Truly Shattuck

Truly Shattuck (July 27, 1875 – December 6, 1954) was a soubrette star of vaudeville, music halls, and Broadway whose career began in tragedy and ended in relative obscurity.

Truly Shattuck
Burr McIntosh Monthly August, 1905
Born
Clarice Etrulia de Bucharde

(1875-07-27)July 27, 1875
DiedDecember 6, 1954(1954-12-06) (aged 79)
Woodland Hills, California, U.S.
OccupationMusical Actress
Spouse(s)Stephen A. Douglas,

Early life

Truly Shattuck was born at San Miguel, San Luis Obispo County, California in an adobe house adjoining the historic Mission San Miguel Arcángel.[1] Her birth name was said to be Clarice Etrulia de Burchards (or Burcharde)[1][2] which has proven difficult to verify through public records. Shattuck was the surname of her stepfather, who like her birthfather, nothing here is known. Truly's mother was Jane Shattuck.

In 1893 Jane Shattuck murdered Harry Poole, her daughter's boyfriend, after he refused to commit to marriage after the couple spent the night together. Shattuck's mother was originally convicted of first degree murder, but was later released after winning a temporary insanity appeal. At the time Shattuck was a chorus girl at the Tivoli Opera House in San Francisco and as a result of the national exposure generated by Poole's murder, her career began to take seed.[3]

Career

New York Public Library Digital Gallery, My queen Irene, she is the best girl I've seen. [first line ...] ([c1899])

Truly Shattuck made her first New York vaudeville appearance at Tony Pastor's theater in 1896.[1] Her first major role came the following year playing Mephisto in "Very Little Faust and Much Marguerite",[4] staged at Hammerstein's Olympia Theatre.[5] Shattuck went on to tour for a number of seasons as a lead performer in several traveling burlesque and vaudeville companies. When John Philip Sousa's marches were the rage in the 1890s, Truly caused a bit of controversy by putting words to his music and singing them at music halls such as Koster & Bial's in New York. Shattuck spent the last year or so of the 19th century in Germany performing at Berlin and Dresden before supporting Edna May in the 1900 London production of An American Beauty,[1][6]

In 1904 she went from vaudeville to Broadway to play Celestine in the musical An English Daisy,[7] at the Casino Theatre and later that year in George M. Cohan's Little Johnny Jones at the Liberty Theatre.[8] In 1906 she played Mrs. Franklin-Jones-Berrymore in the musical farce The Governor's Son[8] staged at the Aerial Gardens (now the New Amsterdam Roof). She created the role of Violette in A Parisian Model[9] at the Broadway Theatre in 1906 and the following year she played Adelaide Forster (the lady) in the George Broadhurst play The Lady from Lane's[10] staged at the Lyric Theatre and Casino Theatre. Her last Broadway roles came in 1910 as Trixie Stole in Judy Forgot[11] at the Broadway Theatre and as Alma in “Alma, Where Do You Live?” with Weber and Fields[12][13]

She was the first to sing Ernest R. Ball's 1913 song Love Me, and the World Is Mine[14] and the following year began an extensive European tour performing at music halls in St. Petersburg, Vienna, Berlin, Dresden, Hamburg, Frankfort and London.[1] Throughout her early career she was a frequent performer with Weber and Fields in shows like Hip! Hip! Hooray! as Vera Shapeleigh at Joe Weber's Theatre in November, 1907.[1][2]

Burr McIntosh Monthly, 1906

In 1910 Shattuck declared bankruptcy in a New York court with nearly $2,800 liabilities and no assets.[15] It was reported in the press at the time that her extravagant lifestyle, expensive cars, clothes and a yacht, caused her downfall.[16] Her husband, Stephen A. Douglas, claimed that she went through a half-million dollars in four years. The two wed in 1899, and according to the press spent very little time together over their marriage. Douglas, who was salesman, was granted a divorce in 1914 some four years after he filed on the grounds of desertion.[17]

On October 13, 1911, she was rushed to Johns Hopkins Hospital suffering from a brain abscess. She had been in Baltimore performing at the Academy of Music in Alma, Where Do You Live? and would be absent from the stage for nearly two years.[18] She returned to vaudeville in 1913 with a new partner, Thomas A. Wise, a comedian who played in The Lady From Lane's.[1] In 1919 she received positive reviews with Emma O'Neil in their vaudeville skit Punctuating Life's Manuscript.[19]

Shattuck turned to Hollywood in 1915 and over the next twelve years would appear in some sixteen silent films. Her first known movie was The Iron Strain,[20] in which she played Mrs. Van Ness. Her last was in 1927 as Mrs. P. Belmont-Fox in Rubber Heels.[21] At the time of the taking of the 1920 US census Shattuck was recorded as a house guest of Rudolph K Hynicka and his young wife Dorothy at their Los Angeles residence. Hyincka was a journalist who rose to control virtually every political appointments in Cincinnati over some two decades.[22][23]

