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Marguerite Sylva

Marguerite Sylva (also known as Marguerita Sylva) (10 July 1875 – 21 February 1957) was a Belgian born mezzo-soprano who achieved fame in opera, operetta, and musical theatre. She was particularly known for her performances in the title role of Bizet's Carmen, which she sang over 300 times in the course of her career. Sylva was a pioneering recording artist for Edison Records and made many recordings for the company from 1910 to 1912.[1]

Marguerite Sylva
Marguerite Sylva as Carmen, her signature role. (Paris circa 1906)
Born
Marguerite Alice Hélène Smith

(1875-07-10)10 July 1875
Brussels, Belgium
Died21 February 1957(1957-02-21) (aged 81)
Glendale, California, U.S.
Occupation(s)Mezzo-soprano, actress
Years active1920-1945
Spouse(s)William Mann (?-1912) divorced
Bernard L. Smith (1915-1929) divorced (2 children)

Biography edit

Marguerite Sylva was born Marguerite Alice Hélène Smith in Brussel, to Mathilde (Schearer) Smith and Dr. Christian Charles Louis Smith, a Belgian of English parentage who was a consulting physician to the royal court of Belgium. Both she and her sister Edith were trained in music at the Belgian Royal Conservatory. Marguerite primarily studied the piano but also took private singing lessons. Edith went on to become a concert violinist of some renown, performing as Nadia Sylva.[2]

 
Marguerite Sylva on a poster for the 1900 production of the Kirke La Shelle and Julian Edwards comic opera, The Princess Chic

According to Marguerite Sylva's entry in the 1935 edition of American Women, it was W. S. Gilbert who gave the sisters their stage names.[3] In early 1896 they were in London, where Edith was to play her violin for Gilbert, with Marguerite providing the piano accompaniment. Sylva recalled that after Edith finished playing, Gilbert asked her, "Don't you do anything?". She told him she "sang a little" and proceeded to sing the Habanera from Carmen to him. He offered her a part in his upcoming production of The Grand Duke, but she turned it down saying that she wanted to "try grand opera first".[4] After an audition with Augustus Harris, she was engaged to sing for the Drury Lane Theatre, and made her debut there in Carmen. However, with Harris' death in June 1896, her opera aspirations ended. Instead she went to the United States with Herbert Beerbohm Tree's theatre company for a production of Gilbert Parker's The Seats of the Mighty at the Knickerbocker Theatre.[citation needed] Amongst the actors in the company was Gerald Du Maurier to whom she became engaged.[5] The young couple had planned to pursue musical theatre careers together in the United States, but in the end, the engagement was broken off.[6] According to Beerbohm Tree, Sylva's mother had been opposed to the marriage.[7]

Du Maurier returned to the London stage. Sylva remained in the United States where she carved out an increasingly successful career in musical comedy, operetta and vaudeville. She appeared in the world premiere of The Fortune Teller by Victor Herbert and toured several U.S. cities playing the leading roles in The Princess Chic, Miss Bob White, and The Strollers. She eventually formed the Marguerite Sylva Opera Company to produce comic operas and operettas under the management of Samuel F. Nixon and J. Fred Zimmerman.[8] In 1902 she married the theatrical manager William David Mann. The couple left for France in 1904 where Sylva again became fascinated by opera. She found a teacher, Madame Delattre, and was soon engaged by the Opéra-Comique. She made her debut there on 14 September 1906 in the title role of Carmen to very good reviews.[9] For the next three years Sylva sang with great success throughout France and Germany where she was a particular favourite. In 1909, Oscar Hammerstein invited her to return to America to sing for his opera company. On 1 September 1909, Marguerite Sylva made her American operatic debut as Carmen at the Manhattan Opera House.[10]

In the ensuing years Sylva sang with Hammerstein's company (until a contractual dispute ended their professional relationship), the Boston Opera Company[11] and with the San Carlo Opera Company in the United States. She also sang in Europe, including an acclaimed 1912 performance in Carmen at the Berlin Royal Opera with Enrico Caruso as Don José.[12] She continued to appear on Broadway as well, with performances in the premieres of Gypsy Love and The Skylark. For a time, Sylva enjoyed a celebrity status normally accorded to movie stars, and even had her own line of cosmetics. In 2008, Mark Swed wrote in Los Angeles Times:

