Everything about Lillian Russell totally explained
Lillian Russell (
December 41860 –
June 6 1922) was an
American actress and
singer.
Born
Helen Louise Leonard in
Clinton, Iowa, Lillian Russell became one of the most famous actresses and singers of the late
19th century and early
20th century, known for her beauty and style, as well as for her voice and stage presence.
Life and career
Russell's father was newspaper publisher Charles E. Leonard, and her mother was the feminist
Cynthia Leonard, the first woman to run for mayor of New York City. Her family moved to
Chicago in 1865, where she attended the Convent of the Sacred Heart and the Park Institute.
Early career
At the age of 18, she and her mother left for
New York where Leonard studied singing under
Leopold Damrosch. She joined the chorus of a touring production of
Gilbert and Sullivan's
comic opera H.M.S. Pinafore in 1879 and two weeks later married the orchestra leader, Harry Braham.
In November 1879, having changed her name to "Lillian Russell," she made her first appearance on Broadway at
Tony Pastor's Casino Theater, billed as "an English Ballad Singer." Pastor, known as the father of
vaudeville, was responsible for introducing many well-known performers. Russell immediately gained popularity, and she toured with Pastor and later starred in some of his
comic operas. In the early 1880s Russell starred in the Bijou Opera House, on Broadway, and elsewhere in Gilbert and Sullivan comic opera roles, such as the title role in
Patience and Aline in
The Sorcerer.
Russell married her second husband, composer
Edward Solomon, in 1884 (a year after their daughter was born) travelled with him to England. There she starred in Solomon's
Polly,
Grundy and Solomon's
Pocahontas and Solomon and
Stephens'
Virginia and Paul. While in London, she was engaged to create the title role of Gilbert and Sullivan's
Princess Ida, but she was dismissed during rehearsals. She then returned to America, touring in Solomon's comic operas. They had a daughter named Dorothy. In 1886, Solomon was arrested for
bigamy. Russell filed for divorce in 1893 and joined the J. C. Duff Opera Company, with which she toured for two years.
During these years, Russell continued to star in comic operas and other musical theatre. In 1887, she starred as Carlotta in
Gasparone by
Karl Millöcker in
New York City at the Standard Theatre, together with
Eugene Oudin and
J. H. Ryley." When
Alexander Graham Bell introduced long distance telephone service on
May 8 1890, Russell's voice was the first carried over the line. From
New York City, Russell sang "Sabre Song" to audiences in
Boston and
Washington, D.C..
She married actor John Haley Augustin Chatterton (known as "Giovanni Perugini") in 1894, but they soon separated. Russell continued starring with various opera companies, including the McCaull Opera Company and later her own company. For many years, Russell was the foremost singer of
operettas in America. Her voice, stage presence and beauty were the subject of a great deal of fanfare in the news media, and she was extremely popular with audiences. Actress
Marie Dressler observed, "I can still recall the rush of pure awe that marked her entrance on the stage. And then the thunderous applause that swept from orchestra to gallery, to the very roof." Among Russell's best-known roles were in Gilbert and Sullivan's
Patience and
The Sorcerer and
W. S. Gilbert's
The Mountebanks,
Alfred Cellier's
Dorothy as well as
Jacques Offenbach's
The Princess of Trebizonde,
The Brigands (in a translation by Gilbert),
The Grand Duchess of Gerolstein, and
The Queen of Brilliants.
For forty years, Russell was also the companion of businessman
"Diamond Jim" Brady, who showered her with extravagant gifts of diamonds and gemstones and supported her extravagant lifestyle.
Later years
In 1899, Russell joined the Weber and
Fields's Music Hall, where she starred in their entertainments until 1904. Composer
John Stromberg had written several hit songs for Russell. Before the production of
Twirly Whirly, he delayed delivery of her new solo, insisting it wasn't ready. Days before the first rehearsal, Stromberg took his own life, and the folded manuscript for a sentimental ballad entitled "Come Down Ma Evenin' Star" was found in his coat pocket. The touching ballad became the signature song of Russell's later years and is the only one that she's known to have recorded.
After 1904, Russell began to have vocal difficulties, but she didn't retire from the stage. Instead, she switched to non-musical comedies, touring under the management of James Brooks, but she eventually returned to singing, appearing in burlesque, variety and other entertainments. In 1912, she married her fourth husband,
Alexander Pollock Moore, owner of the
Pittsburgh Leader, and mostly retired from the stage.
In later years, Russell wrote a newspaper column, advocated
women's suffrage (as her mother had), and was a popular lecturer, advocating an optimistic philosophy of self-help. During
World War I, she recruited for the U.S. Marine Corps and raised money for the war effort. Russell became a wealthy woman, and during the
Actors' Equity strike of 1919, she made a major donation of money to sponsor the formation of the
Chorus Equity Association by the chorus girls at the
Ziegfeld Follies.
According to the
March 17 1922 edition of the
New York Times, Russell traveled aboard the
R.M.S. Aquitania from
Southampton,
England, to the Port of New York on the
March 11 to
March 17 crossing. "[She] established a precedent by acting as Chairman of the ship's concert, the first woman, so far as the records show, to preside at an entertainment on shipboard."
Lillian Russell died on
June 6 1922, shortly after a completing a fact-finding mission to Europe on behalf of President
Warren Harding. She was buried with full military honors. She is interred in a private mausoleum in the
Allegheny Cemetery in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
A full-length portrait of Russell was painted in 1902 by the Swiss-born American artist
Adolfo Müller-Ury (1862-1947) who also painted another oval half-length, but both portraits are missing.
Legacy
The Lillian Russell Theatre aboard the City of Clinton Showboat is a
summer stock theater named after Russell in her hometown of
Clinton, Iowa. A
1940 film was made about Russell's life. It was directed by
Irving Cummings who, as a teenager starting his career, had acted with Russell in the play
Wildfire in 1908.
Further Information
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