed Pollitt that he did not fit into his plans for his life. Crowley quickly regretted the break-up, but they did not reconcile, and an accidental [[snub]] on [[Bond Street]] ultimately estranged Pollitt from his former lover.<ref name=perdurabo/> Crowley remained attached to Pollitt, who inspired a number of sonnets and other poems, and immortalized him in his 1910 book on homosexual love, ''The Scented Garden of Abdullah the Satirist of Shiraz''.<ref name=perdurabo/><ref>{{cite book |last1=Bogdan |first1=Henrik |last2=Starr |first2=Martin P.|title=Aleister Crowley and Western Esotericism|date=2012|publisher=OUP USA |isbn=9780199863099 |pages=50–51|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=za9BM0BvmkMC&pg=PA50|language=en}}</ref> Finally, in his autobiography ''[[The Confessions of Aleister Crowley]]'', he recalled the end of the relationship as a "lifelong regret."<ref name=perdurabo/>

The exact nature of Pollitt's relationship with Beardsley is unclear, although the two men shared a keen interest in erotica and possibly [[transvestism]]. Beardsley referred to Pollitt as "My best good friend," and created a bookplate specially for him that seemed to echo Pollitt's vision of his female alter-ego.<ref name=kooistra/> Pollitt also sent risqué photographs of himself to their mutual friend [[Oscar Wilde]].<ref name=kooistra/>

==Later life==
In 1901 Pollitt was living in [[Marylebone]], London.<ref name=macdonald/> In August 1914 following the outbreak of [[World War I]], he enlisted in the [[Royal Army Medical Corps]] and served as a [[Lance-Corporal]] of the 9159th regiment.<ref name=perdurabo/>

==In popular culture==
In [[E.F. Benson]]'s 1896 novel ''The Babe B.A.'', the eponymous Babe is a barely disguised portrait of Pollitt as a student:<ref name=perdurabo/>

{{blockquote|The Babe was a cynical old gentleman of twenty years of age, who played the banjo charmingly. In his less genial moments he spoke querulously of the monotony of the services of the Church of England, and of the hope-less respectability of [[Émile Zola|M. Zola]]. His particular forte was dinner parties for six, skirt dancing and acting, and the performances of the duties of half-back at Rugby football. His dinner parties were selected with the utmost carelessness, his usual plan being to ask the first five people he met, provided he did not know them too intimately. With a wig of fair hair, hardly any rouge, and an ingenue dress, he was the image of Vesta Collins,<ref>Benson's amalgam of variety stars [[Vesta Tilley]] and [[Lottie Collins]].</ref> and that graceful young lady might have practised before him, as before a mirror...

The furniture of his rooms was as various and as diverse as his accomplishments. Several of Mr. Aubrey Beardsley's illustrations from [[the Yellow Book]], clustering round a large photograph of [[Sandro Botticelli|Botticelli's]] ''[[Primavera (painting)|Primavera]]'', which the Babe had never seen, hung above one of the broken sofas, and in his bookcase several numbers of The Yellow Book, which the Babe declared bitterly had turned grey in a single night, since the former artist had ceased to draw for it, were ranged side by side with ''[[Joseph Butler|Butler's]] Analogies'', ''[[Robert Smith Surtees|Mr. Sponge's Sporting Tour]]'', and Miss [[Marie Corelli]]'s ''Barabbas''.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Benson|first1=E. F.|title=The Babe, B.A.: Being the uneventful history of a young gentleman at Cambridge university|date=1896|publisher=G.P. Putnam's Sons|location=New York|url=https://archive.org/details/babebabeingunev00bensgoog}}</ref>}}


==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Pollitt, Herbert Charles}}
[[Category:1871 births]]
[[Category:1871 births]]
[[Category:1942 deaths]]
[[Category:1942 deaths]]
[[Category:Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge]]
[[Category:Alumni of Trinity College, Cambridge]]
[[Category:Female impersonators]]
[[Category:English LGBTQ entertainers]]
[[Category:British Army personnel of World War I]]
[[Category:Royal Army Medical Corps soldiers]]
[[Category:LGBTQ military personnel]]

