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Lillian Russell

Lillian Russell (born Helen Louise Leonard; December 4, 1860 or 1861[1] – June 6, 1922) was an American actress and singer. She became one of the most famous actresses and singers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries, praised for her beauty and style, as well as for her voice and stage presence;[2] a reviewer referred to her as "the most beautiful actress of the legitimate stage."[3]

Lillian Russell
Russell in 1898
Born
Helen Louise Leonard

December 4, 1860 (or 1861)
DiedJune 6, 1922 (aged 60–61)
Occupation(s)Actress, singer
Years active1879–1919
Spouses
Harry Braham
(m. 1879; div. 1881)
(m. 1885; div. 1893)
John Haley Agustin
(m. 1894; div. 1898)
(m. 1912)
RelativesCynthia Leonard (mother)

Russell was born in Clinton, Iowa, but raised in Chicago. Her parents separated when she was 18, and she moved to New York with her mother. She began to perform professionally by 1879, singing for Tony Pastor and playing roles in comic opera, including Gilbert and Sullivan works. Composer Edward Solomon created roles in several of his comic operas for her in London. In 1884, they returned to New York and married in 1885, but in 1886, Solomon was arrested for bigamy. For many years, she was the foremost singer of operettas and musical theatre in the United States, performing continuously through the end of the 19th century.

In 1899, she joined the Weber and Fields' Broadway Music Hall, where she starred for five years. After 1904, she began to have vocal difficulties and switched to dramatic roles. She later returned to musical roles in vaudeville and retired from performing around 1919. Russell was married four times, but her longest relationship was with Diamond Jim Brady, who supported her extravagant lifestyle for four decades. In later years, she wrote a newspaper column, advocated women's suffrage, was a popular lecturer, and contributed to the passage of the restrictive Immigration Act of 1924.

Life and career edit

Russell was born Helen Louise Leonard in Clinton, Iowa,[4] the fourth of five daughters of newspaper publisher Charles E. Leonard, and author and feminist Cynthia Leonard, the first woman to run for mayor of New York City. Her family moved to Chicago in 1865, where she studied at the Convent of the Sacred Heart from age 7 to 15 and then at the Park Institute. Her father became a partner in the printing firm of Knight & Leonard, and her mother became active in the women's rights movement. Russell, called Nellie as a child, excelled at school theatricals. In her teens, she studied music privately and sang in choirs. In December 1877, she performed in an amateur production of Time Tries All at Chickering Hall in Chicago.[5][6]

Early career edit

 
in Patience, 1882

When Russell was 18, her parents separated, and she, her mother and her younger sister moved to New York City, where her mother did suffrage work for Susan B. Anthony. Russell studied singing under Leopold Damrosch and considered pursuing an operatic career; her very religious mother disapproved of her working in theatre, which she considered disreputable.[5] Russell began dating Walter Sinn, whose father owned the Brooklyn Park Theatre. Walter's mother helped Russell get a chorus job (as Nellie Leonard) with Edward E. Rice, who was touring his musical Evangeline to Boston beginning in September 1879,[7] together with Gilbert and Sullivan's comic opera H.M.S. Pinafore.[8] Russell soon began seeing the orchestra leader Harry Braham and became pregnant. They married in November when the show moved to New York theatres.[9] She gave birth to their son Harry in June 1880. In September, Braham got a prestigious job conducting at Tony Pastor's Theatre on Broadway.[10] Pastor, known as the father of vaudeville, was responsible for introducing many well-known performers.[11] In November 1880, Pastor engaged Russell for his variety shows. At his suggestion, she chose a stage name, Lillian Russell, and Pastor introduced her as an "English ballad singer".[12] She was immediately popular with audiences and soon was acting in skits, as well as singing.[13] In early 1881, the baby died after his nanny accidentally penetrated his stomach with a diaper pin.[14] Braham came home to find the dying baby. The tragedy exacerbated Russell's difficult relationship with her mother and led to her divorce from Braham.[13]

In the summer of 1881, Russell toured with Pastor's company.[6] That fall, she played the leading soprano role of Mabel in a burlesque of The Pirates of Penzance at Pastor's theatre. She next played at the Bijou Opera House on Broadway as Djenna in The Great Mogul and with the McCaull Comic Opera Company played Bathilda there in Olivette.[5] She also played the title role in Gilbert and Sullivan's Patience and Aline in The Sorcerer in 1882 at the Bijou.