 
Marguerite Sylva with her daughters

"Carmen" is not new to the Hollywood Bowl. On July 8, 1922, three days before the first season of "Symphonies Under the Stars," the Los Angeles Philharmonic, itself only 3 years old, mounted a lavish production of Bizet's opera. The cast numbered nearly 500. Massive sets of Seville surrounded the brand-new amphitheater. When soprano Marguerita Sylva, who starred, rolled into Union Station five days earlier, reporters were there to greet her as if she were a movie star. Proceeds from the performance financed the installation of the Bowl's first benches.[13]

Sylva and her husband, William Mann, had become estranged during her years in France and were divorced in 1912.[14] On 1 December 1915, Sylva married Lieut. Bernard L. Smith, who at the time was the assistant naval attaché at the American Embassy in Paris. The couple later had two daughters, Daphnee and Marita, both of whom went on to have minor careers as actresses. The marriage ended in divorce on grounds of desertion in 1929.[15] In her later years, Sylva lived in North Hollywood, where she played a series of small character roles in films and taught singing. A year before her death, she was the subject of the popular NBC television show This Is Your Life.[16] Amongst those paying tribute to Sylva was the mezzo-soprano Mariska Aldrich who had sung with her in Hammerstein's opera company and whose career path had been somewhat similar to Sylva's.[17] On 20 February 1957, Marguerite Sylva was driving her car when it went off the road and plowed into a house. She was severely injured in the accident and died the following day at the age of 81 in Behrens Memorial Hospital in Glendale, California.

Opera roles edit

Although Marguerite Sylva's basic voice type was mezzo-soprano, she often took on soprano roles as well. Her roles in operetta and comic opera are included in this list.[18]

On Broadway edit

Marguerite Sylva's American stage debut was in the play The Seats of the Mighty (1896). However, her early appearances on Broadway were mainly in musical comedies, comic operas and operettas. Sylva toured widely in the United States in this repertoire. This list is restricted to her known Broadway performances only:

  • Mlle. Pompom in the premiere of The Fortune Teller an operetta by Victor Herbert (26 September - 29 October 1898)
  • Lady Janet Belford in the premiere Mam'selle 'Awkins, a musical comedy by Herman Perlêt and Alfred E. Aarons (26 February - 31 March 1900.
  • Erminie in the revival of Erminie, a comic opera by Edward Jakobowski (19 October - 28 November 1903)
  • Zorika in the premiere of Gypsy Love, an English version of Zigeunerliebe, an operetta by Franz Lehár (17 October - 11 November 1911)
  • Elsie in the premiere of The Skylark, a comedy by Thomas P. Robinson (25 July - August 1921)
  • Sonya Orlova Varilovna in the premiere of Cousin Sonia, a comedy by Louis Verneuil (7 December 1925 - January 1926)
  • Mooda in the premiere of Golden Dawn a musical by Emmerich Kalman (30 November 1927 – 5 May 1928)
  • Mahuna in the premiere of Luana a musical comedy by Rudolf Friml (17 September - 4 October 1930
  • Giulia Sabittini in the revival of The Great Lover, a comedy by Frederic and Fanny Hatton and Leo Ditrichstein (11 October - October 1932)
  • Countess von Hohenbrunn in the premiere of Three Waltzes, a musical by Clare Kummer and Rowland Leigh from the play by Paul Knepler [de] using music by Johann Strauss I, Johann Strauss II, and Oscar Straus (25 December 1937 – 9 April 1938)

In film edit

Sylva's early venture into cinema was probably the title role in a 1913 silent film of Carmen shot in Nîmes, France with M. Habay (an actor with the Théâtre Sarah Bernhardt) as Don José.[19] Her first major role in a Hollywood film came in 1920 when she played Hilda Wilson in The Honey Bee directed by Rupert Julian.[20] Her other film roles included:

Title Year Role Director Notes
The Honey Bee 1920 Hilda Wilson Rupert Julian
They Dare Not Love 1941 Countess Marlik James Whale uncredited
The Leopard Man 1943 Marta Jacques Tourneur uncredited
The Seventh Victim 1943 Mrs. Bella Romari Mark Robson
To Have and Have Not 1944 Cashier Howard Hawks uncredited
The Conspirators 1944 Older Woman Jean Negulesco uncredited
The Gay Senorita 1945 Doña Maria Sandoval Arthur Dreifuss[21]
Her Highness and the Bellboy 1945 Diplomat's Wife Richard Thorpe uncredited

