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Creativity Quote by Ivor Novello

"The public must suffer untold pangs from the stiffness, the deliberate stifling of emotion, on the part of many British actors"

About this Quote

Novello’s jab lands because it’s aimed at a national performance style, not individual talent. “The public must suffer” flips the usual hierarchy: actors are supposed to suffer for their art, but here the audience pays the price. It’s a musician’s complaint about acting, but it’s really about timing, breath, and feeling - the stuff you can’t fake when you’re trying to look “proper.”

The key phrase is “deliberate stifling of emotion.” Novello isn’t accusing British actors of being incapable; he’s accusing them of choosing restraint as a badge of seriousness. That word “deliberate” implies a cultural training: a stage tradition (and class tradition) that equates emotional transparency with vulgarity. “Stiffness” reads like posture, voice placement, clipped diction - the whole apparatus of respectability that can turn a scene into a recital. The “untold pangs” are a sly exaggeration, but also a real critique of how repression can become exhausting to watch.

Context matters: Novello built his fame in musical theatre and film, where intimacy and immediacy are the currency. In the early 20th-century British tradition, especially in prestige theatre, emotional control often signaled refinement. Novello is arguing for a different kind of authenticity - not melodrama, but permission to be porous. The subtext is commercial and cultural: audiences are changing, cinema is close-up, and the old stiff-upper-lip technique starts to look less like craft and more like fear of feeling.

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Public Suffering from British Actors Stiffness: Novello Quote
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About the Author

Ivor Novello (January 15, 1893 - March 6, 1951) was a Musician from Welsh.

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