Bigamous marriage and peak years edit

Russell met composer Edward Solomon later in 1882 at Pastor's New York Casino Theatre where he was the season's musical director and she became the star. Unaware of his first marriage, she became his mistress and they sailed together to London. There she starred in several works he wrote specifically for her, including Virginia in Paul and Virginia, Phoebe in Billee Taylor, and the title roles in Polly, or the Pet of the Regiment and Pocahontas.[15] While in London, she was engaged to create the title role in Gilbert and Sullivan's Princess Ida (1884), but she clashed with W.S. Gilbert and was dismissed during rehearsals.[16]

Solomon's comic operas were not highly successful in Britain, so Russell and Solomon returned to America. They had a daughter together, Dorothy Lillian Russell,[17] in 1884, and married in New Jersey in 1885.[15] Russell was very well received in Solomon's works, on tour in the U.S. for Pastor. Another Solomon success for Russell and Pastor was Pepita; or, the Girl with the Glass Eyes.[18][19] Russell also played in New York theatres or on tour in Gilbert and Sullivan and in operettas.[5] Her relationship with Solomon soured, mostly due to his poor finances, and their last show, The Maid and the Moonshiner (1886), was a flop. When creditors sued Solomon, he fled the country.[15] In 1886, Solomon was arrested for bigamy because his previous marriage had not been dissolved. Russell obtained a divorce from Solomon in 1893.[20]

 
Russell in Giroflé-Girofla, 1890s

Russell continued to star in comic opera and other musical theatre. She toured with the J.C. Duff Opera Company between other engagements for two years beginning in 1886.[6] In 1887, she starred as Carlotta in Gasparone by Karl Millöcker in New York City at the Standard Theatre, together with Eugène Oudin and J.H. Ryley.[21] Later the same year, she was back at the Casino Theatre in the title role of Dorothy, and over the next several years, she continued to star in operettas and musical theatre on Broadway. Her parts at this time included the title role in The Grand Duchess of Gerolstein, Fiorella in The Brigands (in a translation by W.S. Gilbert), Teresa in The Mountebanks, Marion in La Cigale, and Rosa in Princess Nicotine.[5][22] In 1891, she opened at the Garden Theatre as the star of the Lillian Russell Opera Company.[6] Giroflé-Girofla was a favorite of Russell, who played the dual lead role in Chicago, New York and on tour in the 1890s.[23]

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.[2] 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."[24] 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 the saber song from La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein to audiences in Boston and Washington, D.C. She rode a bicycle custom made for her by Tiffany & Co. It was a gold-plated machine that displayed the jeweler's art at its most opulent and unconventional – the handlebars inlaid with mother-of-pearl and the wheel spokes featuring her initials set in diamonds. She had "a cream serge leg-of-mutton sleeve cycling suit with the skirt shortened by three inches, which caused a sensation and set a trend."[25]

She married tenor John Haley Augustin Chatterton (known professionally as Signor Giovanni Perugini) in 1894, but they soon separated, and in 1898, they divorced.[6] In the spring of 1894, she returned to London to play Betta in The Queen of Brilliants by Edward Jakobowski and then played the same role in the New York production at Abbey's Theatre. She remained at Abbey's, playing several roles, but when that theatre shut down in 1896, she played in other Broadway houses in more operettas by Offenbach (such as The Princess of Trebizonde and many others), Victor Herbert and others, such as Erminie (at the Casino Theatre) in 1899.[5]

For 40 years, Russell was also the companion of businessman "Diamond Jim" Brady, who showered her with expensive gifts of diamonds and gemstones and supported her extravagant lifestyle.[14][22] Russell was said to be able nearly to match Brady's excessive eating habits, and would do so in public. While she was proud of her ability, it led to long-term struggles with her weight which, at her heaviest, approached 200 pounds.[26]

Later years edit

In 1899, Russell joined the Weber and Fields Music Hall, where she starred in their burlesques and other entertainments until 1904. Her first production there was Fiddle-dee-dee in 1899 which also featured DeWolf Hopper, Fay Templeton and David Warfield. Other favorites were Whoop-de-doo and The Big Little Princess. Before the 1902 production of Twirly-Whirly, John Stromberg, who had composed several hit songs for her, delayed giving Russell her solo for several days, saying that it was not ready. When he committed suicide a few days before the first rehearsal, sheet music for "Come Down Ma Evenin' Star" was discovered in his coat pocket. It became Russell's signature song and is the only one she is known to have recorded,[27] although the recording was made after Russell's voice had deteriorated significantly.[6]

 
Russell in Lady Teazle (1904)

Leaving Weber and Fields, she next played the title role of Lady Teazle in 1904 at the Casino Theatre and then began to play in vaudeville. After 1904, Russell began to have vocal difficulties, but she did not retire from the stage. Instead, she switched to non-musical comedies, touring from 1906 to 1908 under the management of James Brooks.[6] In 1906, she played the title role in Barbara's Millions, and in 1908 she was Henrietta Barrington in Wildfire. The next year she was Laura Curtis in The Widow's Might. In 1911, she toured in In Search of a Sinner. Russell then returned to singing, appearing in burlesque, variety and other entertainments.[5]

In 1912, she married her fourth husband, Alexander Pollock Moore, owner of the Pittsburgh Leader, and mostly retired from the stage. The wedding was held in Pittsburgh at the grand Schenley Hotel, which today is a national historic landmark and the University of Pittsburgh's student union building. Russell lived, for a time, in suite 437 of the hotel, now located in the offices of the student newspaper, The Pitt News.[28] The same year, she made her last appearance on Broadway in Weber & Fields' Hokey Pokey. In 1915, Russell appeared with Lionel Barrymore in the motion picture Wildfire, which was based on the 1908 play in which she had appeared. This was one of her few motion picture appearances. She appeared in vaudeville until 1919, when ill health forced her to leave the stage entirely, after a four-decade long career.[27]

