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{{short description|Usually male domestic worker in charge of all the household staff}} | |||
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{{redirect|Butlers||Butler (disambiguation)}} | |||
] Butler's Pantry.]] | |||
A '''butler''' is a person who works in a house serving and is a ] in a large ]. In ]s, the household is sometimes divided into departments with the butler in charge of the ], ], and ]. Some also have charge of the entire parlour floor and ] caring for the entire house and its appearance.<ref name="emilypost">{{cite book |title= Emily Post's Etiquette |last=Post |first=Emily| year=2007 |publisher=Echo Library |isbn=978-1-4068-1215-2}}</ref> A butler is usually male and in charge of male servants while a housekeeper is usually female and in charge of female servants. Traditionally, male servants (such as ]) were better paid and of higher status than female servants. The butler, as the senior male servant, has the highest servant status. He can also sometimes function as a ]. | |||
In older houses where the butler is the most senior worker, titles such as '']'', ''butler administrator'', ''house manager'', ''manservant'', ''staff manager'', '']'', ''staff captain'', ''estate manager'', and ''head of household staff'' are sometimes given. The precise duties of the employee will vary to some extent in line with the title given but, perhaps more importantly, in line with the requirements of the individual employer. In the grandest homes or when the employer owns more than one residence, there is sometimes an estate manager of higher rank than the butler. The butler can also be assisted by a head ] called the '''under-butler.'''<ref>Michelle Jean Hoppe’s article 046: ''Servants: Their Hierarchy and Duties''.</ref> | |||
The '''butler''' is a senior ] in a large ]. Usually the butler is the most senior staff member, although in the ]s of the past, the household was sometimes divided into departments with the butler in charge of the dining room (including the ]) and pantry, and sometimes the entire parlour floor, and a ] who was in charge of the whole house and its appearance. Housekeepers are occasionally portrayed in ] as being the most senior staff member and as even making recommendations for the hiring of the butler. | |||
==Background== | |||
In modern houses where the butler is the most senior worker, titles such as '']'', ''Butler Administrator'', ''Staff Manager'', ''Estate Manager'' and ''Head of Household Staff'' are sometimes given. | |||
] | |||
The word ''butler'' comes from Anglo-Norman ''buteler'', a variant form of Old Norman ''*butelier'', corresponding to ] ''botellier'' 'officer in charge of the king's wine bottles', derived from ''boteille'' 'bottle' (Modern French ''bouteille)'', itself from Gallo-Romance <small>BUTICULA</small> 'bottle'. For centuries, the butler has been the attendant entrusted with the care and serving of wine and other bottled beverages, which in ancient times might have represented a considerable portion of the household's assets and led to the position becoming chief steward of a household. | |||
In Britain, the butler was originally a middle-ranking member of the staff of a grand household. In the 17th and 18th centuries, <!-- When gentleman attendants disappeared from aristocratic households that doesn't make sense; pages, valets and footmen were all still in place‒needs explaining. Reply: pageboys in the 18th century sense were just very young servants, nothing like a medieval page of high birth. Valets and footmen were not "gentlemen" attendants, they were servants.--> the butler gradually became the senior, usually male, member of a household's staff in the very grandest households. However, there was sometimes a steward who ran the outside estate and financial affairs, rather than just the household, and who was senior to the butler in social status into the 19th century. Butlers used always to be attired in a special uniform, distinct from the ] of junior servants, but today a butler is more likely to wear a ] or business casual clothing and appear in uniform only on special occasions. | |||
A ''silverman'' or ''silver butler'' has expertise and professional knowledge of the management, secure storage, use and cleaning of all ], associated tableware and other paraphernalia for use at military and other special functions. | |||
The word "butler" derives from the ] "bouteillier", (meaning "cup bearer"), from "bouteille", ("bottle"). The role of the butler, for centuries, has been that of the chief ] of a household, the attendant entrusted with the care and serving of wine and other bottled beverages (which in ancient times represented a considerable portion of the household's assets.) | |||
==Origin and history== | |||
In Britain the butler was originally a middle ranking member of the staff of a grand household. In the 17th and 18th centuries <!--when gentleman attendants disappeared from aristocratic households that--doesn't make sense; pages, valets and footmen were all still in place--needs explaining--> the butler gradually became the usually senior male member of a household's staff (in the very grandest households there was sometimes a house steward senior to the butler into the 19th century). Butlers used to always be attired in a special uniform, distinct from the ] of junior servants, but today a butler is more likely to wear a business suit or business casual clothing and appear in uniform only on special occasions. | |||
] | |||
The modern role of the butler has evolved from earlier roles that were generally concerned with the care and serving of alcoholic beverages. | |||
===Ancient through medieval eras=== | |||
The earliest literary mention of a butler is probably that of the man whose release from prison was predicted by ] in the ] account of Joseph's interpretation of the dreams of the ]'s servants. | |||
{{for|butlers in Anglo-Saxon England|Dish-bearers and butlers in Anglo-Saxon England}} | |||
From ancient through medieval times, alcoholic beverages were chiefly stored first in earthenware vessels, then later in wooden barrels, rather than in glass bottles; these containers would have been an important part of a household's possessions. The care of these assets was therefore generally reserved for trusted slaves, although the job could also go to free persons because of heredity-based class lines or the inheritance of trades. | |||
The biblical ] contains a reference to a role precursive to modern butlers. The early Hebrew ] interpreted a dream of Pharaoh's שקה (shaqah) (literally "to give to drink"), which is most often translated into English as "chief butler" or "chief ]."<ref>Genesis 39-40.</ref> | |||
In London there remains only one hotel which offers a private butler service, The Lanesborough Hotel. | |||
In ancient Greece and Rome, it was nearly always slaves who were charged with the care and service of wine, while during the ] the ''pincerna'' filled the role within the noble court. The English word "butler" itself comes from the ] word ''bo(u)teler'' (and several other forms), from Anglo-Norman ''buteler'', itself from Old Norman ''butelier'', corresponding to ] ''botellier'' ("bottle bearer"), Modern French ''bouteiller'', and before that from ] ''butticula''. The modern ] "butler" thus relates both to bottles and ]. | |||
] | |||
Eventually the European butler emerged as a middle-ranking member of the servants of a great house, in charge of the ''buttery'' (originally a storeroom for "butts" of liquor, although the term later came to mean a general storeroom or pantry).<ref>This was most likely from a loss of the original Latin meaning and the mistaken belief that ''buttery'' related to "butter".</ref> While this is so for household butlers, those with the same title but in service to the Crown enjoyed a position of administrative power and were only minimally involved with various stores. | |||
], the estate of ], 1914.]] | |||
===Elizabethan through Victorian eras=== | |||
==Butlers in fiction== | |||