Latest revision as of 05:29, 25 September 2024

Herbert Charles Pollitt
Portrait by Frederick H. Evans
Born(1871-07-20)July 20, 1871
Kendal, Westmorland
DiedAugust 10, 1942(1942-08-10) (aged 71)[1]
NationalityBritish
Alma materTrinity College, Cambridge
Military career
Allegiance United Kingdom
Service / branch British Army
Years of service1914–1919
RankLance corporal
UnitRoyal Army Medical Corps
Battles / warsWorld War I

Herbert Charles Pollitt (July 20, 1871 – 1942), also known as Jerome Pollitt, was a patron of the arts and on-stage female impersonator who performed as Diane de Rougy (an homage to Liane de Pougy). He became notorious as a Cambridge undergraduate due to his taste for Decadent art and literature, and was immortalised as the eponymous hero of an E.F. Benson novel (The Babe B.A.) in 1896. He became a very close friend of the artist Aubrey Beardsley, and had a brief but significant relationship with the occultist Aleister Crowley. Following his time at Cambridge, Pollitt moved to London and saw service in the First World War as a lance-corporal. He died in 1942.

Early life and education

[edit]

Pollitt was the son of Charles Pollitt, the proprietor of The Westmorland Gazette and his wife, Jane. He attended Heversham school, then went on to Trinity College, Cambridge in 1889.[1] He gained his BA in 1892 and his MA in 1896.[2]

At Cambridge, he became president of Footlights, the Cambridge University Dramatic Club.[3] He was described as one of the most notorious and talked-about undergraduates of his tenure, his rooms furnished with pictures by Beardsley, James Abbott McNeill Whistler, and Félicien Rops, and his bookshelves stocked with Decadent works.[2] Ultimately, he failed to qualify as a doctor.[4] In late 1897, he decided to be known as Jerome Pollitt.[2]

Diane de Rougy

[edit]
Pollitt as Diane de Rougy, mid 1890s. Photograph by Scott & Wilkinson, Cambridge

The name of Pollitt's female alter-ego, Diane de Rougy, was inspired by Liane de Pougy, a vedette at the Folies Bergère who also had a reputation as one of Paris's most beautiful and notorious courtesans.[2] In performance, however, de Rougy's noted scarf-dancing was more like that of the American dancer Loie Fuller.[2][5]

As the Footlights were largely a masculine establishment, female impersonation was not uncommon, but de Rougy became particularly renowned for her performances and as much a local Cambridge celebrity as Pollitt himself.[2][6] She danced in two plays by Arthur Pilkington Shaw for Footlights, and it was claimed that her performances made women jealous.[2] In 1894, Frederick Hollyer exhibited a photographic portrait of de Rougy at the London Photographic Salon.[4]

As patron

[edit]
Whistler's lithograph of Pollitt, 1896

Pollitt was a close friend of Aubrey Beardsley and became a collector of his art alongside other examples of erotica. He was also close to Leonard Smithers, Beardsley's publisher, from whom he purchased pornography for his collection. In his last letter, written on his deathbed, Beardsley begged Smithers and Pollitt to destroy all his erotic drawings and work, a request which both men ignored.[5][2]

Pollitt was also a collector and sometime patron of James Abbott McNeill Whistler, and held an at-home exhibition of the artist's etchings in 1910.[4] While Whistler began painting a portrait of Pollitt in 1896–1897, the painting was unfinished and ultimately destroyed.[4] However, Whistler's lithographic portrait of Pollitt from 1896 and a drawing survive in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago.[4][7]

Personal life

[edit]

In October 1897, following his return to Footlights to perform as Diane de Rougy, Pollitt met Aleister Crowley, and the two swiftly entered into a relationship.[2][3] Crowley wrote that "I lived with Pollitt as his wife for some six months and he made a poet out of me."[2] The relationship ultimately failed through Pollitt's unwillingness to take part in Crowley's interest in mysticism.[2] This led to a quarrel, in which Crowley informed Pollitt that he did not fit into his plans for his life. Crowley quickly regretted the break-up, but they did not reconcile, and an accidental snub on Bond Street ultimately estranged Pollitt from his former lover.[2] Crowley remained attached to Pollitt, who inspired a number of sonnets and other poems, and immortalized him in his 1910 book on homosexual love, The Scented Garden of Abdullah the Satirist of Shiraz.[2][8] Finally, in his autobiography The Confessions of Aleister Crowley, he recalled the end of the relationship as a "lifelong regret."[2]