Beginning around 1912, Russell wrote a newspaper column, became active in the women's suffrage movement (as her mother had been), and was a popular lecturer on personal relationships, health and beauty, advocating an optimistic philosophy of self-help and drawing large crowds.[5][6] In 1913, she declared that she would refuse to pay her income taxes to protest "the denial of the ballot to women."[29] Nonetheless, she recruited for the U.S. Marine Corps during World War I and raised money for the war effort.[6]

 
Russell with Frank Sheridan in the play Wildfire (1908)

Russell became a wealthy woman, and during the 1919 Actors' Equity Association strike, she made a major donation of money to sponsor the formation of the Chorus Equity Association by the chorus girls at the Ziegfeld Follies. In March 1922, Russell traveled aboard the RMS Aquitania from Southampton, England, to the Port of New York on the March 11–17 crossing. According to The New York Times, 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."[30]

In 1922, Russell undertook a fact-finding mission to Europe on behalf of President Warren Harding. The mission was to investigate the increase in immigration. She recommended a five-year moratorium on immigration and a minimum of 21 years residency before making application for naturalization.[31] Russell stated: "only the useless in the reconstruction of their countries are seeking to come to the United States ... the immigration of recent years has been from that class of people which arrests rather than aids, the development of any nation".[31] Her findings were instrumental in developing the content of the Immigration Act of 1924,[14] which greatly restricted immigration of southern and eastern Europeans and banned the immigration of Asians.[32]

Russell suffered apparently minor injuries on the return trip, which, however, led to complications, and she died after ten days of illness at her home in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.[5] Thousands of people lined the route of her military funeral,[33] attended by many actors and politicians; President Harding sent a wreath that was set atop her casket. She is interred in her family's private mausoleum in the Allegheny Cemetery in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.[34]

 
Russell and Moore, just before her fact-finding mission to Europe in 1922

Thoroughbred racing edit

Lillian Russell's friend Diamond Jim Brady was a significant owner of thoroughbred racehorses and may have influenced her decision to become involved in the sport. In August 1906, her press agent announced she had acquired eight colts sired by the New Zealand stallion Carbine for her new thoroughbred racing stable. She competed under the nom de course "Mr. Clinton" with racing colors to be navy blue with a white star. [35]

Legacy edit

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. A 1940 film was made about Russell, although it presents a sanitized version of Russell's life. It was directed by Irving Cummings, and stars Alice Faye as Russell, with Henry Fonda, Don Ameche, Edward Arnold and Warren William.[36] Marilyn Monroe posed as Russell for Life.[37]

 
Russell in How to Live 100 Years, a 1913 Kinemacolor short

The Lillian Russell Theatre aboard the City of Clinton Showboat is a summer stock theatre named after Russell in her hometown of Clinton, Iowa.[38] The University of Pittsburgh's student activities building, the William Pitt Union, has a Lillian Russell Room on its fourth floor, in the offices of The Pitt News, in the same location where Russell lived when the building was the Schenley Hotel. The room contains a portrait of Russell.[28][39]