The ''steward'' of the Elizabethan era was more akin to the butler that later emerged.<ref>]; Lord Montagu's Book of Rules and Orders, 1595.</ref> Gradually, throughout the 19th century and particularly the Victorian era, as the number of butlers and other domestic servants greatly increased in various countries, the butler became a senior male servant of a household's staff. By this time he was in charge of the more modern ''wine cellar'', the "]" or ''pantry'' (from French ''pain'' from Latin ''panis'', bread) as it came to be called, which supplied bread, butter, cheese, and other basic provisions, and the ''ewery'', which contained napkins and basins for washing and shaving.<ref name="scanlon">{{cite journal | author=Nancy Scanlon | title=The Development of the Kitchen in the English Country House 1315–1864 |journal=Journal of Culinary Science and Technology |year=2006 |volume=4| issue=2/3 |pages=79–92}}</ref> In the very grandest households there was sometimes an Estate Steward or other senior steward who oversaw the butler and his duties.<ref name="mrsbeeton">{{cite book| title=Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management |last=Beeton |first=Isabella | date=2000 |orig-year=1861 |page=393 |publisher=Oxford University Press |isbn=978-0-19-283345-7}}</ref> '']'s Book of Household Management'', a manual published in Britain in 1861, reported: | |||
<blockquote>The number of the male domestics in a family varies according to the wealth and position of the master, from the owner of the ducal mansion, with a retinue of attendants, at the head of which is the chamberlain and house-steward, to the occupier of the humbler house, where a single footman, or even the odd man-of-all-work, is the only male retainer. The majority of gentlemen's establishments probably comprise a servant out of livery, or butler, a footman, and coachman, or coachman and groom, where the horses exceed two or three.<ref name="mrsbeeton"/></blockquote> | |||
The real-life butler is discreet and unobtrusive. The butler of fiction, by contrast, is larger-than-life and has become a ] in ] and a traditional ] in the ]. Butlers provide comic relief with often wry comments, clues as to the perpetrators of various crimes and are represented as at least as intelligent, or even more so, than their “betters”. They are often portrayed as being serious and expressionless. The fictional butler is always given a typical anglo-celtic surname. | |||
] in Powys, U.K., in 1891. The residence had 17 servants in residence. The largest stately houses could have 40 or more.]] | |||
"The butler" is integral to the plot of countless ]s and ]s, whether or not the character has been given a name. Butlers figure so prominently in ]s and ]s that they can be considered ]s in ] and ] where a ] is "]!" | |||
Butlers were head of a strict service hierarchy and therein held a position of power and respect. They were more managerial than "hands on"—more so than serving, they officiated in service. For example, although the butler was at the door to greet and announce the arrival of a formal guest, the door was actually ''opened'' by a footman, who would receive the guest's hat and coat. Even though the butler helped his employer into his coat, this had been handed to him by a footman. However, even the highest-ranking butler would "pitch in" when necessary, such as during a staff shortage, to ensure that the household ran smoothly, although some evidence suggests this was so even during normal times.<ref>{{cite book |first=Carrolyn |last=Steedman |title=The servant's labour: the business of life, England, 1760–1820 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |series=Social History |volume=29 |date=February 2004|issue=1 }}</ref> | |||
===Notable fictional butlers=== | |||
], ], ] and ] are among the world's most well-known fictional butlers. See ] for a list of characters who are butlers. | |||
The household itself was generally divided into areas of responsibility. The butler was in charge of the dining room, the ], pantry, and sometimes the entire main floor. Directly under the butler was the ''first footman'' (or ''head footman''), although there could also be a ''deputy butler'' or ''under-butler'' who would fill in as butler during the butler's illness or absence. The '']''‒there were frequently numerous young men in the role within a household‒ performed a range of duties including serving meals, attending doors, carrying or moving heavy items, and they often doubled as '']s''. Valets themselves performed a variety of personal duties for their employer. Butlers engaged and directed all these junior staff and each reported directly to him. The '']'' was in charge of the house as a whole and its appearance. In a household without an official head housekeeper, female servants and kitchen staff were also directly under the butler's management, while in smaller households, the butler usually doubled as valet. Employers and their children and guests addressed the butler (and under-butler, if there was one) by last name alone; fellow servants, retainers, and tradespersons as "Mr. ". | |||
===Notable fictional non-butlers=== | |||
Butlers were typically hired by the master of the house but usually reported to its lady. Beeton in her manual suggested a GBP 25–50 (US$2,675‒5,350) per-year salary for butlers; room and board and livery clothing were additional benefits, and tipping known as ''vails'', were common.<ref>{{cite journal |last=Marshall |first=D. |date=April 1929|title=The Domestic Servants of the Eighteenth Century |journal=Economica |issue=25 |pages=15‒40 |doi=10.2307/2548516 |jstor=2548516 }}</ref> | |||
See ] for a list of characters who are often mistaken for butlers, but (strictly speaking) are valets, rather than butlers. | |||
The few butlers who were married had to make separate housing arrangements for their families, as did all other servants within the hierarchy. | |||
===In the early United States=== | |||
==Notable non-fictional butlers== | |||
] | |||
*], butler to the late ] | |||
From the beginning of ] in the ], in the early 17th century, ] were put to task as domestic servants. Some eventually became butlers. Gary Puckrein, a social historian, argues that those used in particularly affluent homes authentically internalised the sorts of "refined" norms and personal attributes that would reflect highly upon the social stature of their masters or mistresses. One of the first books written and published through a commercial U.S. publisher by an African American was by a butler named ]. The book, ''The House Servant's Directory,''<ref>{{cite web|author=Robert Roberts |url= https://d.lib.msu.edu/fa |title=The House Servant's Directory |publisher=Munroe and Francis; New York: Charles S. Francis, 1827 |website=digital.lib.msu.edu |access-date=10 January 2022 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220110141201/https://d.lib.msu.edu/fa |archive-date=10 January 2022}}</ref> first published in 1827, is essentially a manual for butlers and waiters, and is called by Puckrein "the most remarkable book by an African American in ]". The book generated such interest that a second edition was published in 1828, and a third in 1843.<ref name="puckrein">{{cite journal |author=Gary Puckrein |title=The Science of Service |journal=American Visions |date=October–November 1998 |volume=13 |issue=5}}</ref> | |||
*], butler, '']'', 2002 British historical recreation TV series | |||
*], former ] diplomat who portrays "the butler" in the US TV series '']'' | |||
European ] formed a corps of domestic workers from which butlers were eventually drawn. Although not the victims of institutionalised slavery, many of them had not volunteered for domestic service, but were forced into it by indebtedness or coercion. As with African American slaves, they could rise in domestic service, and their happiness or misery depended greatly on the disposition of their masters. | |||
*Arthur Richard Inch, longtime real-life butler, Butler Technical Consultant for the film '']'' | |||
*], ] and ] specialist, head of the Ivor Spencer International School for Butler Administrators/Personal Assistants and Estate Managers | |||
===The modern butler=== | |||
Beginning around the early 1920s (following ]), employment in domestic service occupations began a sharp overall decline in western European countries, and even more markedly in the ]. Even so, there were still around 30,000 butlers employed in ] by ]. As few as one hundred were estimated to remain by the mid-1980s.<ref name="steadyjeevesyouvegotcompany">{{cite journal |author=J. Lee |title=Steady, Jeeves‒you've got company! |journal=] |year=1988 |volume=104 |issue=17}}</ref> ] Barry Higman argues that a high number of domestic workers within a society correlates with a high level of socio-]. Conversely, as a society undergoes levelling among its ]es, the number employed in domestic service declines.<ref name="domesticserviceinaustralia">{{cite book |title=Domestic Service in Australia |last=Higman |first=Barry |year=2002 |publisher=Melbourne University Publishing |isbn=978-0-522-85011-6}}</ref> | |||
