Sylva Stuart Watson


Sylva Stuart Watson was licensee and manager of the Theatre Royal, Haymarket, in London, England, from 1963.
Sylva Larratt was born in 1894 in Camberwell the daughter of Herbert Arthur and Jane Larratt, she would later use the name Little Carmen Sylva when performing as child vocalist with her father who was a baritone. She married Stuart Watson in 1920 in Wandsworth.
Having been a child singer, she began her adult career singing opera and in music hall, and worked as an actress, once performing with Sybil Thorndike.
She formed the Theatre Royal Haymarket Company which included Ralph Richardson and Flora Robson.
Her father-in-law Horace Watson was previously manager of the Theatre Royal, Haymarket.
In 1969, she campaigned against the opening of theatres on Sundays, and was quoted in the House of Lords by Martin Peake, 2nd Viscount Ingleby on the matter, in 1971.
She appeared as a "castaway" on the BBC Radio programme Desert Island Discs on 21 August 1971, where her book choice consisted of volumes on astronomy and astrology, and her luxury item was forty yards of flowered chintz, a needle & cotton.
Watson died on 26 March 1984 in London.