Films edit

  • Lillian Russell (1906 short) as herself[40]
  • La Tosca (1911 short)
  • How to Live 100 Years (1913 Kinemacolor short) as herself
  • Popular Players Off the Stage (1913 short documentary) as herself
  • Potted Pantomimes (1914)[41]
  • Wildfire (1915)[42]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Although some sources state that Russell was born in 1861, her New York Times obituary and IBDB say she was born in 1860, as do most book-length biographies.
  2. ^ a b Gibson, Idah McGlone. "An Intimate Study of Lillian Russell", Chicago Tribune, June 25, 1911, Section 7, p. 2.
  3. ^ "The Theater: Lillian Russell Tonight." Bisbee, Arizona Daily Review, November 11, 1915, p. 8.
  4. ^ "Charles Cityan Star's Cousin", Mason City, Iowa Globe-Gazette, June 20, 1940, p. 22.
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Lillian Russell Dies of Injuries", The New York Times, June 6, 1922, pp. 1–2, accessed April 17, 2009
  6. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Russell, Lillian", River Campus Libraries, University of Rochester, accessed January 4, 2014.
  7. ^ Fields 2008, pp. 12–14.
  8. ^ "Lillian Russell, Famous Actress, Taken by Death", Toledo Blade, June 8, 1922, p. 1
  9. ^ Fields 2008, pp. 15–16.
  10. ^ Fields 2008, pp. 17–18.
  11. ^ Brown, T. Allston. A History of the New York Stage, Vol. 2, New York: Dodd, Mead and Company (1903), pp. 122–23; and Minor, David. Timeline, including several events from Russell's career, Eagles Byte Historical Research website, 2001, accessed November 7, 2013.
  12. ^ Fields 2008, pp. 6, 18–19.
  13. ^ a b Fields 2008, p. 24.
  14. ^ a b c A Woman Like No Other: The Real Lillian Russell, 2006. Twentieth Century Fox Productions.
  15. ^ a b c Tomes, Jason. Edward Solomon, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, October 2007; accessed July 16, 2014.
  16. ^ Stedman, Jane W. (1996) W. S. Gilbert, A Classic Victorian & His Theatre, pp. 200–01, Oxford University Press ISBN 0-19-816174-3
  17. ^ Doroth's married name was Dorothy Calbit
  18. ^ Welch, Deshler. The Theatre, vol. 1, 1886, p. 150, accessed June 27, 2013.
  19. ^ Brown, Thomas Alston. A History of the New York Stage, Vol. 3, New York: Dodd, Mead and Company (1903), p. 176, accessed June 27, 2013.
  20. ^ Stone, David. "Edward Solomon", Who Was Who in the D'Oyly Carte Opera Company, February 17, 2002, accessed January 17, 2016
  21. ^ The New York Times review of 1887 New York production
  22. ^ a b Kenrick, John. "Who's Who in Musicals: Ro – Ru", Musicals101.com (2005), accessed January 4, 2014.
  23. ^ Fields 2008, p. 221.
  24. ^ "Musical Theater", Spotlight: Biography, Smithsonian Institution, accessed January 4, 2014
  25. ^ Woodhead, Lindy. War Paint: Madame Helena Rubinstein and Miss Elizabeth Arden, Their Lives, Their Times, Their Rivalry, Wiley, 2004, pp. 65–66 ISBN 0471487783
  26. ^ Burke, John (1972). Duet in diamonds; the flamboyant saga of Lillian Russell and Diamond Jim Brady in America's gilded age. New York City: Manor Books. pp. 108–110, 126–127.
  27. ^ a b Kenrick, John (2002). History of the Musical Stage – 1890s: Part II, Musicals101.com; accessed September 22, 2008.
  28. ^ a b Toker, Franklin (1986). Pittsburgh: an urban portrait. University Park, Pennsylvania: Pennsylvania State University Press. p. 91. ISBN 978-0-271-00415-0.
  29. ^ "Lillian Russell", The Bemidji Daily Pioneer, Bemidji, Minnesota, November 11, 1913, p. 1
  30. ^ The New York Times, March 17, 1922.
  31. ^ a b "Lillian Russell Would Bar Aliens", The New York Times, March 22, 1922, p. 4
  32. ^ "The Immigration Act of 1924 (The Johnson-Reed Act)" November 1, 2013, at the Wayback Machine, U.S Department of State Office of the Historian, accessed March 29, 2016
  33. ^ "Lillian Russell Laid at Rest with Military Honors", The Evening World, June 8, 1922, p. 2
  34. ^ "Lillian Russell Buried Today", The Clinton Advertiser, June 8, 1922.
  35. ^ "Lillian Russell to Maintain a Stable". Daily Racing Form at University of Kentucky Archives. August 14, 1906. Retrieved November 21, 2018.
  36. ^ . Movies & TV Dept. The New York Times. 2012. Archived from the original on October 17, 2012. Retrieved December 13, 2008.
  37. ^ Avedon, Richard. "Marilyn Monroe in a Remarkable Re-Creation of Fabled Enchantresses" Life magazine, vol. 45, no. 25, December 22, 1958, pp. 138–147, accessed August 4, 2017
  38. ^ Lillian Russell Theatre, clintonshowboat.org, accessed January 17, 2016.
  39. ^ Huang, Sherri (November 18, 2009). "SGB showdown: Romeo vs. Shull". The Pitt News. Retrieved November 25, 2009.
  40. ^ "Lillian Russell Filmography". AFI Catalog. American Film Institute. 2017. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  41. ^ . British Film Institute. Archived from the original on August 21, 2023. Retrieved September 21, 2018.
  42. ^ Lewis, Kevin (1987). "A World across from Broadway II: Filmography of the World Film Corporation, 1913–1922". Film History. Indiana University Press. 1 (2): 167. JSTOR 3815087.

References edit

  • Fields, Armond (2008). Lillian Russell: A Biography of "America's Beauty". Jefferson: Mcfarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-3868-6.
  • Article on Russell's involvement in the women's suffrage movement

Further reading edit

  • Brough, James H. Miss Lillian Russell: A Novel Memoir (NY: McGraw-Hill Companies, 1978) ISBN 0-07-008120-4
  • Morell, Parker. Lillian Russell: The Era of Plush (NY: Random House, 1940).
  • O'Connor, Richard. Duet in Diamonds: The Flamboyant Saga of Lillian Russell and Diamond Jim Brady in America's Gilded Age (NY: Putnam, 1972).
  • Schwartz, Donald, & Bowbeer, Anne. Lillian Russell: A Bio-Bibliography (Greenwood Publishing, 1997) ISBN 978-0-313-27764-1