Following varied shifts and changes accompanying accelerated ] beginning in the late 1980s, overall global demand for butlers since the turn of the millennium has risen dramatically. According to Charles MacPherson, President of Charles MacPherson Associates and owner of The Charles MacPherson Academy for Butlers and Household Managers, the proximate cause is that the number of millionaires and billionaires has increased in recent years, and such people are finding that they desire assistance in managing their households. MacPherson emphasises that the number of wealthy people in ] has increased particularly, creating in that country a high demand for professional butlers who have been trained in the European butlering tradition.<ref name="NPRradio">{{cite interview|url=https://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7338550 |title=By Jeeves, We're Having a Butler Shortage |first=Charles |last=MacPherson |interviewer=Scott Simon |access-date=13 August 2007 |publisher=] News |date=10 February 2007 |work=Weekend Edition Saturday |format=Streaming Audio |url-status=live|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080204020022/http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7338550 |archive-date=4 February 2008}}</ref><ref>{{cite magazine |url=http://static.pinnaclecare.com/reprints/atlantic-monthly-09-06.pdf |first=Sheelah |last=Kolhatka |magazine=] |date=September 2006 |title=Inside the Billionaire Service Industry |pages=97‒101 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131213055730/http://static.pinnaclecare.com/reprints/atlantic-monthly-09-06.pdf |archive-date=13 December 2013}}</ref> There is also increasing demand for such butlers in other ]n countries, ], and the ]-rich ].<ref>{{cite news |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/2761689.stm |title=Royal tips for Indian butlers |date=17 February 2003 |first=Monica |last=Chadha |url-status=live|publisher=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200520004718/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/2761689.stm |archive-date=20 May 2020}}</ref><ref name="Available online">{{cite web|url=http://www.telegraph.co.uk/portal/main.jhtml?xml=/portal/2007/11/15/ftbutler115.xml |title=Butlers: A Jeeves of my very own |first=Jasper |last=Gerard |publisher=] |date=15 November 2007 |url-status=dead | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121113082257/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/features/3634655/Butlers-A-Jeeves-of-my-very-own.html |archive-date=13 November 2012}}{{webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20130114040418/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/portal/main.jhtml?xml=/portal/2007/11/15/ftbutler115.xml |date=14 January 2013}}</ref> | |||
Higman additionally argues that the inequality/equality levels of societies are a major determinant of the nature of the domestic servant/employer relationship.<ref>Higman (2002).</ref> As the 21st century approached, many butlers began carrying out an increasing number of duties formerly reserved for more junior household servants. Butlers today may be called upon to do whatever household and personal duties their employers deem fitting, in the goal of freeing their employers to carry out their own personal and professional affairs. Professional butler and author Steven M. Ferry states that the image of tray-wielding butlers who specialise in serving tables and decanting wine is now anachronistic, and that employers may well be more interested in a butler who is capable of managing a full array of household affairs‒from providing the traditional dinner service, to acting as valet, to managing high-tech systems and multiple homes with complexes of staff. While in truly grand houses the modern butler may still function exclusively as a top-ranked household affairs manager,<ref name="butlersandhouseholdmanagers">{{cite book | title=Butlers & Household Managers: 21st Century Professionals |last=Ferry |first=Steven M | page=14 |publisher=BookSurge Publishing |isbn=978-1-59109-306-0 |year=2002}}</ref> in lesser homes, such as those of dual-income middle-class professionals,<ref name="Available online"/> they perform a full array of household and ] duties,<ref name="thebutlerdoesit">{{cite web|url=https://archive.triblive.com/news/the-butler-does-it/ |author=William Loeffler |date=15 April 2007 |title=The butler does it |publisher=] }}</ref> including mundane ].<ref name="moveoverjeeves">{{cite news|url=http://www.smh.com.au/articles/2002/10/04/1033538773717.html |title=Move over, Jeeves, a new breed of butler is working her way up |author=James Woodford |newspaper=] |date=5 October 2002 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210308093956/http://www.smh.com.au/national/move-over-jeeves-a-new-breed-of-butler-is-working-her-way-up-20021005-gdfp4q.html |archive-date=8 March 2021 |quote=Ms Camille, who is the Australasian representative to the Butler's Guild: "I still make beds, clean toilets and peg out washing," she says. "It's not all as glamorous as people perceive it to be".}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/desperately-seeking-jeeves/article20399430/ |url-status=live |title=Desperately seeking Jeeves |first=Rebecca |last=Dube |date=20 July 2007 |publisher=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220112032253/https://www.theglobeandmail.com/life/desperately-seeking-jeeves/article20399430/ |archive-date=12 January 2022 |quote=Lynda Reeves, president of the Toronto-based House & Home Media, for the term "butler" says: "it's a pretentious name for a housekeeper".}}</ref> Butlers today may also be situated within corporate settings, embassies, cruise ships, yachts, or within their own small "Rent-a-Butler" business or similar agency.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://money.independent.co.uk/personal_finance/invest_save/article149002.ece |url-status=dead |title=More money than time? Rent a butler |first=Jones |last=Harvey |work=] |date=15 December 2001|location=United Kingdom |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131113140123/http://www.independent.co.uk/money/spend-save/more-money-than-time-rent-a-butler-748066.html |archive-date=13 November 2013}}</ref> | |||
Along with these changes of scope and context, butlering ] has changed. Whereas butlers have traditionally worn a special uniform that separated them from junior servants, and although this is still often the case, butlers today may wear more casual clothing geared for climate, while exchanging it for formal business attire only upon special service occasions. There are cultural distinctions, as well. In the United States, butlers may frequently don a polo shirt and slacks, while in Bali they typically wear ]s.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.deccanherald.com/Content/Jul272007/metro2007072615305.asp |url-status=dead |title=The alter ago of Jeeves |date=27 July 2007 |first=Michael |last=Patrao |publisher=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080411023736/http://www.deccanherald.com/Content/Jul272007/metro2007072615305.asp |archive-date=11 April 2008 }}</ref> | |||
In 2007, the number of butlers in Britain had risen to an estimated 5,000.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nysun.com/foreign/shortage-of-butlers-has-worlds-wealthy-facing/55511/ |url-status=live |access-date=16 March 2020 |title=Shortage of Butlers Has World's Wealthy Facing a Crisis |last=Sapsted |first=David |date=30 May 2007 |website=] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210308184926/https://www.nysun.com/foreign/shortage-of-butlers-has-worlds-wealthy-facing/55511/ |archive-date=8 March 2021}}</ref> That number rose to 10,000 by 2014, consistent with increased worldwide demand.<ref>{{cite web|last=Katz|first=David|date=8 May 2014|title=What It's Like to Be a Billionaire's Butler |url=https://www.gq.com/story/rich-billionaires-butlers-servants |url-status=live |access-date=4 July 2021|website=] |language=en-US |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20211003045553/https://www.gq.com/story/rich-billionaires-butlers-servants |archive-date=3 October 2021}}</ref> | |||