Recordings edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Shaman, William et al. (1999), p. 285
  2. ^ The Era, London, 13 February 1897.
  3. ^ Howes, Durward (1935) p. 543
  4. ^ The New York Times, 23 August 1909
  5. ^ Los Angeles Times, 26 Nov 1896
  6. ^ Du Maurier (1935) pp. 67-71
  7. ^ Pearson, Hesketh (1956) p. 97
  8. ^ New York Times, 10 August 1902, p. 10
  9. ^ Stoullig, Edmond (1907) pp. 212-213
  10. ^ New York Times, 2 September 1909, p. 9
  11. ^ "Alice Nielsen And The Gayety Of Nations" (2009)
  12. ^ New York Times, 8 October 1912, p. 4
  13. ^ Swed, Mark, Los Angeles Times, July 15, 2008
  14. ^ New York Times, 4 February 1912, p. 15
  15. ^ New York Times, 2 May 1929, p. 4
  16. ^ The episode aired on 14 March 1956. (This Is Your Life Episode List on classictvinfo.com)
  17. ^ Holdridge, Lawrence F. (2000)
  18. ^ This list was primarily compiled from reviews and articles in the New York Times and Hamilton, Frank (2007)
  19. ^ Lecointe, Thierry (2004)
  20. ^ , New York Times Movie Guide.
  21. ^ For more about this film, see Gevinson (1997) p. 374

References edit

  • Du Maurier, Daphne (1935), Gerald: A Portrait, Doubleday, Doran & Company.
  • Gevinson, Alan (1997) Within Our Gates: Ethnicity in American Feature Films, 1911-1960, University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-20964-8
  • Hamilton, Frank (2007)
  • Holdridge, Lawrence F. (2000) , The Edison Trials: Voice Audition Cylinders of 1912-1913, Marston Records.
  • Howes, Durward (1935) American women: The Official Who's who Among the Women of the Nation, Richard Blank Publishing Company.
  • Lecointe, Thierry (2004) "Les premières années du spectacle cinématographique à Nîmes – 1895-1913", 1895: Revue de l’Association française de recherche sur l’histoire du cinéma, n°43.
  • Los Angeles Times, "Engaged: Du Maurier's Son to Marry Miss Marguerite Sylva", 26 Nov 1896
  • Los Angeles Times, "Teachers Will Fete Former Opera Star", 31 May 1956
  • New York Times, "Bustle and Stir of the Theatrical World", 10 August 1902, p. 10
  • New York Times, "Marguerite Sylva A New Carmen Here", 23 August 1909, p. 7.
  • New York Times, "Carmen at the Manhattan: Mme. Marguerite Sylva Wins Success as the Heroine", 2 September 1909, p. 9.
  • New York Times, "Marguerite Sylva Divorced", 4 February 1912, p. 15
  • New York Times, "Shares Caruso's Honors: Marguerite Sylva Obtains Triumph in Title Role of "Carmen" in Berlin", 8 October 1912, p. 4
  • New York Times, "Opera Star Asks Divorce: Marguerita Sylva Files Suit Against B.L. Smith in Miami", 2 May 1929, p. 4
  • Pearson, Hesketh (1956), Beerbohm Tree: His Life and Laughter, Methuen.
  • Shaman, William et al. (1999) More EJS: Discography of the Edward J. Smith Recordings ("Unique Opera Records Corporation" (1972–1977), "A.N.N.A. Record Company" (1978–1982), "special-label" Issues (circa 1954-1981), and Addendum to "The Golden Age of Opera" Series), Greenwood Publishing Group, p. 285 and passim. ISBN 0-313-29835-1
  • Stoullig, Edmond (1907) Les Annales du théâtre et de la musique, Paris: P. Ollendorff, pp. 212–213
  • Swed, Mark, "'Carmen' at the Hollywood Bowl", Los Angeles Times, 15 July 2008
  • Van Nuys News, Obituary: Edith Sarah Jane Sinkins, 4 February 1952.

