Lottie Gilson

Lottie Gilson (1862 – June 10, 1912)[1] was a popular comedian and vaudeville singer of the 1880s and 1890s. She was billed as "The Little Magnet" in recognition of her ability to attract and engage audiences. Due to her popularity, she was much sought-after by Tin Pan Alley publishers to boost sheet music sales. Songs particularly associated with Gilson include "The Sunshine of Paradise Alley", "The Little Lost Child", "The Sidewalks of New York", and "My Mother Was a Lady".

Photograph of Lottie Gilson on "My little Georgia Rose" cover

Career

She was born Lydia Deagon in Basel, Switzerland.[1] Details of her early life are unknown including when she first came to the United States and when she made her stage debut. The first record of her performing is in 1884, at the Bowery's Old National Theatre, where she became a regular act.[1] Her success at Old National led eventually to engagements at top New York theaters of the day: Tony Pastor's, Henry Miner's, and Hyde & Behman's.[1] She was soon established as one of the top soubrettes of vaudeville. She appeared at Miner's Theatre and Tony Pastor's new 14th Street Theatre in Lower Manhattan and Hyde and Behman's Theater in Brooklyn.[1]

Like many vaudeville stars, Gilson was known not for her singing talent, but for her personality and showmanship.[2] Her rapport with her audience and talent for attracting customers earned her the nickname "The Little Magnet", which became part of her billing.[1] In the beginning, her act was mainly ballads and tear-jerkers; the sentimental ballad "The Sunshine of Paradise Alley" (1895) was especially identified with her. After a few years she expanded into bawdy comical songs, such as "You're Not the Only Pebble on the Beach" (1896). She pioneered methods of engaging the audience that were so widely copied they became cliches. One was the use of a hand-mirror to reflect the spotlight into the audience, shining it on likely male customers and thus making them a part of her act. The practice of cajoling the audience to sing along on the chorus was another of Gilson's trademarks.[3] A staged variation of audience participation involved a teenage boy in the balcony—ostensibly a customer, but really a shill—who is suddenly inspired to sing with or to the performer.[1][4] Gus Edwards was one such balcony-singer who contributed to Gilson's act.[5]

Gilson was also in the forefront of another vaudeville practice, taking money[lower-alpha 1] from Tin Pan Alley sheet music publishers to promote songs by including them in her act.[1][6] Her popularity made her very attractive to publishers, who could be sure that songs would be heard and appreciated by a large audience when she sang them. According to publisher and songwriter E.B. Marks, Gilson could "draw tears from an audience with a perfectly vapid song".[7] Marks's "The Little Lost Child" (1894) was one of the many successful songs plugged by Gilson. Her promotion also played a role in the success of "The Sidewalks of New York" (1894); she introduced it in her act at Miner's London Theatre in the Bowery, employing her method of encouraging the audience to sing along at the chorus.[8]

Death

Lottie Gilson died June 10, 1912 in New York City.[1][9]

Notes

  1. Other inducements were offered besides money: Shapiro Bernstein gave her a $500 diamond ring to sing their songs.[4]
gollark: That would fit with the general pattern of governments responding to bad things.
gollark: Apparently by texting numbers you can send payments, on mobile phones. What UTTER IDIOT thought that that was a good and secure idea?
gollark: The phone system is seemingly a weird horrible mess.
gollark: Apparently pirates had the eyepatches to be able to switch to a dark-adapted eye to see belowdecks.
gollark: They totally are. They randomly stop focusing right for some reason. They've apparently got the light sensitive bits and nerves the wrong way round.

References

  1. Cullen, Frank; Hackman, Florence; McNeilly, Donald (2006). Vaudeville, Old and New: An Encyclopedia of Variety Performers in America. Psychology Press. pp. 438–439. ISBN 978-0-415-93853-2.
  2. Rosenfeld, Monroe H. (April 1897). "Prosperous Vaudeville Vocalists". Metropolitan. V (3): 226–227.
  3. "Lottie Gilson, 'The Little Magnet'". Edison Phonograph Monthly. IX (11): 8–9. November 1911. Retrieved 2015-01-17 via Internet Archive.
  4. Sanjek, Russell (1988). American Popular Music and Its Business: The First Four Hundred Years. Volume II: From 1790 to 1909. Oxford University Press. pp. 338, 409. ISBN 978-0-19-504310-5.
  5. Jasen, David A. (2003). Tin Pan Alley: an Encyclopedia of the Golden Age of American Song. Routledge. pp. 127, 158–159. ISBN 0-415-93877-5.
  6. Trav S.D. (2006). No Applause—Just Throw Money: The Book That Made Vaudeville Famous. Faber and Faber. p. 112. ISBN 978-0-86547-958-6.
  7. Shteir, Rachel (2004). Striptease: The Untold History of the Girlie Show. Oxford University Press. p. 69. ISBN 978-0-19-512750-8.
  8. Lasser, Michael (2014). America's Songs II: Songs from the 1890s to the Post-War Years. Routledge. p. 4. ISBN 978-1-135-09452-2.
  9. "Lottie Gilson Dies". Variety. XXVII (2): 8. June 15, 1912. Retrieved 2015-06-27 via Internet Archive.
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