External links edit

Photos of Russell

  • Image galleries
  • Photo of Russell and her husband Alexander Moore on board the RMS Aquitania, 1922
  • "Famous Tightlacers" Photos of Russell
  • Photo Gallery of Lillian Russell, New York Public Library

lillian, russell, biographical, film, film, american, screenwriter, lillian, case, russell, born, helen, louise, leonard, december, 1860, 1861, june, 1922, american, actress, singer, became, most, famous, actresses, singers, late, 19th, early, 20th, centuries,. For the biographical film see Lillian Russell film For the American screenwriter see Lillian Case Russell Lillian Russell born Helen Louise Leonard December 4 1860 or 1861 1 June 6 1922 was an American actress and singer She became one of the most famous actresses and singers of the late 19th and early 20th centuries praised for her beauty and style as well as for her voice and stage presence 2 a reviewer referred to her as the most beautiful actress of the legitimate stage 3 Lillian RussellRussell in 1898BornHelen Louise LeonardDecember 4 1860 or 1861 Clinton Iowa U S DiedJune 6 1922 aged 60 61 Pittsburgh Pennsylvania U S Occupation s Actress singerYears active1879 1919SpousesHarry Braham m 1879 div 1881 wbr Edward Solomon m 1885 div 1893 wbr John Haley Agustin m 1894 div 1898 wbr Alexander Pollock Moore m 1912 wbr RelativesCynthia Leonard mother Russell was born in Clinton Iowa but raised in Chicago Her parents separated when she was 18 and she moved to New York with her mother She began to perform professionally by 1879 singing for Tony Pastor and playing roles in comic opera including Gilbert and Sullivan works Composer Edward Solomon created roles in several of his comic operas for her in London In 1884 they returned to New York and married in 1885 but in 1886 Solomon was arrested for bigamy For many years she was the foremost singer of operettas and musical theatre in the United States performing continuously through the end of the 19th century In 1899 she joined the Weber and Fields Broadway Music Hall where she starred for five years After 1904 she began to have vocal difficulties and switched to dramatic roles She later returned to musical roles in vaudeville and retired from performing around 1919 Russell was married four times but her longest relationship was with Diamond Jim Brady who supported her extravagant lifestyle for four decades In later years she wrote a newspaper column advocated women s suffrage was a popular lecturer and contributed to the passage of the restrictive Immigration Act of 1924 Contents 1 Life and career 1 1 Early career 1 2 Bigamous marriage and peak years 1 3 Later years 2 Thoroughbred racing 3 Legacy 4 Films 5 Notes 6 References 7 Further reading 8 External linksLife and career editRussell was born Helen Louise Leonard in Clinton Iowa 4 the fourth of five daughters of newspaper publisher Charles E Leonard and author and feminist Cynthia Leonard the first woman to run for mayor of New York City Her family moved to Chicago in 1865 where she studied at the Convent of the Sacred Heart from age 7 to 15 and then at the Park Institute Her father became a partner in the printing firm of Knight amp Leonard and her mother became active in the women s rights movement Russell called Nellie as a child excelled at school theatricals In her teens she studied music privately and sang in choirs In December 1877 she performed in an amateur production of Time Tries All at Chickering Hall in Chicago 5 6 Early career edit nbsp in Patience 1882When Russell was 18 her parents separated and she her mother and her younger sister moved to New York City where her mother did suffrage work for Susan B Anthony Russell studied singing under Leopold Damrosch and considered pursuing an operatic career her very religious mother disapproved of her working in theatre which she considered disreputable 5 Russell began dating Walter Sinn whose father owned the Brooklyn Park Theatre Walter s mother helped Russell get a chorus job as Nellie Leonard with Edward E Rice who was touring his musical Evangeline to Boston beginning in September 1879 7 together with Gilbert and Sullivan s comic opera H M S Pinafore 8 Russell soon began seeing the orchestra leader Harry Braham and became pregnant They married in November when the show moved to New York theatres 9 She gave birth to their son Harry in June 1880 In September Braham got a prestigious job conducting at Tony Pastor s Theatre on Broadway 10 Pastor known as the father of vaudeville was responsible for introducing many well known performers 11 In November 1880 Pastor engaged Russell for his variety shows At his suggestion she chose a stage name Lillian Russell and Pastor introduced her as an English ballad singer 12 She was immediately popular with audiences and soon was acting in skits as well as singing 13 In early 1881 the baby died after his nanny accidentally penetrated his stomach with a diaper pin 14 Braham came home to find the dying baby The tragedy exacerbated Russell s difficult relationship with her mother and led to her divorce from Braham 13 In the summer of 1881 Russell toured with Pastor s company 6 That fall she played the leading soprano role of Mabel in a burlesque of The Pirates of Penzance at Pastor s theatre She next played at the Bijou Opera House on Broadway as Djenna in The Great Mogul and with the McCaull Comic Opera Company played Bathilda there in