Vivian Alferetta Dandridge (April 22, 1921 – October 26,
1991) was an American singer, actress and dancer. Acclaimed as the black
Marilyn Monroe, Vivian Dandridge's younger sister, Dorothy, was the more famous
of the two.
Dorothy Dandridge (right) sister Vivian,
mother Ruby
(upper left), and Geneva Williams
Dandridge was born in Cleveland, Ohio, to Cyril Dandridge
and the former Ruby Jean Butler, an aspiring entertainer. Dandridge's parents
separated shortly before the birth of her sister Dorothy. Initially, Ruby
Dandridge put her two girls to work performing acrobatics, songs, and skits.
She billed them as the "Wonder Children". Realizing the potential
success of her girls, Ruby and her girlfriend Geneva Williams decided to have
her daughters embark on a tour of the United States. Under Neva's tutelage, the
Wonder Children earned $400–$500 per appearance during the late 1920s, touring
through Tennessee, South Carolina, Georgia and many other states. Neva
accompanied the girls on piano as well as acted as their manager and was a
particularly aggressive disciplinarian. Both Dorothy and Vivian suffered from
her angry outbursts, which were frequent and severe.
Because their income was more important to the family
than their education, Dorothy and Vivian did not attend regular classes at
school until the 8th grade, instead relying on tutors. After the stock market crash in 1929, the
Wonder Children were added to the long list of the unemployed. Ruby Dandridge,
still clinging to the hopes of a film career for herself and her daughters,
bought four bus tickets and moved the family to Los Angeles. After immersing
herself into the professional community of black Hollywood, Ruby found limited
opportunities for herself or her girls. A friend of the family told Ruby that
her daughters were unlikely to meet with success in California, she enrolled
them in a dancing school run by Laurette Butler.
In California, the Dandridge daughters befriended another
girl, Etta Jones*, and began to sing together. After Jones' father heard them
sing, Ruby Dandridge decided that the three should form a singing group. Thus,
the Dandridge Sisters were born. While Neva and Ruby gained bit parts in films,
the Dandridge Sisters began appearing in musical sequences of films and toured
over the United States, sharing bills with the likes of Nat King Cole, Mantan
Moreland, and dancer Marie Bryant. The female trio was a sort of black Andrews
Sisters, singing songs in three part harmony. They eventually became headliners
at the Cotton Club in Harlem, New York. They even appeared in a short-run
Broadway musical revue, Swingin' The Dream, in 1939, at the Centre Theatre. The
Dandridge Sisters also toured in London and Hawaii.
The only known recorded songs that the Dandridge Sisters
made on vinyl were “FDR Jones”, “The Lady’s In Love With You”, "Undecided"
(1939), and "If I Were Sure Of You" recorded for the Parlophone label
while they were in London, and "Minnie the Moocher is Dead",
"You Ain’t Nowhere", "Ain’t Goin to Study War No More", and
"That’s Your Red Wagon", which they recorded in 1940 with Jimmie
Lunceford and his big band orchestra while they were on tour with him.
Etta, Dorothy & Vivian
After touring for a year and a half, however, the
Dandridge Sisters group abruptly disbanded, after Dorothy was determined to
become an actress, unsatisfied with just appearances in occasional soundies or
bit parts in Hollywood films. This left Vivian in a desperate financial
situation. She attempted to find work in clubs, but many were not interested.
She did, however, find employment as an occasional actress in films but did not
achieve the same level of success as her sister Dorothy. Vivian did however,
attended the Academy Awards in 1955 with Dorothy Dandridge when Dorothy was
nominated for Best Actress for her role in Carmen Jones.
By 1956, friends and family members were concerned for
the welfare of Dandridge, as she moved away and went into seclusion. Her sister
Dorothy later found out that her sister was residing in New York City. At this
point, Dorothy and Vivian did not remain in contact, though Dorothy sometimes
provided financial assistance to Vivian and her son Michael Wallace. Other than
the occasional telegram, Dorothy and Vivian remained estranged. Upon Dorothy's
death in 1965, Vivian could not bear to attend the funeral. Instead, she
disappeared from the public eye.
Yet in 1968, Vivian signed a recording contract with
Jubilee Records and released a jazz LP, The Look of Love, that same year. The
album was produced by Bob Stephens and conducted by Charles Coleman, and
included such tracks as "Love is Blue", "Try to Remember",
"Sunny", "Strange Fruit", and "Lover Man". On the
cover, Vivian is lying on a sofa, looking pensive while holding a snifter of
brandy.
