Amazon.co.uk Review
Escaping from enrolment at medical school the teenage Hutch made his way to Harlem, where he immersed himself in the world of jazz, becoming an accomplished pianist and singer, working with Mamie Smith and Duke Ellington, before heading off for Paris in 1924 and reaching London in 1927.His rise to fame and social notoriety was extraordinary. Along the way he worked for the Spanish royal family and Ataturk, the Turkish president; befriended Josephine Baker as well as the future Edward VIII; taught dance to the Aga Khan and slept with just about everyone of repute in the period, including Tallulah Bankhead, Cole Porter, Merle Oberon and Edwina Mountbatten. In the process Hutch launched an enormously successful recording career, appearing at the most exclusive clubs throughout Europe, Africa and the Far East, developing an inimitably elegant style, which seduced all who saw him perform. Breeze stresses that "Hutch's charm and talent for being what people wanted him to be caused many prejudices to be set aside, and many social barriers to melt." Yet his chameleon-like personae had its darker side; a disowned wife and heavy drinking took their toll after the Second World War, and Hutch was increasingly forced onto the road and into insalubrious bookings as his crooning fell out of fashion and his health began to fail. He became "a diffident ambassador from a golden era, gamely seeking to brighten an increasingly grey world." If Breeze's biography never reads quite as elegantly as Hutch's career, it's mainly because of the sheer weight of incident which this hugely enjoyable and sadly neglected character left behind him. --Jerry Brotton