Olivette 5 She also played the title role in Gilbert and Sullivan s Patience and Aline in The Sorcerer in 1882 at the Bijou Bigamous marriage and peak years edit Russell met composer Edward Solomon later in 1882 at Pastor s New York Casino Theatre where he was the season s musical director and she became the star Unaware of his first marriage she became his mistress and they sailed together to London There she starred in several works he wrote specifically for her including Virginia in Paul and Virginia Phoebe in Billee Taylor and the title roles in Polly or the Pet of the Regiment and Pocahontas 15 While in London she was engaged to create the title role in Gilbert and Sullivan s Princess Ida 1884 but she clashed with W S Gilbert and was dismissed during rehearsals 16 Solomon s comic operas were not highly successful in Britain so Russell and Solomon returned to America They had a daughter together Dorothy Lillian Russell 17 in 1884 and married in New Jersey in 1885 15 Russell was very well received in Solomon s works on tour in the U S for Pastor Another Solomon success for Russell and Pastor was Pepita or the Girl with the Glass Eyes 18 19 Russell also played in New York theatres or on tour in Gilbert and Sullivan and in operettas 5 Her relationship with Solomon soured mostly due to his poor finances and their last show The Maid and the Moonshiner 1886 was a flop When creditors sued Solomon he fled the country 15 In 1886 Solomon was arrested for bigamy because his previous marriage had not been dissolved Russell obtained a divorce from Solomon in 1893 20 nbsp Russell in Girofle Girofla 1890sRussell continued to star in comic opera and other musical theatre She toured with the J C Duff Opera Company between other engagements for two years beginning in 1886 6 In 1887 she starred as Carlotta in Gasparone by Karl Millocker in New York City at the Standard Theatre together with Eugene Oudin and J H Ryley 21 Later the same year she was back at the Casino Theatre in the title role of Dorothy and over the next several years she continued to star in operettas and musical theatre on Broadway Her parts at this time included the title role in The Grand Duchess of Gerolstein Fiorella in The Brigands in a translation by W S Gilbert Teresa in The Mountebanks Marion in La Cigale and Rosa in Princess Nicotine 5 22 In 1891 she opened at the Garden Theatre as the star of the Lillian Russell Opera Company 6 Girofle Girofla was a favorite of Russell who played the dual lead role in Chicago New York and on tour in the 1890s 23 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 2 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 24 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 the saber song from La Grande Duchesse de Gerolstein to audiences in Boston and Washington D C She rode a bicycle custom made for her by Tiffany amp Co It was a gold plated machine that displayed the jeweler s art at its most opulent and unconventional the handlebars inlaid with mother of pearl and the wheel spokes featuring her initials set in diamonds She had a cream serge leg of mutton sleeve cycling suit with the skirt shortened by three inches which caused a sensation and set a trend 25 She married tenor John Haley Augustin Chatterton known professionally as Signor Giovanni Perugini in 1894 but they soon separated and in 1898 they divorced 6 In the spring of 1894 she returned to London to play Betta in The Queen of Brilliants by Edward Jakobowski and then played the same role in the New York production at Abbey s Theatre She remained at Abbey s playing several roles but when that theatre shut down in 1896 she played in other Broadway houses in more operettas by Offenbach such as The Princess of Trebizonde and many others Victor Herbert and others such as Erminie at the Casino Theatre in 1899 5 For 40 years Russell was also the companion of businessman Diamond Jim Brady who showered her with expensive gifts of diamonds and gemstones and supported her extravagant lifestyle 14 22 Russell was said to be able nearly to match Brady s excessive eating habits and would do so in public While she was proud of her ability it led to long term struggles with her weight which at her heaviest approached 200 pounds 26 Later years edit nbsp Come Down Ma Evenin Star source source Lillian Russell s only known recording from 1912 Problems playing this file See media help In 1899 Russell joined the Weber and Fields Music Hall where she starred in their burlesques and other entertainments until 1904 Her first production there was Fiddle dee dee in 1899 which also featured DeWolf Hopper Fay Templeton and David Warfield Other favorites were Whoop de doo and The Big Little Princess Before the 1902 production of Twirly Whirly John Stromberg who had composed several hit songs for her delayed giving Russell her solo for several days saying that it was not ready When he committed suicide a few days before the first rehearsal sheet music for Come Down Ma Evenin Star was discovered in his coat pocket It became Russell s signature song and is the only one she is known to have recorded 27 although the recording was made after Russell s voice had deteriorated significantly 6 nbsp Russell in Lady Teazle 1904 Leaving Weber and Fields she next played the title role of Lady Teazle in 1904 at the Casino Theatre and then began to play in vaudeville After 1904 Russell began to have vocal difficulties