==Training== | |||
Butlers traditionally learned their position while progressing their way up the service ladder. For example, in the documentary ''The Authenticity of Gosford Park'', retired butler Arthur Inch (born 1915) describes starting as a ].<ref>''The Authenticity of Gosford Park'', Documentary featurette in '']'' Collector's Edition DVD, Universal Studios, 2002.</ref> While this is still often the case, numerous private butlering schools exist today. Additionally, major up-market hotels such as the ] offer traditional butler training, while some hotels have trained a sort of pseudo-butler for service in defined areas such as "]s", who fix guests' computers and other electronic devices, and "bath butlers" who draw custom baths.<ref name="thebutlersaredoingit">{{cite journal |author=Alex Witchel |title=At Hotels, the Butlers Are Doing It |journal=] |date=20 August 2000 |volume=149 |issue=51486 |page=2}}</ref> | |||
==Gender and butlering== | |||
Butlers have traditionally been male, and this remains the norm. Probably the first mention of a female butler is in the 1892 book ''Interludes being Two Essays, a Story, and Some Verses'' by Horace Smith. In it Smith quotes the noted writer and Anglican clergyman ], who between 1809 and 1829 struggled to make ends meet in a poorly paid assignment to a rural parish in ]: | |||
<blockquote> | |||
"I turned schoolmaster to educate my son, as I could not afford to send him to school. Mrs. Sydney turned schoolmistress to educate my girls as I could not afford a governess. I turned farmer as I could not let my land. A man servant was too expensive, so I caught up a little garden girl, made like a milestone, christened her Bunch, put a napkin in her hand, and made her my butler. The girls taught her to read, Mrs. Sydney to wait, and I undertook her morals. Bunch became the best butler in the country.<ref>{{cite book|url=http://infomotions.com/etexts/gutenberg/dirs/1/7/0/6/17065/17065.htm |url-status=dead |first1=Horace |last1=Smith |first2=Joel|last2=Lehtonen |orig-year=1892 |date=14 November 2005 |title=Interludes being Two Essays, a Story, and Some Verses |publisher=MacMillan & Co. |isbn=1-4069-1965-9 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081228001937/http://infomotions.com/etexts/gutenberg/dirs/1/7/0/6/17065/17065.htm|archive-date=28 December 2008|quote=Joel Lehtonen is a contributor, translator of the book}}</ref> | |||
</blockquote> | |||
Today, female butlers are sometimes preferred,<ref name="moveoverjeeves"/> especially for work within ] and ] families where there may be religious objections for men to work closely with women in a household.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.automobilsport.com/hotels-resorts-rosewood-saudi-middle-east-corniche-jeddah-saudiarabia-hans-peter-leitzke-photos---30962.html |url-status=usurped |title=Unique Rosewood Ladies Floor could start trend in Saudi, Middle East Hotels |date=10 December 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210225053905/https://www.automobilsport.com/hotels-resorts-rosewood-saudi-middle-east-corniche-jeddah-saudiarabia-hans-peter-leitzke-photos---30962.html |archive-date=25 February 2021}}</ref> Western female celebrities may also prefer a female butler, as may households where the wife is driving the decision to hire a butler.<ref name="Available online"/> Despite these trends, the Ivor Spencer School asserts that female butlers are not easily placed, on the whole. | |||
In ancient times, the roles precursive to butlering were reserved for chattel or those confined within heredity-based class structures. With the advent of the medieval era, butlering became an opportunity for social advancement‒even more so during Victorian times. Although still based upon various antecedent roles as manifested during different eras, butlering today has frequently taken over many of the roles formerly reserved for lower-ranking domestic servants. At the same time it has become a potentially lucrative career option.<ref>In Loeffler (15 April 2007), Nathalie Laitmon of The Calendar Group in Stamford, Connecticut, states that skilled butlers within the grandest households can make USD 200,000 (GBP 101,500). She states, "The bigger the lifestyle of the family, the more they can earn".</ref> | |||
==Notable butlers== | |||
* ], White House butler who served under seven U.S. presidents | |||
* ], butler, ]; and founder of The London School of British Butlers | |||
* ], butler to ] | |||
* ], White House chief butler from 1932 to 1953 | |||
* ] butler to ], then-], from 2004 to 2011 | |||
==In visual art== | |||
]'']] | |||
Butlers have been occasionally depicted in visual art. A famous ], '']'' (c. 1758), is unique among such works. In it, the 18th-century English artist ] depicted his household servants, all surrounding the butler. In showing the group in a close-knit assemblage rather than in the performance of their routine household duties, Hogarth sought to humanise and dignify them in a manner akin to wealthy-class members, who were the normal subjects of such ]s. While this was a subversive act that certainly raised many eyebrows in his day‒Hogarth conspicuously displayed the work in his estate home in full view of guests‒at the same time he had painted his servants' facial expressions to convey the sincerity and deference expected of servant-class members.<ref name="fourhundredyears">{{cite book |title=Below stairs, 400 years of servants' portraits |editor=Waterfield G. |editor2=A. French |editor3=M. Craske |year=2003 |publisher=National Portrait Gallery |location=London |isbn=978-1-85514-512-2}}</ref> | |||
In ], "The Butler's in Love" series by U.S. artist ] is especially poignant. In the series, Stock portrays the butler as sick with love, but the possibility of fulfillment is hopeless: the love is a forbidden love, perhaps felt for the lady of the house, and so it must be suffered alone in silent concealment. In addition to the ongoing mannerisms and facial expressions of the butler, a seated lady once appearing in a curtained room and a recurring lipstick-stained ] glass over which the butler obsesses provide the interpretive clues. In selecting a butler as his subject, Stock sought to provide a "universal character", a pathos-laden figure that could be widely related to and that could depict the universality of loneliness felt by someone who can only look in from the outside. Stock began the series in 1985 to express his difficult feelings during a personal experience of unrequited love. One of the paintings was inspiration for a ] short film, "The Butler's in Love" by actor/director ], shot in 2008 at ]'s historic ].<ref>Croft, Karen. "Butlers in Love", ''Salon'', 24 May 2001.</ref><ref>The World of Marck Stock.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/05/14/DDOF10KL7M.DTL& |url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090116000808/http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=%2Fc%2Fa%2F2008%2F05%2F14%2FDDOF10KL7M.DTL& |archive-date=16 January 2009 |last=Garchik |first=Leah |title=San Francisco Chronicle |date=14 May 2008}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wayfaring.com/waypts/show/32050 |url-status=dead |title=San Francisco's historic Westerfield Mansion |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100731063000/http://www.wayfaring.com/waypts/show/32050 |archive-date=31 July 2010}}</ref> | |||
==In fiction== | |||
The real-life modern butler attempts to be discreet and unobtrusive, friendly but not familiar, keenly anticipative of the needs of his or her employer, and graceful and precise in execution of duty. The butler of fiction, by contrast, often tends to be larger than life and has become a ] in ] and a traditional ] in the ]. Butlers may provide comic relief with wry comments, clues as to the perpetrators of various crimes, and are represented as at least as intelligent and moral as their “betters,” or even more so. They are often portrayed as being serious and expressionless and in the case that the wealthy hero is an orphan‒such as ], ]'s Satella Harvenheit, or ]'s ]‒may be a father figure to said hero. Regardless of the genre in which they are cast, butlers in fiction almost invariably follow the "British butler" model and are given an appropriate-sounding surname. The fictional butler tends to be given a typical Anglo-Celtic surname and have an English accent. The Asian, African American, or Caribbean houseboy is a variant, but even these major-domos are based on the British icon. | |||