External links edit

  • Internet Broadway Database, Marguerita Sylva
  • IMDb, Marguerita Sylva
  • Marguerite Sylva portrait Univ of Louisville Macauley's Theatre collection
  • Marguerite Sylva selected recordings at InternetArchive.com(downloadable acoustic format)
  • Marguerite Sylva, recordings with Carl Hayden, Arthur Albro
  • The Theatre, November 1911, cover, Marguerite Sylva(archived)

marguerite, sylva, also, known, marguerita, sylva, july, 1875, february, 1957, belgian, born, mezzo, soprano, achieved, fame, opera, operetta, musical, theatre, particularly, known, performances, title, role, bizet, carmen, which, sang, over, times, course, ca. Marguerite Sylva also known as Marguerita Sylva 10 July 1875 21 February 1957 was a Belgian born mezzo soprano who achieved fame in opera operetta and musical theatre She was particularly known for her performances in the title role of Bizet s Carmen which she sang over 300 times in the course of her career Sylva was a pioneering recording artist for Edison Records and made many recordings for the company from 1910 to 1912 1 Marguerite SylvaMarguerite Sylva as Carmen her signature role Paris circa 1906 BornMarguerite Alice Helene Smith 1875 07 10 10 July 1875Brussels BelgiumDied21 February 1957 1957 02 21 aged 81 Glendale California U S Occupation s Mezzo soprano actressYears active1920 1945Spouse s William Mann 1912 divorcedBernard L Smith 1915 1929 divorced 2 children Contents 1 Biography 2 Opera roles 3 On Broadway 4 In film 5 Recordings 6 Notes 7 References 8 External linksBiography editMarguerite Sylva was born Marguerite Alice Helene Smith in Brussel to Mathilde Schearer Smith and Dr Christian Charles Louis Smith a Belgian of English parentage who was a consulting physician to the royal court of Belgium Both she and her sister Edith were trained in music at the Belgian Royal Conservatory Marguerite primarily studied the piano but also took private singing lessons Edith went on to become a concert violinist of some renown performing as Nadia Sylva 2 nbsp Marguerite Sylva on a poster for the 1900 production of the Kirke La Shelle and Julian Edwards comic opera The Princess Chic According to Marguerite Sylva s entry in the 1935 edition of American Women it was W S Gilbert who gave the sisters their stage names 3 In early 1896 they were in London where Edith was to play her violin for Gilbert with Marguerite providing the piano accompaniment Sylva recalled that after Edith finished playing Gilbert asked her Don t you do anything She told him she sang a little and proceeded to sing the Habanera from Carmen to him He offered her a part in his upcoming production of The Grand Duke but she turned it down saying that she wanted to try grand opera first 4 After an audition with Augustus Harris she was engaged to sing for the Drury Lane Theatre and made her debut there in Carmen However with Harris death in June 1896 her opera aspirations ended Instead she went to the United States with Herbert Beerbohm Tree s theatre company for a production of Gilbert Parker s The Seats of the Mighty at the Knickerbocker Theatre citation needed Amongst the actors in the company was Gerald Du Maurier to whom she became engaged 5 The young couple had planned to pursue musical theatre careers together in the United States but in the end the engagement was broken off 6 According to Beerbohm Tree Sylva s mother had been opposed to the marriage 7 Du Maurier returned to the London stage Sylva remained in the United States where she carved out an increasingly successful career in musical comedy operetta and vaudeville She appeared in the world premiere of The Fortune Teller by Victor Herbert and toured several U S cities playing the leading roles in The Princess Chic Miss Bob White and The Strollers She eventually formed the Marguerite Sylva Opera Company to produce comic operas and operettas under the management of Samuel F Nixon and J Fred Zimmerman 8 In 1902 she married the theatrical manager William David Mann The couple left for France in 1904 where Sylva again became fascinated by opera She found a teacher Madame Delattre and was soon engaged by the Opera Comique She made her debut there on 14 September 1906 in the title role of Carmen to very good reviews 9 For the next three years Sylva sang with great success throughout France and Germany where she was a particular favourite In 1909 Oscar Hammerstein invited her to return to America to sing for his opera company On 