Lew Lake (born Louis Charles Polack; 10 January 1875 – 5 November 1939) was an English comic actor, writer, producer, and theatre manager.
He was born in Shoreditch, London, the son of a Dutch-born cigar maker. Around 1900, he started performing in music halls as a comedian, and soon formed a double act with Bob Morris (1866–1945). They performed a two-act comedy sketch called "The Bloomsbury Burglars", written by Lake, in which Lake (as "Nobbler") and Morris (as "Jerry") played window cleaners who broke into a house to recover some incriminating letters, but were chased over rooftops and eventually caught by the police.[1] The performance introduced the phrase "Stick it, Jerry!", which became a popular catchphrase. It was adopted by soldiers in the First World War, and the term "Jerry" then came to be used as a nickname for German soldiers.[1][2][3]
The sketch was filmed in 1912, by A. E. Coleby, as The Bloomsbury Burglars, and on stage Lake and Morris also performed a sequel, "My Pal Jerry".[4] The sketches required a number of extras, and Lake then set up his own company, Lew Lake’s Colossal Comedy Company of Comedians, for which he wrote another sketch, "The Rib-Nosed Baboon", which required 150 extras.[citation needed]
His son, Lewis Polack, known as Lew Lake Jr. (1901–1958), continued in the family tradition as a performer and manager of the Islington theatre until his death.[8]
References
12Raymond Mander and Joe Mitchenson, British Music Hall: A story in pictures, Studio Vista, 1965, p.141