Today, butlers are usually portrayed as being refined and well-spoken. However, in 19th century fiction such as '']'', butlers generally spoke with a strong ] or other regional accent. | |||
"The butler" is integral to the plot of countless ]s and ]s, whether or not the character has been given a name. Butlers figure so prominently in ]s and ]s that they can be considered ]s in ] and ], where a ] is "The butler did it!" | |||
The best-known fictional manservant, and the archetype of the quintessential British butler, is himself not a butler at all but instead a ]: ], the iconic creation of author ] is a "gentleman's gentleman" and general ]. Probably the best-known fictional butlers are ] from the '']'' comic and films; Hudson of ] television fame; ] from the ] television series; and Crichton from ]'s '']''. Lesser-knowns include ] from the novel ''Belvedere'', which was adapted into a feature film with sequels and later a ]; ], from the television series '']'', based on Charles Addams' '']'' cartoons; Beach, from the Wodehouse series about ]; ], the butler at the Sheffield house in American sitcom '']'', Geoffrey from ], Bailey (an English canine butler) from the children's animated television series '']'' and Benson from the two series '']'' and '']''. | |||
Not all fictional butlers portray the "butler stereotype", however. ], who played the butler Jennings in the film '']'' was coached in brooding detail by Arthur Inch, a longtime real-life butler.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.midsussextimes.co.uk/CustomPages/CustomPage.aspx?PageID=35023 |title=The man who got it right for Gosford Park and told Richard E Grant what was wrong |publisher=] |date=2002 | | |||
quote=Also see: ''The Authenticity of Gosford Park''}}{{Dead link|date=January 2022}}</ref> Mr. Stevens, the butler played by ] in the film '']'', was also acted with remarkable realism.{{fact|date=December 2024}} A female butler, Sarah Stevens, is the principal character in ]'s 2002 ''Dying to Please'', a murder/romance novel. Howard gives detailed and generally accurate descriptions of butlering in the work.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www1.epinions.com/content_64617352836 |title=Linda Howard - Dying To Please|url-status=dead |access-date=24 January 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080220075736/http://www.epinions.com/content_64617352836 |archive-date=20 February 2008|quote=A synopsis of Linda Howard's 2002 ''Dying to Please'' book, archived copy}}</ref> | |||
===Examples=== | |||
{{See also|List of fictional butlers}} | |||
<!--Not Jeeves - see above - he is not a butler--> | |||
* ], ]'s butler from ] | |||
* ], from the television show '']'' | |||
* ], ]'s butler from ] | |||
* ], the butler of ] in '']'' | |||
* ], from the Blandings Castle stories by ], frequently conspires with the clever Gally Threepwood | |||
==See also== | ==See also== | ||
*] | * ] | ||
*] | * ] | ||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
==Notes== | |||
* ''This article is based on material from "{{URL|http://stephenewen.org/articles/History_of_Butlers_and_Butlering.html |A Brief History of Butlers and Butlering}}{{dead link|date=July 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}" by Stephen Ewen, which is licensed under the ]''. | |||
* {{citizendium}} ''The article there is a mirror copy of "A Brief History of Butlers and Butlering" by Stephen Ewen''. | |||
==Further reading== | |||
] | |||
{{Commons category|Butlers}} | |||
* {{cite book |title=The Butler's Guide to Running the Home and Other Graces |ref=none |first1=Stanley |last1=Ager |first2=Fiona St. |last2=Aubyn |publisher=Potter Style |year=2012 |isbn=9780385344708}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Clayton |first=Nicholas |title=A Butler's Guide to Table Manners |ref=none |year=2017 |publisher=National Trust |isbn=978-1905400485}} | |||
* {{cite book|last=Ferry |first=Steven |title=Hotel Butlers, The Great Service Differentiators |date=2009 |publisher=BookSurge Publishing (reprint) |isbn=978-1439226483 |ref=none}} | |||
* {{cite book |title=The Butler Speaks: A Return to Proper Etiquette, Stylish Entertaining, and the Art of Good Housekeeping |first=Charles |last=MacPherson |location=Toronto |publisher=Random House |date=2013 |isbn=9780449015919}} | |||
* {{cite book |first=Cyrus |last=Redding |author-link=Cyrus Redding |title=Every Man His Own Butler |ref=none |location=] |publisher= Whittaker & Co. |year=1839 |oclc=25057151}} | |||
* {{cite book |last=Starkey |first=Mary Louise |title=Mrs. Starkey's Original Guide to Private Service Management |ref=none |year=1989 |publisher=Mansion Publishing |isbn=978-0966480726}} | |||
{{Modern cleaning roles}} | |||
] | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
] | |||
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Latest revision as of 21:57, 20 December 2024
Usually male domestic worker in charge of all the household staff "Butlers" redirects here. For other uses, see Butler (disambiguation).A butler is a person who works in a house serving and is a domestic worker in a large household. In great houses, the household is sometimes divided into departments with the butler in charge of the dining room, wine cellar, and pantry. Some also have charge of the entire parlour floor and housekeepers caring for the entire house and its appearance. A butler is usually male and in charge of male servants while a housekeeper is usually female and in charge of female servants. Traditionally, male servants (such as footmen) were better paid and of higher status than female servants. The butler, as the senior male servant, has the highest servant status. He can also sometimes function as a chauffeur.
In older houses where the butler is the most senior worker, titles such as majordomo, butler administrator, house manager, manservant, staff manager, chief of staff, staff captain, estate manager, and head of household staff are sometimes given. The precise duties of the employee will vary to some extent in line with the title given but, perhaps more importantly, in line with the requirements of the individual employer. In the grandest homes or when the employer owns more than one residence, there is sometimes an estate manager of higher rank than the butler. The butler can also be assisted by a head footman or footboy called the under-butler.
Background
The word butler comes from Anglo-Norman buteler, a variant form of Old Norman *butelier, corresponding to Old French botellier 'officer in charge of the king's wine bottles', derived from boteille 'bottle' (Modern French bouteille), itself from Gallo-Romance BUTICULA 'bottle'. For centuries, the butler has been the attendant entrusted with the care and serving of wine and other bottled beverages, which in ancient times might have represented a considerable portion of the household's assets and led to the position becoming chief steward of a household.
In Britain, the butler was originally a middle-ranking member of the staff of a grand household. In the 17th and 18th centuries, the butler gradually became the senior, usually male, member of a household's staff in the very grandest households. However, there was sometimes a steward who ran the outside estate and financial affairs, rather than just the household, and who was senior to the butler in social status into the 19th century. Butlers used always to be attired in a special uniform, distinct from the livery of junior servants, but today a butler is more likely to wear a business suit or business casual clothing and appear in uniform only on special occasions.
A silverman or silver butler has expertise and professional knowledge of the management, secure storage, use and cleaning of all silverware, associated tableware and other paraphernalia for use at military and other special functions.
Origin and history
The modern role of the butler has evolved from earlier roles that were generally concerned with the care and serving of alcoholic beverages.
