From 27 March 1863 he was the original Hawkshaw, a detective, in
The Ticket-of-Leave Man by Taylor, his first distinct acting success. In 1864 he became manager of the Olympic Theatre. In London he had appeared only at this theatre. He opened on 2 November with three new plays: Tom Taylor's
The Hidden Hand, and two farces, John Oxenford's
The Girl I Left Behind Me and John Maddison Morton's ''My Wife's Bonnet'', all of them adaptations from the French. In Tom Taylor's
Settling Day, opening on 4 March 1865, he was the first Meiklam. In a revival of
Twelfth Night he was Sir
Andrew Aguecheek. From 30 June 1865 in Tom Taylor's
The Serf, or Love Levels All, he was Khor, an old serf. From about 1866 the Olympic Theatre was managed by
Benjamin Nottingham Webster. From 7 November 1868 he played Inspector
Javert in the first production of
The Yellow Passport by
Henry Gartside Neville, an adaptation of
Les Misérables by Victor Hugo. He appeared in
A Life Chase, an adaptation by himself and
John Oxenford of
Le Drame de la Rue de la Paix, at the
Gaiety Theatre opening on 11 October 1869. ==Mirror Theatre==