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Lillian Russell
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Stage actress Lillian Russell is an ideal beauty
at about 200 pounds. She first appeared in light opera in 1879, but
didn't achieve stardom until 1899, when she performed at Weber and
Fields' Music Hall, and later with her own Lillian Russell Opera
Company. She was noted for her flamboyant personality and for her love
of jewelry.
On November 22, 1880 Lillian Russell made her debut at Tony Pastor's
Theatre in New York City. Within weeks, the beautiful blonde added a
prominent role in The Pie Rats of Penn Yann to her stage credits. This
spirited "travesty" of Gilbert and Sullivan's The Pirates of Pennzance
made Lillian Russell an instant star. For the next 35 years, Russell
maintained her position as one of the first ladies of the American
stage. Born Helen Louise Leonard in 1861, "Nellie" was raised in a
middle class home. Trained in music and foreign languages, in the late
1870s she moved with her mother from Chicago to New York in order to
receive advanced voice instruction.
Soon, she met Tony Pastor, the vaudeville impresario who transformed
the slightly seedy variety format into respectable family
entertainment. Billed as "Lillian Russell, The English Ballad Singer"
she was seen at Tony Pastor's by almost everyone in New York--except
her mother.
"For more than a month I succeeded in appearing
in Tony Pastor's every night, without my mother receiving so much as an
inkling of my new occupation. This was easier than it sounds because
mother was a busy woman . . . But one night at dinner I had a sudden
premonition that something was wrong. I raised my eyes and found the
glance of a newspaperman who lived in the same house . . . "Mrs.
Leonard," he said, "do you know that there is a girl named Lillian
Russell, who sings at Tony Pastor's Theatre, who looks enough like your
little Nellie to be her sister?"" - Lillian Russell, American
Vaudeville As seen By Its Contemporaries (New York: Random House, 1984)
page. 11-12.
Assured that Tony Pastor's Theatre was "respectable," that night Mrs.
Leonard sat in the audience and joined in the thunderous applause
following her daughter's performance.
Hearing her sing in Pie Rats of Penn Yann, Sir Arthur Sullivan
pressured Russell to leave Tony Pastor's for an equivalent role in the
legitimate production. She refused to break her contract with Pastor.
By 1888, Russell commanded $20,000 a year headlining the Casino Theater
in New York City. There she took on some of her most acclaimed roles
including Gabrielle Dalmont in An American Beauty--a title that became
her soubriquet.
Entering her second decade on the stage, Russell was as popular as
ever. Touring with the Casino company made Lillian Russell a household
name. When Alexander Graham Bell introduced long distance telephone
service on May 8, 1890, her voice was the first carried over the new
line. Stationed in New York, Russell sang "Sabre Song" to audiences in
Boston and Washington.
The turn of the century found Russell older and
fuller of figure, but still highly paid and much in demand. In 1899,
she moved away from light opera and toward vaudeville by joining Lew
Fields and Joe Weber's theatrical company. At the Weber and Fields
Music Hall and with their touring company she stared in productions
including Whirl-I-Gig, Hoity-Toity, and Woop-Dee-Doo. In September
1900, Russell and other performers entertained at a benefit for
Galveston flood victims.
One of America's first celebrities, the public was as fascinated with
Lillian Russell's private life as they were enchanted by her stage
presence. Although her solid middle-class background and lady-like
demeanor helped elevate the social status of entertainers, Russell's
four marriages (one to a bigamist), her rumored affairs with Diamond
Jim Brady and the Great Sandow, and her appetite for food and jewelry
added to her notoriety.
After marrying prominent Republican Alfred P. Moore in 1912, Russell
increasingly focused on politics. She presided over opening of
Progressive Party headquarters in Pittsburgh, sold Liberty Bonds during
World War I, and campaigned for Warren Harding in the 1920
election.
Lillian Russell died in 1922 shortly after a completing a fact-finding
mission to Europe on behalf of President Harding. She was buried with
full military honors.
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