Ancient through medieval eras
For butlers in Anglo-Saxon England, see Dish-bearers and butlers in Anglo-Saxon England.From ancient through medieval times, alcoholic beverages were chiefly stored first in earthenware vessels, then later in wooden barrels, rather than in glass bottles; these containers would have been an important part of a household's possessions. The care of these assets was therefore generally reserved for trusted slaves, although the job could also go to free persons because of heredity-based class lines or the inheritance of trades.
The biblical book of Genesis contains a reference to a role precursive to modern butlers. The early Hebrew Joseph interpreted a dream of Pharaoh's שקה (shaqah) (literally "to give to drink"), which is most often translated into English as "chief butler" or "chief cup-bearer."
In ancient Greece and Rome, it was nearly always slaves who were charged with the care and service of wine, while during the Medieval Era the pincerna filled the role within the noble court. The English word "butler" itself comes from the Middle English word bo(u)teler (and several other forms), from Anglo-Norman buteler, itself from Old Norman butelier, corresponding to Old French botellier ("bottle bearer"), Modern French bouteiller, and before that from Medieval Latin butticula. The modern English "butler" thus relates both to bottles and casks.
Eventually the European butler emerged as a middle-ranking member of the servants of a great house, in charge of the buttery (originally a storeroom for "butts" of liquor, although the term later came to mean a general storeroom or pantry). While this is so for household butlers, those with the same title but in service to the Crown enjoyed a position of administrative power and were only minimally involved with various stores.
Elizabethan through Victorian eras
The steward of the Elizabethan era was more akin to the butler that later emerged. Gradually, throughout the 19th century and particularly the Victorian era, as the number of butlers and other domestic servants greatly increased in various countries, the butler became a senior male servant of a household's staff. By this time he was in charge of the more modern wine cellar, the "buttery" or pantry (from French pain from Latin panis, bread) as it came to be called, which supplied bread, butter, cheese, and other basic provisions, and the ewery, which contained napkins and basins for washing and shaving. In the very grandest households there was sometimes an Estate Steward or other senior steward who oversaw the butler and his duties. Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management, a manual published in Britain in 1861, reported:
The number of the male domestics in a family varies according to the wealth and position of the master, from the owner of the ducal mansion, with a retinue of attendants, at the head of which is the chamberlain and house-steward, to the occupier of the humbler house, where a single footman, or even the odd man-of-all-work, is the only male retainer. The majority of gentlemen's establishments probably comprise a servant out of livery, or butler, a footman, and coachman, or coachman and groom, where the horses exceed two or three.
Butlers were head of a strict service hierarchy and therein held a position of power and respect. They were more managerial than "hands on"—more so than serving, they officiated in service. For example, although the butler was at the door to greet and announce the arrival of a formal guest, the door was actually opened by a footman, who would receive the guest's hat and coat. Even though the butler helped his employer into his coat, this had been handed to him by a footman. However, even the highest-ranking butler would "pitch in" when necessary, such as during a staff shortage, to ensure that the household ran smoothly, although some evidence suggests this was so even during normal times.
The household itself was generally divided into areas of responsibility. The butler was in charge of the dining room, the wine cellar, pantry, and sometimes the entire main floor. Directly under the butler was the first footman (or head footman), although there could also be a deputy butler or under-butler who would fill in as butler during the butler's illness or absence. The footman‒there were frequently numerous young men in the role within a household‒ performed a range of duties including serving meals, attending doors, carrying or moving heavy items, and they often doubled as valets. Valets themselves performed a variety of personal duties for their employer. Butlers engaged and directed all these junior staff and each reported directly to him. The housekeeper was in charge of the house as a whole and its appearance. In a household without an official head housekeeper, female servants and kitchen staff were also directly under the butler's management, while in smaller households, the butler usually doubled as valet. Employers and their children and guests addressed the butler (and under-butler, if there was one) by last name alone; fellow servants, retainers, and tradespersons as "Mr. ".
Butlers were typically hired by the master of the house but usually reported to its lady. Beeton in her manual suggested a GBP 25–50 (US$2,675‒5,350) per-year salary for butlers; room and board and livery clothing were additional benefits, and tipping known as vails, were common. The few butlers who were married had to make separate housing arrangements for their families, as did all other servants within the hierarchy.
In the early United States
From the beginning of slavery in the United States, in the early 17th century, African Americans were put to task as domestic servants. Some eventually became butlers. Gary Puckrein, a social historian, argues that those used in particularly affluent homes authentically internalised the sorts of "refined" norms and personal attributes that would reflect highly upon the social stature of their masters or mistresses. One of the first books written and published through a commercial U.S. publisher by an African American was by a butler named Robert Roberts. The book, The House Servant's Directory, first published in 1827, is essentially a manual for butlers and waiters, and is called by Puckrein "the most remarkable book by an African American in antebellum United States". The book generated such interest that a second edition was published in 1828, and a third in 1843.
European indentured servants formed a corps of domestic workers from which butlers were eventually drawn. Although not the victims of institutionalised slavery, many of them had not volunteered for domestic service, but were forced into it by indebtedness or coercion. As with African American slaves, they could rise in domestic service, and their happiness or misery depended greatly on the disposition of their masters.
The modern butler
Beginning around the early 1920s (following World War I), employment in domestic service occupations began a sharp overall decline in western European countries, and even more markedly in the United States. Even so, there were still around 30,000 butlers employed in Britain by World War II. As few as one hundred were estimated to remain by the mid-1980s. Social historian Barry Higman argues that a high number of domestic workers within a society correlates with a high level of socio-economic inequality. Conversely, as a society undergoes levelling among its social classes, the number employed in domestic service declines.
Following varied shifts and changes accompanying accelerated globalisation beginning in the late 1980s, overall global demand for butlers since the turn of the millennium has risen dramatically. According to Charles MacPherson, President of Charles MacPherson Associates and owner of The Charles MacPherson Academy for Butlers and Household Managers, the proximate cause is that the number of millionaires and billionaires has increased in recent years, and such people are finding that they desire assistance in managing their households. MacPherson emphasises that the number of wealthy people in China has increased particularly, creating in that country a high demand for professional butlers who have been trained in the European butlering tradition. There is also increasing demand for such butlers in other Asian countries, India, and the petroleum-rich Middle East.
Higman additionally argues that the inequality/equality levels of societies are a major determinant of the nature of the domestic servant/employer relationship. As the 21st century approached, many butlers began carrying out an increasing number of duties formerly reserved for more junior household servants. Butlers today may be called upon to do whatever household and personal duties their employers deem fitting, in the goal of freeing their employers to carry out their own personal and professional affairs. Professional butler and author Steven M. Ferry states that the image of tray-wielding butlers who specialise in serving tables and decanting wine is now anachronistic, and that employers may well be more interested in a butler who is capable of managing a full array of household affairs‒from providing the traditional dinner service, to acting as valet, to managing high-tech systems and multiple homes with complexes of staff. While in truly grand houses the modern butler may still function exclusively as a top-ranked household affairs manager, in lesser homes, such as those of dual-income middle-class professionals, they perform a full array of household and personal assistant duties, including mundane housekeeping. Butlers today may also be situated within corporate settings, embassies, cruise ships, yachts, or within their own small "Rent-a-Butler" business or similar agency.