The exact nature of Pollitt's relationship with Beardsley is unclear, although the two men shared a keen interest in erotica and possibly transvestism. Beardsley referred to Pollitt as "My best good friend," and created a bookplate specially for him that seemed to echo Pollitt's vision of his female alter-ego.[5] Pollitt also sent risqué photographs of himself to their mutual friend Oscar Wilde.[5]

Later life

[edit]

In 1901 Pollitt was living in Marylebone, London.[4] In August 1914 following the outbreak of World War I, he enlisted in the Royal Army Medical Corps and served as a Lance-Corporal of the 9159th regiment.[2]

[edit]

In E.F. Benson's 1896 novel The Babe B.A., the eponymous Babe is a barely disguised portrait of Pollitt as a student:[2]

The Babe was a cynical old gentleman of twenty years of age, who played the banjo charmingly. In his less genial moments he spoke querulously of the monotony of the services of the Church of England, and of the hope-less respectability of M. Zola. His particular forte was dinner parties for six, skirt dancing and acting, and the performances of the duties of half-back at Rugby football. His dinner parties were selected with the utmost carelessness, his usual plan being to ask the first five people he met, provided he did not know them too intimately. With a wig of fair hair, hardly any rouge, and an ingenue dress, he was the image of Vesta Collins,[9] and that graceful young lady might have practised before him, as before a mirror... The furniture of his rooms was as various and as diverse as his accomplishments. Several of Mr. Aubrey Beardsley's illustrations from the Yellow Book, clustering round a large photograph of Botticelli's Primavera, which the Babe had never seen, hung above one of the broken sofas, and in his bookcase several numbers of The Yellow Book, which the Babe declared bitterly had turned grey in a single night, since the former artist had ceased to draw for it, were ranged side by side with Butler's Analogies, Mr. Sponge's Sporting Tour, and Miss Marie Corelli's Barabbas.[10]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b "Pollitt, Herbert Charles". ACAD A Cambridge Alumni Database.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Kaczynski, Richard (2012). Perdurabo, Revised and Expanded Edition: The Life of Aleister Crowley. North Atlantic Books. pp. 37–45. ISBN 9781583945766.
  3. ^ a b Bogdan, Henrik; Starr, Martin P. (2012). Aleister Crowley and Western Esotericism. OUP USA. p. 37. ISBN 9780199863099.
  4. ^ a b c d e f MacDonald, Margaret. "Biography: Herbert Charles Jerome Pollitt, 1871–1942". Whistler Etchings: A Catalogue Raisonné. University of Glasgow. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  5. ^ a b c d Kooistra, Lorraine Janzen (2003). "Sartorial Obsessions: Beardsley and Masquerade". In Fredeman, William Evan; Latham, David (eds.). Haunted Texts: Studies in Pre-Raphaelitism in Honour of William E. Fredeman. University of Toronto Press. pp. 178–183. ISBN 9780802036629.
  6. ^ Sutin, Lawrence (2014). Do What Thou Wilt: A Life of Aleister Crowley. St. Martin's Press. ISBN 9781466875265.
  7. ^ "Whistler's portraits of H.C. Pollitt in the Art Institute of Chicago". The Art Institute of Chicago. Art Institute of Chicago. Retrieved 20 July 2017.
  8. ^ Bogdan, Henrik; Starr, Martin P. (2012). Aleister Crowley and Western Esotericism. OUP USA. pp. 50–51. ISBN 9780199863099.
  9. ^ Benson's amalgam of variety stars Vesta Tilley and Lottie Collins.
  10. ^ Benson, E. F. (1896). The Babe, B.A.: Being the uneventful history of a young gentleman at Cambridge university. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons.