Zoe Gail

Zoe Gail [1] (20 February 1920 – 20 February 2020) was a South African-born American actress.

Zoe Gail
Born20 February 1920
Cape Town, South Africa
Died20 February 2020
Las Vegas, Nevada, United States
Occupationactress, singer
Spouse(s)Hubert Gregg (m.1943-1950) Bert Bernard

Early life

Gail was born Zoe Margaret Stapelton in Cape Town, South Africa.[1] She was an actress known for Tonight at the London Palladium (1955), No Orchids for Miss Blandish (1948), Lady Luck (1948)[2] and Here's Looking at You[3][4] Gail was also known for her comedic abilities. She was married to Hubert Gregg with whom she had one child, Stacey Gregg,[5] and also married to Bert Bernard.[4] Gail was chosen to switch on the lights at the West End of London in 1949 nearly a decade after they were turned off at the outbreak of World War II. She stood in a spotlight on the balcony of the Criterion Restaurant at Piccadilly Circus, dressed in black top hat, white tie and tails, she sang her hit song I’m Going to Get Lit Up When the Lights Go Up in London.[6][7][8] Then she said "Abracadabra, hey Presto" and switched on the lights. She then quickly tossed her top hat into a crowd of ten thousand people. But Zoe had not gotten universal admiration when she first sang the song in Strike a New Note[9] at the Prince of Wales Theatre in 1943. J B Priestley disapproved of her “strange, hermaphroditic garb”.[10]

Death

On 20 February 2020, Zoe Gail died in Las Vegas, Nevada, United States at 100 years old.

gollark: Nim is an interesting possibility which I may investigate, yes.
gollark: I feel like that would just be OCaml but the ecosystem is even more nonexistent.
gollark: It has nice features but also horrible things.
gollark: I tried using it for stuff and I disliked it.
gollark: Haskell is obviously no, Python is quite slow and has different ecosystem problems as well as a remarkable amount of weird inconsistency, JS dependencies break after about 5 months and it's an awful language, Rust is somewhat nice but annoying compared to higher level languages, Clojure is maybe good however Lisp and also Java (well, JVM), and... that's about it?

References

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