Aubrey Hopwood

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Aubrey Hopwood with two Old English Sheepdogs (1905)

Aubrey Hopwood (4 April 1863 25 October 1917) was a British lyricist of Edwardian musical comedy and a novelist and author of nonsense books for children. He co-wrote the lyrics for the musicals A Runaway Girl (1898) and The Lucky Star (1899), among others, and wrote additional lyrics for the 1900 revival of Henry Savile Clarke's 1886 operetta Alice in Wonderland.[1]

Theatre poster for A Runaway Girl (1898)

Born Henry Aubrey Hopwood in Edinburgh in 1863, he was the second son and one of nine children of Mary Augusta Henrietta née Coventry, (born 1841, the granddaughter of George Coventry, 8th Earl of Coventry,[2] and John Turner Hopwood (1829‒1900), then Member of Parliament for Clitheroe in Lancashire. He attended Cheam School and Charterhouse.[3] His younger brother was Rear Admiral Ronald Hopwood (1868‒1949), referred to as the "Poet Laureate" of the Royal Navy by Time magazine.[4]

Career

Later life

References

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