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Showing posts with label Vince Barnett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vince Barnett. Show all posts

Saturday, April 18, 2020

Honoring Margaret on Her 108th Birthday









"A rose by
any other
name..."


This is an
important
date on the
Shady Dell
calendar.














Our dear friend
Margaret Schneider,
who for years
inspired us as
"The Oldest Living
Dell Rat"... was
born April 18, 1912,
108 years ago today.







Margaret's father built the
Shady Dell and the family
became its first occupants
when Margaret (right)
was one year old.







To celebrate Margaret's
birthday this year,
I posted three songs
that remind me of her,
three musical relics of
the past that I think she
would enjoy and might
even have known in
her early years.







THE GALE SISTERS

When I worked in TV, we shot news footage
on "mag film" (magnetic sound-on-film) as
opposed to optical sound-on-film. By 1931,
when Margaret Schneider was age nineteen,
(she's eighteen in the picture at right) optical
sound-on-film had been adopted by the movie
industry for use in its talkies. The Movietone,
one of the methods of optical sound recording,
was used commercially in theaters from the
mid 20s through the 30s. You are about to
watch an early Movietone film clip.




These four performing sisters were billed as The Dancing Gale Quadruplets,
but they were actually two sets of twins. In 1931, the vaudeville act appeared
in George White's Scandals, the long-running string of Broadway revues
produced by White. Of the four Gale Sisters, only Jane Gale (real name
Helen Gilmartin) is possibly still alive, given the fact that death dates
are provided for the other three but none for her. Jane/Helen was born
in 1911, the year before Margaret was born. If it's true, if she's still
living, she will celebrate her 109th birthday this July. Now please
watch and listen as The Gale Sisters perform "The Dance."

The Gale Sisters aka The Dancing Gale Quadruplets
(1930 Fox Movietone outtake of "The Dance"
from George White's Scandals of 1931)




MARTHA TILTON, LEO DIAMOND,
JIMMIE DODD & VINCE BARNETT

Similar to the Scopitones of the 50s and 60s, Soundies were three minute
musical films produced in the 1940s and played in public places on
coin-operated movie jukeboxes called Panorams.

This being an election year, and with the threat of the coronavirus wreaking
havoc across America, I present the 1941 short What The Country Needs.
Big band era singer Martha Tilton aka "The Liltin' Miss Tilton" performs
the song accompanied  by harmonica player Leo Diamond. At the 1:50
mark, be sure to catch Jimmie Dodd, the good-natured fellow who, the
following decade, became famous as leader of The Mouseketeers on
The Mickey Mouse Club. In this Soundie, Jimmy appears as a singing
paper boy. Next comes a vocal part by Vince Barnett before Martha
finishes the piece. Dear Margaret, this is for you.

"What The Country Needs" (Soundie)
Martha Tilton, Leo Diamond, Jimmie Dodd
and Vince Barnett (scene from 1941 short
What The Country Needs)




THE BOSWELL SISTERS


To wind up Margaret's tribute, here are The Boswell Sisters, a jazz
vocal trio that was one of the most popular acts of the 1920s and 30s.
The Boswell Sisters were among the earliest stars of radio. They released
many records and appeared in films. In 1998 the Boswells were inducted
into the Vocal Group Hall of Fame. Raised in New Orleans, Martha, Connee
and Helvetia "Vet" Boswell received formal classical music training on
piano, cello and violin respectively. In addition, The Boswell girls
were exposed to African-American blues singers, and their
soulful singing style reflects that early influence.

In 1932, at the height of The Great Depression, The Boswell
Sisters went to Washington, D.C., put on their happy faces
and sang the optimistic song "Put That Sun Back In The Sky"
for legislators and for the benefit of the American people.
The song is especially relevant today as America faces one
of its greatest challenges ever in dealing with COVID-19.

"Put That Sun Back In The Sky"
- The Boswell Sisters (perf. for legislators
in Washington, D.C. on May 7, 1932



As you saw in that film clip, the middle sister, Connee Boswell, sang from a wheechair.
Unbeknownst to most fans, Connee had been confined to a wheelchair from the age
of three after suffering a near-fatal bout of polio. Her disease-weakened wrist
forced her to change the spelling of her name from "Connie" to "Connee"
because, when signing autographs, the repeated dotting of the "i" caused
her severe pain and cramping. When The Boswell Sisters broke up in
1936, Connee continued to perform as a solo artist and went on to
become recognized as one of the greatest jazz female vocalists
of the 20th century, a major influence on Ella Fitzgerald.

Connee Boswell is an inspiration. Through tough times she kept on smiling.
Her determination to overcome adversity, to survive and thrive, reminds
me of someone I knew and greatly admired - Margaret Schneider.

Happy 108th birthday, dear Margaret.


We love you and miss you!