Henry Howe (born Henry Howe Hutchinson; 31 March 1812 – 9 March 1896)[1] was an English actor, appearing in prominent roles at London theatres. He was a member of the company at the Haymarket Theatre for forty years.
Joining the Haymarket Theatre under Benjamin Webster, he remained there without a break in his engagement for the almost unprecedented term of forty years. Among innumerable original parts were: Brandon in George William Lovell's Look Before You Leap in October 1846, Ernest de Fonblanche in The Roused Lion oin November 1847, and Lord Arden in Lovell's The Wife's Secret in January 1848.[2]
He used to state that there were pieces (such as The Lady of Lyons) in which, during his gradual rise, he had played every male part from the lowest to the highest.[2]
Vaudeville Theatre and Lyceum Theatre
In August 1879, at the Vaudeville Theatre, Howe was the first Rev. Otho Doxey in Richard Lee's Home for Home, and he played William Farren Jr.'s part of Clench in Our Girls by Henry James Byron. Soon afterwards he took Henry Irving's role of Digby Grant in a revival of James Albery's Two Roses. In December 1881, as Mr Furnival in the same piece, he appeared at the Lyceum, with which his closing years were connected. Here he played characters such as Old Capulet in Romeo and Juliet, Antonio in Much Ado about Nothing and Twelfth Night, Germeuil in Robert Macaire by Benjamin Antier, Farmer Flamborough in Olivia by W. G. Wills, Burgomaster in Faust, and very many others.[2]
Howe accompanied Henry Irving to America, and he died in Cincinnati, Ohio on 9 March 1896.[1]
His son, Henry A. Hutchinson Howe, music and theatre critic on the Morning Advertiser, predeceased him, dying on 1 June 1894, aged sixty-one.[2]
John Joseph Knight wrote: "He was a thoroughly conscientious actor, and an exceptionally worthy and amiable man, whose one delight was to cultivate his garden at Isleworth."[2]