A new book collects theater photographs by Angus McBean

Fredric Wilson’s book The Theatrical World of Angus McBean collects British midcentury theater images.

McBean’s favorite model—and muse—was Vivien Leigh (1913-1967), here photographed for a 1951 production of  George Bernard Shaw’s <i>Caesar and Cleopatra.</i>
(At left) Bruce Ingram, publisher of the <i>Illustrated London News,</i> posed in 1950 with bound volumes of every edition of the paper since 1842.

In 1970, the British theatrical photographer Angus McBean (1904-90) sold Harvard his oeuvre: a collection of 40,000 glass-plate negatives, weighing eight tons, that has become the most-requested archive of visual material in the Harvard Theatre Collection (part of Houghton Library). McBean (pronounced McBain) worked through the glory years of British theater from the 1930s to the 1960s; his career encompasses the early work of Laurence Olivier, Vivien Leigh, and Alec Guinness, as well as the next generation of stars, like Richard Burton, Audrey Hepburn, and Elizabeth Taylor. McBean shot Mae West and Noel Coward as well as West Side Story and the cover of the Beatles’ first album, Please Please Me (1963).

The Theatrical World of Angus McBean: Photographs from the Harvard University Theatre Collection. (David R. Godine, 2009), by Fredric Woodbridge Wilson, curator of the Theatre Collection, is a handsome volume bringing together some of the photographer’s memorable images, all in black-and-white. (McBean, who was skillful at retouching his portraits, avoided color because it was far more difficult to alter.) He was “in nearly every sense a conservative,” Wilson writes in his introduction, noting that “in a photographic age that came to embrace the strobe light, the light meter, and the hand-held, small-format film camera, he employed cumbersome floodlights and a view camera that relied upon six-by-four inch glass plates [which Kodak stopped manufacturing during McBean’s lifetime]. He gauged his exposures by eye.” Yet those large glass plates could capture 30 times the detail of a 35-millimeter negative. As opera scholar Richard Traubner writes in an introductory essay, they recorded “the fabulously dark blacks, Velázquez-like in their density, and the dramatic chiaroscuro effects that were McBean’s hallmarks.” The result is a book bursting with visual drama.

Read more articles by Craig Lambert

You might also like

Novelist Lev Grossman on Why Fantasy Isn’t About Escapism

The Magicians author discusses his influences, from Harvard to King Arthur to Tolkien.

This TikTok Artist Combines Monsters and Mental Heath

Ava Jinying Salzman’s artwork helps people process difficult feelings.

England’s First Sports Megastar

A collection of illustrations capture a boxer’s triumphant moment. 

Most popular

Why Men Are Falling Behind in Education, Employment, and Health

Can new approaches to education address a growing gender gap?

The 1884 Cannibalism-at-Sea Case That Still Has Harvard Talking

The Queen v. Dudley and Stephens changed the course of legal history. Here’s why it’s been fodder for countless classroom debates.

Harvard art historian Jennifer Roberts teaches the value of immersive attention

Teaching students the value of deceleration and immersive attention

Explore More From Current Issue

Black and white photo of a large mushroom cloud rising above the horizon.

Open Book: A New Nuclear Age

Harvard historian Serhii Plokhy’s latest book looks at the rising danger of a new arms race.

A silhouette of a person stands before glowing domes in a red, rocky landscape at sunset.

Getting to Mars (for Real)

Humans have been dreaming of living on the Red Planet for decades. Harvard researchers are on the case.

Lawrence H. Summers, looking serious while speaking at a podium with a microphone.

Harvard in the News

Grade inflation, Epstein files fallout, University database breach