1 September 1909 Marguerite Sylva made her American operatic debut as Carmen at the Manhattan Opera House 10 In the ensuing years Sylva sang with Hammerstein s company until a contractual dispute ended their professional relationship the Boston Opera Company 11 and with the San Carlo Opera Company in the United States She also sang in Europe including an acclaimed 1912 performance in Carmen at the Berlin Royal Opera with Enrico Caruso as Don Jose 12 She continued to appear on Broadway as well with performances in the premieres of Gypsy Love and The Skylark For a time Sylva enjoyed a celebrity status normally accorded to movie stars and even had her own line of cosmetics In 2008 Mark Swed wrote in Los Angeles Times nbsp Marguerite Sylva with her daughters Carmen is not new to the Hollywood Bowl On July 8 1922 three days before the first season of Symphonies Under the Stars the Los Angeles Philharmonic itself only 3 years old mounted a lavish production of Bizet s opera The cast numbered nearly 500 Massive sets of Seville surrounded the brand new amphitheater When soprano Marguerita Sylva who starred rolled into Union Station five days earlier reporters were there to greet her as if she were a movie star Proceeds from the performance financed the installation of the Bowl s first benches 13 Sylva and her husband William Mann had become estranged during her years in France and were divorced in 1912 14 On 1 December 1915 Sylva married Lieut Bernard L Smith who at the time was the assistant naval attache at the American Embassy in Paris The couple later had two daughters Daphnee and Marita both of whom went on to have minor careers as actresses The marriage ended in divorce on grounds of desertion in 1929 15 In her later years Sylva lived in North Hollywood where she played a series of small character roles in films and taught singing A year before her death she was the subject of the popular NBC television show This Is Your Life 16 Amongst those paying tribute to Sylva was the mezzo soprano Mariska Aldrich who had sung with her in Hammerstein s opera company and whose career path had been somewhat similar to Sylva s 17 On 20 February 1957 Marguerite Sylva was driving her car when it went off the road and plowed into a house She was severely injured in the accident and died the following day at the age of 81 in Behrens Memorial Hospital in Glendale California Opera roles editAlthough Marguerite Sylva s basic voice type was mezzo soprano she often took on soprano roles as well Her roles in operetta and comic opera are included in this list 18 Carmen Carmen Cavalleria rusticana Santuzza Erminie Erminie Faust Marguerite Gypsy Love Zorika La boheme Musetta La favorite Leonore Le Chemineau Catherine Le Point d Argentan Rose Marie Les contes d Hoffmann Giulietta Manon Manon Mignon Mignon Mireille Taven Pagliacci Nedda The Fortune Teller Mlle Pompom The Princess Chic Princess Chic of Normandy Tosca Tosca Werther Charlotte On Broadway editMarguerite Sylva s American stage debut was in the play The Seats of the Mighty 1896 However her early appearances on Broadway were mainly in musical comedies comic operas and operettas Sylva toured widely in the United States in this repertoire This list is restricted to her known Broadway performances only Mlle Pompom in the premiere of The Fortune Teller an operetta by Victor Herbert 26 September 29 October 1898 Lady Janet Belford in the premiere Mam selle Awkins a musical comedy by Herman Perlet and Alfred E Aarons 26 February 31 March 1900 Erminie in the revival of Erminie a comic opera by Edward Jakobowski 19 October 28 November 1903 Zorika in the premiere of Gypsy Love an English version of Zigeunerliebe an operetta by Franz Lehar 17 October 11 November 1911 Elsie in the premiere of The Skylark a comedy by Thomas P Robinson 25 July August 1921 Sonya Orlova Varilovna in the premiere of Cousin Sonia a comedy by Louis Verneuil 7 December 1925 January 1926 Mooda in the premiere of Golden Dawn a musical by Emmerich Kalman 30 November 1927 5 May 1928 Mahuna in the premiere of Luana a musical comedy by Rudolf Friml 17 September 4 October 1930 Giulia Sabittini in the revival of The Great Lover a comedy by Frederic and Fanny Hatton and Leo Ditrichstein 11 October October 1932 Countess von Hohenbrunn in the premiere of Three Waltzes a musical by Clare Kummer and Rowland Leigh from the play by Paul Knepler de using music by Johann Strauss I Johann Strauss II and Oscar Straus 25 