but she did not retire from the stage Instead she switched to non musical comedies touring from 1906 to 1908 under the management of James Brooks 6 In 1906 she played the title role in Barbara s Millions and in 1908 she was Henrietta Barrington in Wildfire The next year she was Laura Curtis in The Widow s Might In 1911 she toured in In Search of a Sinner Russell then returned to singing appearing in burlesque variety and other entertainments 5 In 1912 she married her fourth husband Alexander Pollock Moore owner of the Pittsburgh Leader and mostly retired from the stage The wedding was held in Pittsburgh at the grand Schenley Hotel which today is a national historic landmark and the University of Pittsburgh s student union building Russell lived for a time in suite 437 of the hotel now located in the offices of the student newspaper The Pitt News 28 The same year she made her last appearance on Broadway in Weber amp Fields Hokey Pokey In 1915 Russell appeared with Lionel Barrymore in the motion picture Wildfire which was based on the 1908 play in which she had appeared This was one of her few motion picture appearances She appeared in vaudeville until 1919 when ill health forced her to leave the stage entirely after a four decade long career 27 Beginning around 1912 Russell wrote a newspaper column became active in the women s suffrage movement as her mother had been and was a popular lecturer on personal relationships health and beauty advocating an optimistic philosophy of self help and drawing large crowds 5 6 In 1913 she declared that she would refuse to pay her income taxes to protest the denial of the ballot to women 29 Nonetheless she recruited for the U S Marine Corps during World War I and raised money for the war effort 6 nbsp Russell with Frank Sheridan in the play Wildfire 1908 Russell became a wealthy woman and during the 1919 Actors Equity Association strike she made a major donation of money to sponsor the formation of the Chorus Equity Association by the chorus girls at the Ziegfeld Follies In March 1922 Russell traveled aboard the RMS Aquitania from Southampton England to the Port of New York on the March 11 17 crossing According to The New York Times 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 30 In 1922 Russell undertook a fact finding mission to Europe on behalf of President Warren Harding The mission was to investigate the increase in immigration She recommended a five year moratorium on immigration and a minimum of 21 years residency before making application for naturalization 31 Russell stated only the useless in the reconstruction of their countries are seeking to come to the United States the immigration of recent years has been from that class of people which arrests rather than aids the development of any nation 31 Her findings were instrumental in developing the content of the Immigration Act of 1924 14 which greatly restricted immigration of southern and eastern Europeans and banned the immigration of Asians 32 Russell suffered apparently minor injuries on the return trip which however led to complications and she died after ten days of illness at her home in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 5 Thousands of people lined the route of her military funeral 33 attended by many actors and politicians President Harding sent a wreath that was set atop her casket She is interred in her family s private mausoleum in the Allegheny Cemetery in Pittsburgh Pennsylvania 34 nbsp Russell and Moore just before her fact finding mission to Europe in 1922Thoroughbred racing editLillian Russell s friend Diamond Jim Brady was a significant owner of thoroughbred racehorses and may have influenced her decision to become involved in the sport In August 1906 her press agent announced she had acquired eight colts sired by the New Zealand stallion Carbine for her new thoroughbred racing stable She competed under the nom de course Mr Clinton with racing colors to be navy blue with a white star 35 Legacy editA full length portrait of Russell was painted in 1902 by the Swiss born American artist Adolfo Muller Ury 1862 1947 who also painted another oval half length but both portraits are missing A 1940 film was made about Russell although it presents a sanitized version of Russell s life It was directed by Irving Cummings and stars Alice Faye as Russell with Henry Fonda Don Ameche Edward Arnold and Warren William 36 Marilyn Monroe posed as Russell for Life 37 nbsp Russell in How to Live 100 Years a 1913 Kinemacolor shortThe Lillian Russell Theatre aboard the City of Clinton Showboat is a summer stock theatre named after Russell in her hometown of Clinton Iowa 38 The University of Pittsburgh s student activities building the William Pitt Union has a Lillian Russell Room on its fourth floor in the offices of The Pitt News in the same location where Russell lived when the building was the Schenley Hotel The room contains a portrait of Russell 28 39 Films editLillian Russell 1906 short as herself 40 La Tosca 1911 short How to Live 100 Years 1913 Kinemacolor short as herself Popular Players Off the Stage 1913 short documentary as herself Potted Pantomimes 1914 41 Wildfire 1915 42 Notes edit Although some sources state that Russell was born in 1861 her New York Times obituary and IBDB say she was born in 1860 as do most book length biographies a b Gibson Idah McGlone An Intimate Study of Lillian Russell Chicago