Later Years

After her vaudeville and film career closed, Shattuck was reduced to working as a waitress and later as a seamstress, but was unable to hold on to either job for very long. In September 1929, after several months of unemployment, Shattuck was arrested in Chicago for trying to shoplift a $16.50 green dress. She later pleaded guilty, but was released after the department store dropped the charges.[24] One paper quoted her saying, “A woman must dress if she wants to work.” [25] A year later it was reported that she had been appointed personal secretary to a Mrs. A. L. Erlanger.[26]

In 1930, Dr. Henry J. Shireson, a cosmetic surgeon, lost his medical license after one of his patients had to have her legs amputated after he attempted to correct her bow-legs (genu varum). It came out in the investigation that a decade earlier he had performed weight loss surgeries on Shattuck, Sophie Tucker and several other celebrities of the day.[27]

Shattuck was among the more than two hundred mourners who attended Fatty Arbuckle's funeral in New York in July 1933.[28]

During the remainder of her life, Shattuck would periodically return to the stage and on occasion perform in radio productions.[29][30] In 1935, Hollywood reporter Alan McElwain listed her among a group of once-popular performers working at the time for $7.50 a-day as a movie bit player.[31]

Death

Shattuck died at the age 79 after an extended illness at the Motion Picture Country Home on Mulholland Drive in Woodland Hills, California.[29][32]

Partial filmography

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References

  1. Who’s Who in Music and Drama edited by Harry Prescott Hanaford and Dixie Hines – 1914 p. 279.
  2. Truly Shattuck - Tlle New York Times. December 10, 1954 p. 27
  3. Duke, Thomas Samuel-Celebrated Criminal Cases of America - 1910. p. 97 accessed December 29, 2016
  4. adapted by Richard F. Carroll, Hervé and Fred Eustis (music), Clement King (lyrics) - Internet Broadway Database
  5. Auditorium Olympia – The New York Times August 22, 1897
  6. Hugh Morton (aka C. M. S. McLellan) (lyrics) Gustave Kerker (music) - Internet Broadway Database
  7. Walter Slaughter (music), Edgar Smith (Lyrics)
  8. Music, Book, Lyrics by George M. Cohan - Internet Broadway Database
  9. Book by Harry B. Smith; Lyrics by Harry B. Smith; Music by Max Hoffman, Sr.
  10. Lyrics by George Broadhurst; Music by Gustav Kerker
  11. Avery Hopwood (Book and Lyrics) Silvio Hein (Music)
  12. George V. Hobart (Book and Lyrics), Jean Briquet (Music)
  13. Music in German immigrant theater: New York City, 1840-1940 By John Koegel 2009 – p. 306
  14. On This Side by E.V. Durling - Tucson Daily Citizen April 29, 1949| p.10
  15. Two Actresses Out of Bankruptcy – The New York Times – November 29, 1910 p. 6
  16. Truly, Tis Wonderful – Oakland Tribune – September 10, 1910 p. 5
  17. Truly Is Free At Last - Oakland Tribune – September 10, 1910 p. 5
  18. Truly Shattuck Stricken - The New York Times October 14, 1911 - p. 13
  19. Bert Williams at the Royal - New York Dramatic Mirror – April 15, 1919 p. 565
  20. Reginald Barker (Director), C. Gardner Sullivan (scenario)
  21. Victor Heerman (Director), Thomas J. Crizer, Ray Harris, J. Clarkson Miller and Sam Mintz (Writers) Internet Movie Database (IMDb.com)
  22. 1920 US Census Records
  23. Cincinnati Ex-Czar R.K. Hynicka Dies - The New York Times- February 23, 1927
  24. Truly Shattuck Is Set Free In Charge of Shoplifting - Rochester Evening Journal September 18, 1929, p.9
  25. Truly Shattuck, Famous as Stage Beauty, Caught Stealing Dress Owosso Argus-Press - September 18, 1929, p.2
  26. Chester B. Bahn - Syracuse Herald – September 8, 1930 p. 29
  27. Dr. Shireson is Barred; Board Revokes License of Chicago Specialist in Beauty. The New York Times, January 24, 1930, p. 24
  28. Stage Folk Mourn at Arbuckle Bier – The New York Times – July 2, 1933 p. 10
  29. Stage Star of 1890s – Truly Shattuck Funeral Service in Hollywood – Oakland Tribune December 10, 1954 p. 34
  30. Wisconsin State Journal (Madison, Wisconsin) April 17, 1937 | p. 7
  31. Hollywood Film Shop by Alan McElwain - The Gallup Independent and Evening Herald, Gallup, New Mexico), December 10, 1935 p. 2
  32. Truly Shattuck - The New York Times – December 10, 1954 p. 27
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