Along with these changes of scope and context, butlering attire has changed. Whereas butlers have traditionally worn a special uniform that separated them from junior servants, and although this is still often the case, butlers today may wear more casual clothing geared for climate, while exchanging it for formal business attire only upon special service occasions. There are cultural distinctions, as well. In the United States, butlers may frequently don a polo shirt and slacks, while in Bali they typically wear sarongs.
In 2007, the number of butlers in Britain had risen to an estimated 5,000. That number rose to 10,000 by 2014, consistent with increased worldwide demand.
Training
Butlers traditionally learned their position while progressing their way up the service ladder. For example, in the documentary The Authenticity of Gosford Park, retired butler Arthur Inch (born 1915) describes starting as a hall boy. While this is still often the case, numerous private butlering schools exist today. Additionally, major up-market hotels such as the Ritz-Carlton offer traditional butler training, while some hotels have trained a sort of pseudo-butler for service in defined areas such as "technology butlers", who fix guests' computers and other electronic devices, and "bath butlers" who draw custom baths.
Gender and butlering
Butlers have traditionally been male, and this remains the norm. Probably the first mention of a female butler is in the 1892 book Interludes being Two Essays, a Story, and Some Verses by Horace Smith. In it Smith quotes the noted writer and Anglican clergyman Sydney Smith, who between 1809 and 1829 struggled to make ends meet in a poorly paid assignment to a rural parish in Yorkshire:
"I turned schoolmaster to educate my son, as I could not afford to send him to school. Mrs. Sydney turned schoolmistress to educate my girls as I could not afford a governess. I turned farmer as I could not let my land. A man servant was too expensive, so I caught up a little garden girl, made like a milestone, christened her Bunch, put a napkin in her hand, and made her my butler. The girls taught her to read, Mrs. Sydney to wait, and I undertook her morals. Bunch became the best butler in the country.
Today, female butlers are sometimes preferred, especially for work within West Asian and Southeast Asian families where there may be religious objections for men to work closely with women in a household. Western female celebrities may also prefer a female butler, as may households where the wife is driving the decision to hire a butler. Despite these trends, the Ivor Spencer School asserts that female butlers are not easily placed, on the whole.
In ancient times, the roles precursive to butlering were reserved for chattel or those confined within heredity-based class structures. With the advent of the medieval era, butlering became an opportunity for social advancement‒even more so during Victorian times. Although still based upon various antecedent roles as manifested during different eras, butlering today has frequently taken over many of the roles formerly reserved for lower-ranking domestic servants. At the same time it has become a potentially lucrative career option.
Notable butlers
- Eugene Allen, White House butler who served under seven U.S. presidents
- Leslie Bartlett, butler, toastmaster; and founder of The London School of British Butlers
- Paul Burrell, butler to Diana, Princess of Wales
- Alonzo Fields, White House chief butler from 1932 to 1953
- Grant Harrold butler to King Charles III, then-Prince of Wales, from 2004 to 2011
In visual art
Butlers have been occasionally depicted in visual art. A famous painting, Heads of Six of Hogarth's Servants (c. 1758), is unique among such works. In it, the 18th-century English artist William Hogarth depicted his household servants, all surrounding the butler. In showing the group in a close-knit assemblage rather than in the performance of their routine household duties, Hogarth sought to humanise and dignify them in a manner akin to wealthy-class members, who were the normal subjects of such portraits. While this was a subversive act that certainly raised many eyebrows in his day‒Hogarth conspicuously displayed the work in his estate home in full view of guests‒at the same time he had painted his servants' facial expressions to convey the sincerity and deference expected of servant-class members.
In contemporary art, "The Butler's in Love" series by U.S. artist Mark Stock is especially poignant. In the series, Stock portrays the butler as sick with love, but the possibility of fulfillment is hopeless: the love is a forbidden love, perhaps felt for the lady of the house, and so it must be suffered alone in silent concealment. In addition to the ongoing mannerisms and facial expressions of the butler, a seated lady once appearing in a curtained room and a recurring lipstick-stained absinthe glass over which the butler obsesses provide the interpretive clues. In selecting a butler as his subject, Stock sought to provide a "universal character", a pathos-laden figure that could be widely related to and that could depict the universality of loneliness felt by someone who can only look in from the outside. Stock began the series in 1985 to express his difficult feelings during a personal experience of unrequited love. One of the paintings was inspiration for a 3-D short film, "The Butler's in Love" by actor/director David Arquette, shot in 2008 at San Francisco's historic Westerfield Mansion.
In fiction
The real-life modern butler attempts to be discreet and unobtrusive, friendly but not familiar, keenly anticipative of the needs of his or her employer, and graceful and precise in execution of duty. The butler of fiction, by contrast, often tends to be larger than life and has become a plot device in literature and a traditional role in the performing arts. Butlers may provide comic relief with wry comments, clues as to the perpetrators of various crimes, and are represented as at least as intelligent and moral as their “betters,” or even more so. They are often portrayed as being serious and expressionless and in the case that the wealthy hero is an orphan‒such as Batman, Chrono Crusade's Satella Harvenheit, or Tomb Raider's Lara Croft‒may be a father figure to said hero. Regardless of the genre in which they are cast, butlers in fiction almost invariably follow the "British butler" model and are given an appropriate-sounding surname. The fictional butler tends to be given a typical Anglo-Celtic surname and have an English accent. The Asian, African American, or Caribbean houseboy is a variant, but even these major-domos are based on the British icon.
Today, butlers are usually portrayed as being refined and well-spoken. However, in 19th century fiction such as Dracula, butlers generally spoke with a strong Cockney or other regional accent.
"The butler" is integral to the plot of countless potboilers and melodramas, whether or not the character has been given a name. Butlers figure so prominently in period pieces and whodunits that they can be considered stock characters in film and theatre, where a catchphrase is "The butler did it!"
The best-known fictional manservant, and the archetype of the quintessential British butler, is himself not a butler at all but instead a valet: Reginald Jeeves, the iconic creation of author P. G. Wodehouse is a "gentleman's gentleman" and general factotum. Probably the best-known fictional butlers are Alfred from the Batman comic and films; Hudson of Upstairs, Downstairs television fame; Mr Carson from the Downton Abbey television series; and Crichton from J. M. Barrie's The Admirable Crichton. Lesser-knowns include Mr. Belvedere from the novel Belvedere, which was adapted into a feature film with sequels and later a television series; Lurch, from the television series The Addams Family, based on Charles Addams' The New Yorker cartoons; Beach, from the Wodehouse series about Blandings Castle; Niles, the butler at the Sheffield house in American sitcom The Nanny, Geoffrey from The Fresh Prince of Bel Air, Bailey (an English canine butler) from the children's animated television series Arthur and Benson from the two series Soap and Benson.
Not all fictional butlers portray the "butler stereotype", however. Alan Bates, who played the butler Jennings in the film Gosford Park was coached in brooding detail by Arthur Inch, a longtime real-life butler. Mr. Stevens, the butler played by Anthony Hopkins in the film Remains of the Day, was also acted with remarkable realism. A female butler, Sarah Stevens, is the principal character in Linda Howard's 2002 Dying to Please, a murder/romance novel. Howard gives detailed and generally accurate descriptions of butlering in the work.
