For the composer, see Alice Marion Shaw.
Alice J. Shaw was an American musical performer, who was billed as "The Whistling Prima Donna" and, in French, "La Belle Siffleuse."
Alice Horton was born in Elmira, New York, the daughter of William Horton, a stock broker. [1]
Alice J. Shaw toured Europe and India performing as a whistler, starting in 1886 with a performance for teachers at Steinway Hall in New York City. In England the following year, she whistled for the Prince of Wales. [2]
Because a "whistling woman" was sometimes considered vulgar or unwise, [3] Shaw was careful to craft her shows with the utmost decorum, both in her physical movements and in her facial expressions. Reviewers remarked on her ability to follow sheet music, which emphasized her self-discipline. [4] An anonymous New York Times reviewer, however, commented that "her notions of melody are weird and uncanny ... and reminds one of little children, in that she ought to be seen but not heard. However, she seems determined to make a noise ..." [5] Another reviewer that year acknowledged her uniqueness, and hoped she would remain so, because "a generation of whistlers is an appalling thing to imagine." [6]
Later in life, she performed with two of her daughters, Ethel and Elsie, whistling and singing twins known as "the May Blossoms." [3] Shaw also made some of the earliest recordings of whistling. In 1888, while touring England, she made wax cylinders with Edison's representative, George Edward Gouraud. She later made commercial recordings, some of which have survived. [4] She was also one of the earliest celebrity spokeswomen for a weight loss product, in 1897 ads for "Dr. Edison Obesity Pills and Obesity Fruit Salts". [7]
Alice Horton married William Holland Shaw. They had four daughters before they divorced in 1888. [8] There was a rumor that she divorced to marry "Buffalo Bill", William Cody. [9] She testified that she had no material assets and lived with her aunt in 1903. [10] She hoped to marry again, to David L. Howell, but he died in 1907 before their wedding. [11]
Beatrice Rose Stella Tanner, better known by her stage name Mrs Patrick Campbell or Mrs Pat, was an English stage actress, best known for appearing in plays by Shakespeare, Shaw and Barrie. She also toured the United States and appeared briefly in films.
Hobson's Choice is a play by Harold Brighouse, the title taken from the popular expression, Hobson's choice—meaning no choice at all.
Ada Jane Jones was an English-American popular singer who made her first recordings in 1893 on Edison cylinders. She is among the earliest female singers to be recorded.
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Fay Templeton was an American actress, singer, songwriter, and comedian.
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Annie Ellen Russell was a British-American stage actress.
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Alice Dunning Lingard was an English actress who performed both in England and in the United States, and was the wife of mimic and comic William Lingard.
Emily Vanderbilt Sloane Hammond was an author, philanthropist, and socialite. She was a member of the Vanderbilt family, and mother of music producer John Hammond. She was a keen musician and was president of numerous charitable societies.
Katherine Spencer Bloodgood Kipp was an American contralto singer and vaudeville performer.
James Coleman Drayton was an American lawyer and socialite. He is known for his marriage and eventual divorce from Charlotte Augusta Astor, which became the subject of international controversy in the 1890s.
Amos Tuck French was an American banker who was prominent in society.
Ethel Borden Harriman was an American heiress, actress, and author who worked as a screenwriter at MGM and RKO during the 1930s.
A 1907 recording of Alice Shaw and her twin daughters performing a whistling trio, "Spring-tide Revels"