Tribune June 25 1911 Section 7 p 2 The Theater Lillian Russell Tonight Bisbee Arizona Daily Review November 11 1915 p 8 Charles Cityan Star s Cousin Mason City Iowa Globe Gazette June 20 1940 p 22 a b c d e f g h i Lillian Russell Dies of Injuries The New York Times June 6 1922 pp 1 2 accessed April 17 2009 a b c d e f g h i Russell Lillian River Campus Libraries University of Rochester accessed January 4 2014 Fields 2008 pp 12 14 Lillian Russell Famous Actress Taken by Death Toledo Blade June 8 1922 p 1 Fields 2008 pp 15 16 Fields 2008 pp 17 18 Brown T Allston A History of the New York Stage Vol 2 New York Dodd Mead and Company 1903 pp 122 23 and Minor David Timeline including several events from Russell s career Eagles Byte Historical Research website 2001 accessed November 7 2013 Fields 2008 pp 6 18 19 a b Fields 2008 p 24 a b c A Woman Like No Other The Real Lillian Russell 2006 Twentieth Century Fox Productions a b c Tomes Jason Edward Solomon Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford University Press October 2007 accessed July 16 2014 Stedman Jane W 1996 W S Gilbert A Classic Victorian amp His Theatre pp 200 01 Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 816174 3 Doroth s married name was Dorothy Calbit Welch Deshler The Theatre vol 1 1886 p 150 accessed June 27 2013 Brown Thomas Alston A History of the New York Stage Vol 3 New York Dodd Mead and Company 1903 p 176 accessed June 27 2013 Stone David Edward Solomon Who Was Who in the D Oyly Carte Opera Company February 17 2002 accessed January 17 2016 The New York Times review of 1887 New York production a b Kenrick John Who s Who in Musicals Ro Ru Musicals101 com 2005 accessed January 4 2014 Fields 2008 p 221 Musical Theater Spotlight Biography Smithsonian Institution accessed January 4 2014 Woodhead Lindy War Paint Madame Helena Rubinstein and Miss Elizabeth Arden Their Lives Their Times Their Rivalry Wiley 2004 pp 65 66 ISBN 0471487783 Burke John 1972 Duet in diamonds the flamboyant saga of Lillian Russell and Diamond Jim Brady in America s gilded age New York City Manor Books pp 108 110 126 127 a b Kenrick John 2002 History of the Musical Stage 1890s Part II Musicals101 com accessed September 22 2008 a b Toker Franklin 1986 Pittsburgh an urban portrait University Park Pennsylvania Pennsylvania State University Press p 91 ISBN 978 0 271 00415 0 Lillian Russell The Bemidji Daily Pioneer Bemidji Minnesota November 11 1913 p 1 The New York Times March 17 1922 a b Lillian Russell Would Bar Aliens The New York Times March 22 1922 p 4 The Immigration Act of 1924 The Johnson Reed Act Archived November 1 2013 at the Wayback Machine U S Department of State Office of the Historian accessed March 29 2016 Lillian Russell Laid at Rest with Military Honors The Evening World June 8 1922 p 2 Lillian Russell Buried Today The Clinton Advertiser June 8 1922 Lillian Russell to Maintain a Stable Daily Racing Form at University of Kentucky Archives August 14 1906 Retrieved November 21 2018 Profile Lillian Russell Movies amp TV Dept The New York Times 2012 Archived from the original on October 17 2012 Retrieved December 13 2008 Avedon Richard Marilyn Monroe in a Remarkable Re Creation of Fabled Enchantresses Life magazine vol 45 no 25 December 22 1958 pp 138 147 accessed August 4 2017 Lillian Russell Theatre clintonshowboat org accessed January 17 2016 Huang Sherri November 18 2009 SGB showdown Romeo vs Shull The Pitt News Retrieved November 25 2009 Lillian Russell Filmography AFI Catalog American Film Institute 2017 Retrieved September 21 2018 Potted Pantomimes 1914 British Film Institute Archived from the original on August 21 2023 Retrieved September 21 2018 Lewis Kevin 1987 A World across from Broadway II Filmography of the World Film Corporation 1913 1922 Film History Indiana University Press 1 2 167 JSTOR 3815087 References editFields Armond 2008 Lillian Russell A Biography of America s Beauty Jefferson Mcfarland ISBN 978 0 7864 3868 6 Article on Russell s involvement in the women s suffrage movementFurther reading editBrough James H Miss Lillian Russell A Novel Memoir NY McGraw Hill Companies 1978 ISBN 0 07 008120 4 Morell Parker Lillian Russell The Era of Plush NY Random House 1940 O Connor Richard Duet in Diamonds The Flamboyant Saga of Lillian Russell and Diamond Jim Brady in America s Gilded Age NY Putnam 1972 Schwartz Donald amp Bowbeer Anne Lillian Russell A Bio Bibliography Greenwood Publishing 1997 ISBN 978 0 313 27764 1External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lillian Russell Lillian Russell at the Internet Broadway Database nbsp Lillian Russell at IMDb Interview of Russell from 1907 Interview with Russell from 1914 Lillian Russell Flaunts Good Taste 1901 Lillian Russell s Beauty Secret The New York Times June 22 1902 magazine supplement p SM16 Robert J Gibson collection of Lillian Russell materials 1894 1984 held by the Billy Rose Theatre Division New York Public Library for the Performing ArtsPhotos of Russell Image galleries Photo of Russell and her husband Alexander Moore on board the RMS Aquitania 1922 Photographs of Russell Famous Tightlacers Photos of Russell Photo Gallery of Lillian Russell New York Public LibraryPortal nbsp Biography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lillian Russell amp oldid 1184387905, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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