Examples
See also: List of fictional butlers- Alfred Pennyworth, Bruce Wayne's butler from Batman
- Angus Hudson, from the television show Upstairs, Downstairs
- Edwin Jarvis, Tony Stark's butler from Iron Man
- Nestor, the butler of Marlinspike Hall in The Adventures of Tintin
- Sebastian Beach, from the Blandings Castle stories by P. G. Wodehouse, frequently conspires with the clever Gally Threepwood
See also
References
- Post, Emily (2007). Emily Post's Etiquette. Echo Library. ISBN 978-1-4068-1215-2.
- Michelle Jean Hoppe’s article 046: Servants: Their Hierarchy and Duties.
- Genesis 39-40.
- This was most likely from a loss of the original Latin meaning and the mistaken belief that buttery related to "butter".
- Anthony-Maria Browne, 2nd Viscount Montagu; Lord Montagu's Book of Rules and Orders, 1595.
- Nancy Scanlon (2006). "The Development of the Kitchen in the English Country House 1315–1864". Journal of Culinary Science and Technology. 4 (2/3): 79–92.
- ^ Beeton, Isabella (2000) . Mrs Beeton's Book of Household Management. Oxford University Press. p. 393. ISBN 978-0-19-283345-7.
- Steedman, Carrolyn (February 2004). The servant's labour: the business of life, England, 1760–1820. Social History. Vol. 29. Taylor & Francis.
- Marshall, D. (April 1929). "The Domestic Servants of the Eighteenth Century". Economica (25): 15‒40. doi:10.2307/2548516. JSTOR 2548516.
- Robert Roberts. "The House Servant's Directory". digital.lib.msu.edu. Munroe and Francis; New York: Charles S. Francis, 1827. Archived from the original on 10 January 2022. Retrieved 10 January 2022.
- Gary Puckrein (October–November 1998). "The Science of Service". American Visions. 13 (5).
- J. Lee (1988). "Steady, Jeeves‒you've got company!". U.S. News & World Report. 104 (17).
- Higman, Barry (2002). Domestic Service in Australia. Melbourne University Publishing. ISBN 978-0-522-85011-6.
- MacPherson, Charles (10 February 2007). "By Jeeves, We're Having a Butler Shortage" (Streaming Audio). Weekend Edition Saturday (Interview). Interviewed by Scott Simon. NPR News. Archived from the original on 4 February 2008. Retrieved 13 August 2007.
- Kolhatka, Sheelah (September 2006). "Inside the Billionaire Service Industry" (PDF). The Atlantic. pp. 97‒101. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 December 2013.
- Chadha, Monica (17 February 2003). "Royal tips for Indian butlers". BBC News. Archived from the original on 20 May 2020.
- ^ Gerard, Jasper (15 November 2007). "Butlers: A Jeeves of my very own". The Daily Telegraph. Archived from the original on 13 November 2012.Archived 14 January 2013 at archive.today
- Higman (2002).
- Ferry, Steven M (2002). Butlers & Household Managers: 21st Century Professionals. BookSurge Publishing. p. 14. ISBN 978-1-59109-306-0.
- William Loeffler (15 April 2007). "The butler does it". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.
- ^ James Woodford (5 October 2002). "Move over, Jeeves, a new breed of butler is working her way up". The Sydney Morning Herald. Archived from the original on 8 March 2021.
Ms Camille, who is the Australasian representative to the Butler's Guild: "I still make beds, clean toilets and peg out washing," she says. "It's not all as glamorous as people perceive it to be".
- Dube, Rebecca (20 July 2007). "Desperately seeking Jeeves". The Globe and Mail. Archived from the original on 12 January 2022.
Lynda Reeves, president of the Toronto-based House & Home Media, for the term "butler" says: "it's a pretentious name for a housekeeper".
- Harvey, Jones (15 December 2001). "More money than time? Rent a butler". The Independent. United Kingdom. Archived from the original on 13 November 2013.
- Patrao, Michael (27 July 2007). "The alter ago of Jeeves". Deccan Herald. Archived from the original on 11 April 2008.
- Sapsted, David (30 May 2007). "Shortage of Butlers Has World's Wealthy Facing a Crisis". The New York Sun. Archived from the original on 8 March 2021. Retrieved 16 March 2020.
- Katz, David (8 May 2014). "What It's Like to Be a Billionaire's Butler". GQ. Archived from the original on 3 October 2021. Retrieved 4 July 2021.
- The Authenticity of Gosford Park, Documentary featurette in Gosford Park Collector's Edition DVD, Universal Studios, 2002.
- Alex Witchel (20 August 2000). "At Hotels, the Butlers Are Doing It". New York Times. 149 (51486): 2.
- Smith, Horace; Lehtonen, Joel (14 November 2005) . Interludes being Two Essays, a Story, and Some Verses. MacMillan & Co. ISBN 1-4069-1965-9. Archived from the original on 28 December 2008.
Joel Lehtonen is a contributor, translator of the book
- "Unique Rosewood Ladies Floor could start trend in Saudi, Middle East Hotels". 10 December 2007. Archived from the original on 25 February 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - In Loeffler (15 April 2007), Nathalie Laitmon of The Calendar Group in Stamford, Connecticut, states that skilled butlers within the grandest households can make USD 200,000 (GBP 101,500). She states, "The bigger the lifestyle of the family, the more they can earn".
- Waterfield G.; A. French; M. Craske, eds. (2003). Below stairs, 400 years of servants' portraits. London: National Portrait Gallery. ISBN 978-1-85514-512-2.
- Croft, Karen. "Butlers in Love", Salon, 24 May 2001.
- The World of Marck Stock.
- Garchik, Leah (14 May 2008). "San Francisco Chronicle". Archived from the original on 16 January 2009.
- "San Francisco's historic Westerfield Mansion". Archived from the original on 31 July 2010.
- "The man who got it right for Gosford Park and told Richard E Grant what was wrong". Mid Sussex Times. 2002.
Also see: The Authenticity of Gosford Park
- "Linda Howard - Dying To Please". Archived from the original on 20 February 2008. Retrieved 24 January 2010.
A synopsis of Linda Howard's 2002 Dying to Please book, archived copy
Notes
- This article is based on material from "A Brief History of Butlers and Butlering" by Stephen Ewen, which is licensed under the Creative Common Attribution-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License.
- This article incorporates material from the Citizendium article "Butler", which is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License but not under the GFDL. The article there is a mirror copy of "A Brief History of Butlers and Butlering" by Stephen Ewen.
Further reading
- Ager, Stanley; Aubyn, Fiona St. (2012). The Butler's Guide to Running the Home and Other Graces. Potter Style. ISBN 9780385344708.
- Clayton, Nicholas (2017). A Butler's Guide to Table Manners. National Trust. ISBN 978-1905400485.
- Ferry, Steven (2009). Hotel Butlers, The Great Service Differentiators. BookSurge Publishing (reprint). ISBN 978-1439226483.
- MacPherson, Charles (2013). The Butler Speaks: A Return to Proper Etiquette, Stylish Entertaining, and the Art of Good Housekeeping. Toronto: Random House. ISBN 9780449015919.
- Redding, Cyrus (1839). Every Man His Own Butler. London: Whittaker & Co. OCLC 25057151.
- Starkey, Mary Louise (1989). Mrs. Starkey's Original Guide to Private Service Management. Mansion Publishing. ISBN 978-0966480726.
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