Home / Tag Archives: Music Hall (page 2)

Tag Archives: Music Hall

Harry Lauder

Sir Harry Lauder was typically the most popular Scottish entertainer ever, focusing on skits and tracks in Scottish dialect. Clad in knit kilts and built with a knotty cane, Lauder merrily performed with whimsical glee the traditional Scottish tracks he’d devised, a few of which right now are as ingrained …

Read More »

Al Bowlly

Typically the most popular vocalist in Britain through the 1930s, Al Bowlly showcased a variety of materials unsurpassed by any contemporary apart from Bing Crosby. He was also a genuine international recording designer: given birth to in Mozambique to Greek and Lebanese parents, he grew up in Johannesburg, but obtained …

Read More »

Noël Coward

A multi-talented Renaissance guy from the 20th hundred years, Zeroël Coward worked primarily being a playwright, professional, songwriter, and singer, but his creative actions also included the composing of fiction and poetry; making and directing for the stage, film, and tv; and nightclub entertaining and saving. Across a profession spanning …

Read More »

Noel Gay

b. Richard Moxon Armitage, 3 March 1898, Wakefield, Yorkshire, Britain, d. 3 March 1954, London Britain. A prolific composer and lyricist, Homosexual was in charge of some of the most well-known and memorable tracks in the united kingdom through the 30s and 40s. A kid prodigy, he was informed at …

Read More »

Marie Lloyd

b. Matilda Alice Victoria Solid wood, 12 Feb 1870, London, Britain, d. 7 Oct 1922, London, Britain. With four sisters, Daisy, Elegance, Alice and Rose, and close friends, Wood created the Fairy Bells Minstrels. Choosing a stage profession, she used the name Bella Delamare and was quickly effective. With a …

Read More »

Les Barker

The zaniness of Monty Python as well as the Goon Present is fused with poetic, Edward Lear-like inanity by Uk poet and songwriter Les Barker. Although his 57 books of poetry possess presented such off-the-wall individuals as Jason & the Quarrels, Cosmo the Pretty Accurate Blade Thrower, and Captain Indecisive, …

Read More »

Vess L. Ossman

This historically important artist was section of several performers who made the very first recordings of so-called ragtime music. He started documenting in the first 1890s and was the dominating banjoist in the thoughts of the brand new record-buying general public for at least ten years from then on. His …

Read More »

Charles Coborn

Music hall mainstay Charles Coborn is well known for a set of turn-of-the-century classics, the self-penned “Two Lovely Dark Eye” and Fred Gilbert’s “THE PERSON Who Broke the lender in Monte Carlo.” Created Colin McCallum in 1852, he started performing by age 20 and went to hundreds of English music …

Read More »

John Yorke Atlee

John Yorke Atlee was among the first stars from the American phonograph industry. A Detroit indigenous, Atlee ultimately resolved in Washington, D.C. where he worked well as a U.S. Authorities official. To create ends fulfill, he began showing up in vaudeville playhouses as a specialist whistler. Whistling, because of its …

Read More »

Flanagan & Allen

Bud Flanagan (b. Reuben Weintrop [Robert Winthrop], 14 Oct 1896, Whitechapel, London, Britain, d. 20 Oct 1968, Kingston, Surrey, Britain) and Chesney Allen (b. William Ernest Allen, 5 Apr 1896, London, Britain, d. 13 November 1982, Midhurst, Sussex, Britain). Among Britain’s best-loved comedy-singing duos throughout their heyday within the 30s …

Read More »