Hildegarde (February 1, 1906 – July 29, 2005) was an
American cabaret singer whose elegant piano and vocal style -- combined with
flirty banter and a champagne smile -- made her an icon of nightclub
sophistication for decades, From vaudeville obscurity, Hildegarde became one of
the highest-paid performers of the 1940s.
Hildegarde was born Hildegarde Loretta Sell in Adell,
Wisconsin as a Roman Catholic in a family of German extraction and raised in
New Holstein, Wisconsin. Her father, a merchant, played the drums and fiddle
and her mother was an organist who directed the church choir. When Hildegarde was
twelve, the family moved to Milwaukee, where she and her two sisters
participated in the school choir and orchestra. Her first desire was to be a
concert pianist and she enrolled for awhile at the School of Music at Marquette
University in the 1920s.. However, circumstances prevented her from continuing,
so she went on to find work in vaudeville.
After several years of this, Gus Edwards
"discovered" Hildegarde and sent her across the country in a
travelling show. Later she went to Paris where she gave her first command
performance for King Gustov of Sweden in the Casanova, a Parisian Boite. She
continued to appear in many famous rooms in London, Cannes, Brussels and at
private concerts.
She was known for 70 years as The Incomparable Hildegarde, a
title bestowed on her by columnist Walter Winchell. She was also nicknamed The
First Lady of the Supper Clubs by Eleanor Roosevelt.
She was once referred to as a "luscious, hazel-eyed
Milwaukee blonde who sings the way Garbo looks". During the peak of her
popularity in the 1930s and 1940s, she was booked in cabarets and supper clubs
at least 45 weeks a year. Her recordings sold in the hundreds of thousands, and
her admirers ranged from soldiers during World War II to King Gustaf VI Adolph
of Sweden and the Duke of Windsor. On some of her recordings, she was
accompanied by band leader Carroll Gibbons.
Best known for Darling, Je Vous Aime Beaucoup, from 1934 she
made plenty of other notable recordings. She introduced I'll Be Seeing You in
the late 1930s; there was The Last Time I Saw Paris, recalling - from 1941 -
the French capital before Nazi occupation; and she was an early
English-language singer of Lili Marlene.
In the late 40's and through the 50's Hildegarde was
considered by many to be the top dinner and supper club entertainer in America
but it was in New York where she headquartered her performances. Her favourite
prop was her handkerchiefs, of which she had a large collection of (even her
table cards featured tiny hankies embedded in them). She sported stunning gowns
by Fontana of Rome. Roses, long gloves and upswept hair were also personal signatures.
"Miss Piggy
stole the gloves idea from me," she once said. A noted flirt, she told
risqué anecdotes while giving long-stemmed roses to men in her audience. During
one performance she waltzed with a U. S. Senator. Her recordings sold in the hundreds
of thousands. She is credited with starting a single-name vogue among
entertainers. Investments and work in ads for a bottled-water company, barley
vitamins and bathtub device gave her a comfortable income through the rock era.
She appeared on the cover of Life in 1939, and Revlon
introduced a Hildegarde shade of lipstick and nail polish. She was an
inspiration for Liberace, who once acknowledged her influence on his
performances: "Hildegarde was perhaps the most famous supper-club
entertainer who ever lived. I used to absorb all the things she was doing, all
the showmanship she created. It was marvellous to watch her, wearing elegant
gowns, surrounded with roses and playing with white gloves on. They used to
literally roll out the red carpet for her."
Hildegarde with Harry S. Truman |
From the 1950s through the 1970s, in addition to her cabaret
performances and record albums, she appeared in a number of television specials
and toured with the national company of the Stephen Sondheim musical Follies.
She appeared as the Celebrity Mystery Guest on What's My Line? on May 8, 1955.
Hildegarde never married although she was quoted as saying
"I traveled all my life, met a lot of men, had a lot of romances, but it
never worked out. It was always 'hello and goodbye.'" She was the business
partner and "good friend" of Anna Sosenko whom she met at the
beginning of her career. That relationship ended up in litigation over the
control of receipts from their joint efforts. Her autobiography, Over 50... So
What!, was published by Doubleday in 1961.
She died at the age of 99 in a hospital in Manhattan on July
29, 2005 of natural causes.
(Info edited mainly from Wikipedia &
bigbandsandbignames.com)
For “Hildegarde – Entrancing Music” go here:
ReplyDeletehttp://www86.zippyshare.com/v/VAzg1uwx/file.html
1. When I'm With You
2. The Touch Of Your Lips
3. Goodnight My Love
4. Alexander's Ragtime Band Memories
5. The Blue Room
6. Lover
7. Darling, Je Vous Aime Beaucoup
8. I Worship You
9. You Made Me Love You
10. A Real Nice Clambake
11. Leave Us Face It
12. The Cab Song
13. Sigh By Night
14. Sidewalks Of New York
15. Why Shouldn't It Happen To Us (With Buddy Clark)
16. I've Told Every Little Star (With Buddy Clark)
17. One-Zy, Two-Zy
18. The Gypsy
19. I'll Be Yours (J'Attendrail)
20. I'll Close My Eyes
21. There's No Holding Me
22. Ask Your Heart
23. One Look At You (Ca Fait Boum!)
24. Oh, My Darling!
25. Wunderbar
26. Ev'ry Time We Say Goodbye
With her long white gloves and sophisticated style, Hildegarde lit up cabarets from NY to Paris for decades. Here's her signature song Darling, Je Vous Aime Beaucoup ; her '40s hits One-Zy, Two-Zy and The Gypsy , plus Lover; The Blue Room; Wunderbar , and 20 more from this high-society heroine!
In Paris she introduced her signature song Darling Je Vous Aime Beaucoup, a song she recorded many times throughout her long career. The version included here was recorded in New York in 1941 and is appearing for the first time on CD