December 1937 9 April 1938 In film editSylva s early venture into cinema was probably the title role in a 1913 silent film of Carmen shot in Nimes France with M Habay an actor with the Theatre Sarah Bernhardt as Don Jose 19 Her first major role in a Hollywood film came in 1920 when she played Hilda Wilson in The Honey Bee directed by Rupert Julian 20 Her other film roles included Title Year Role Director Notes The Honey Bee 1920 Hilda Wilson Rupert Julian They Dare Not Love 1941 Countess Marlik James Whale uncredited The Leopard Man 1943 Marta Jacques Tourneur uncredited The Seventh Victim 1943 Mrs Bella Romari Mark Robson To Have and Have Not 1944 Cashier Howard Hawks uncredited The Conspirators 1944 Older Woman Jean Negulesco uncredited The Gay Senorita 1945 Dona Maria Sandoval Arthur Dreifuss 21 Her Highness and the Bellboy 1945 Diplomat s Wife Richard Thorpe uncreditedRecordings edit nbsp Pleurez pleurez mes yeux source source From Le Cid 1885 sung for Edison Records in 1910 Problems playing this file See media help Notes edit Shaman William et al 1999 p 285 The Era London 13 February 1897 Howes Durward 1935 p 543 The New York Times 23 August 1909 Los Angeles Times 26 Nov 1896 Du Maurier 1935 pp 67 71 Pearson Hesketh 1956 p 97 New York Times 10 August 1902 p 10 Stoullig Edmond 1907 pp 212 213 New York Times 2 September 1909 p 9 Alice Nielsen And The Gayety Of Nations 2009 New York Times 8 October 1912 p 4 Swed Mark Los Angeles Times July 15 2008 New York Times 4 February 1912 p 15 New York Times 2 May 1929 p 4 The episode aired on 14 March 1956 This Is Your Life Episode List on classictvinfo com Holdridge Lawrence F 2000 This list was primarily compiled from reviews and articles in the New York Times and Hamilton Frank 2007 Lecointe Thierry 2004 Honey Bee 1920 New York Times Movie Guide For more about this film see Gevinson 1997 p 374References editDu Maurier Daphne 1935 Gerald A Portrait Doubleday Doran amp Company Gevinson Alan 1997 Within Our Gates Ethnicity in American Feature Films 1911 1960 University of California Press ISBN 0 520 20964 8 Hamilton Frank 2007 Opera in Philadelphia Performance Chronology 1900 1924 Holdridge Lawrence F 2000 Track Listing and Notes The Edison Trials Voice Audition Cylinders of 1912 1913 Marston Records Howes Durward 1935 American women The Official Who s who Among the Women of the Nation Richard Blank Publishing Company Lecointe Thierry 2004 Les premieres annees du spectacle cinematographique a Nimes 1895 1913 1895 Revue de l Association francaise de recherche sur l histoire du cinema n 43 Los Angeles Times Engaged Du Maurier s Son to Marry Miss Marguerite Sylva 26 Nov 1896 Los Angeles Times Teachers Will Fete Former Opera Star 31 May 1956 New York Times Bustle and Stir of the Theatrical World 10 August 1902 p 10 New York Times Marguerite Sylva A New Carmen Here 23 August 1909 p 7 New York Times Carmen at the Manhattan Mme Marguerite Sylva Wins Success as the Heroine 2 September 1909 p 9 New York Times Marguerite Sylva Divorced 4 February 1912 p 15 New York Times Shares Caruso s Honors Marguerite Sylva Obtains Triumph in Title Role of Carmen in Berlin 8 October 1912 p 4 New York Times Opera Star Asks Divorce Marguerita Sylva Files Suit Against B L Smith in Miami 2 May 1929 p 4 Pearson Hesketh 1956 Beerbohm Tree His Life and Laughter Methuen Shaman William et al 1999 More EJS Discography of the Edward J Smith Recordings Unique Opera Records Corporation 1972 1977 A N N A Record Company 1978 1982 special label Issues circa 1954 1981 and Addendum to The Golden Age of Opera Series Greenwood Publishing Group p 285 and passim ISBN 0 313 29835 1 Stoullig Edmond 1907 Les Annales du theatre et de la musique Paris P Ollendorff pp 212 213 Swed Mark Carmen at the Hollywood Bowl Los Angeles Times 15 July 2008 Van Nuys News Obituary Edith Sarah Jane Sinkins 4 February 1952 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Marguerite Sylva Internet Broadway Database Marguerita Sylva IMDb Marguerita Sylva Marguerite Sylva portrait Univ of Louisville Macauley s Theatre collection Marguerite Sylva selected recordings at InternetArchive com downloadable acoustic format Marguerite Sylva recordings with Carl Hayden Arthur Albro The Theatre November 1911 cover Marguerite Sylva archived Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Marguerite Sylva amp oldid 1165321670, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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