Dandridge, under the alias "Marina Rozell,"
later settled in Seattle, Washington, where she lived in anonymity for the rest
of her life. She lived the last eight years in Marina Rozell, in a small
apartment in the Ross Manor complex overlooking Elliott Bay in the Pike Place
Market. She seldom performed any longer except at open-mike nights.She began to
write a book about herself and her sister when she suffered a massive stroke
from which she died on October 26, 1991 at age 70.
Dandridge was married at least five times: Jack
Montgomery (1942–1943), Warren Bra
cken (1945–1945), Ralph Bledsoe (1946–48), Forace Stead
(1951–1953) and Gustav Friedrich (1958–1968).
(Edited mainly from
Wikipedia.*Please note Etta Jones, the girl who’d performed with the Dandridge
Sisters is not the same as the better remembered jazz singer by that name
(1928-2001).
For “Vivian Dandridge – The Look Of Love (1969)” Plus bonus folder of The Dandridge Sisters…….go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/Lwpmk6TZ
1) Love Is Blue 2) Try To Remember 3) Strange Fruit 4) Sunny 5) I Cover The Waterfront 6) Look Of Love 7) You're My Thrill 8) A Coat Of Laughter 9) Lover Man 10) Travelin' Light 11) You Don't Know What Love Is 12) Love Come Back To Me
As a small bonus I have found 6 of the 8 sides the Dandridge Sisters cut between 1939 and 1940 which I have placed in a separate folder. If anyone can find the missing two songs from 1939 then do please share!
Dandridge Sisters Bonus
1. Undecided (1939) 2. If I Were Sure Of You 3. Minnie The Moocher’s Dead (1940) 4. You Ain’t Nowhere 5. I Ain’t Gonna Study War No More 6. That’s Your Red wagon.
Hey, Boppin' Bob, you prob already know by now but all upload.ee links are dead coz I guess they had all their eggs in one basket and lost everything in a fire at the data storage centre in Strasbourg, I believe. Now I don't know whether Krakenfiles stores at same place, but they too have had a partial disaster with their third server also apparntly destroyed/damaged in a fire, though they seem to have recovered/are recovering some of what was initially out of action, so maybe they had some backup/redundancy. I know you don't necessarily have time to reupload stuff all the time but pretty please if poss another upload of Viviane.
Hello CH, Thanks for the info. I thought that upload ee had gone the same way as Rapidshare, It seems I have lost about 65% of my files. I don't mind re-uploading, it's just finding the files as they are all over the place on external hard drives, various flash drives and some even on DVD's! I am at present cataloging them so access will be quicker. here' Viv as requested. https://www.upload.ee/files/12988559/Vivian_Dandrige-Collected.rar.html Regards, Bob
6 comments:
For “Vivian Dandridge – The Look Of Love (1969)”
Plus bonus folder of The Dandridge Sisters…….go here:
https://pixeldrain.com/u/Lwpmk6TZ
1) Love Is Blue
2) Try To Remember
3) Strange Fruit
4) Sunny
5) I Cover The Waterfront
6) Look Of Love
7) You're My Thrill
8) A Coat Of Laughter
9) Lover Man
10) Travelin' Light
11) You Don't Know What Love Is
12) Love Come Back To Me
As a small bonus I have found 6 of the 8 sides the Dandridge Sisters cut between 1939 and 1940 which I have placed in a separate folder. If anyone can find the missing two songs from 1939 then do please share!
Dandridge Sisters Bonus
1. Undecided (1939)
2. If I Were Sure Of You
3. Minnie The Moocher’s Dead (1940)
4. You Ain’t Nowhere
5. I Ain’t Gonna Study War No More
6. That’s Your Red wagon.
Would it be possible to re-share this.
Here you are David
https://www.upload.ee/files/12496283/Vivian_Dandrige-Collected.rar.html
Many thanks.
Hey, Boppin' Bob, you prob already know by now but all upload.ee links are dead coz I guess they had all their eggs in one basket and lost everything in a fire at the data storage centre in Strasbourg, I believe. Now I don't know whether Krakenfiles stores at same place, but they too have had a partial disaster with their third server also apparntly destroyed/damaged in a fire, though they seem to have recovered/are recovering some of what was initially out of action, so maybe they had some backup/redundancy. I know you don't necessarily have time to reupload stuff all the time but pretty please if poss another upload of Viviane.
Thanks perhaps?, CrimsonGhost
Hello CH, Thanks for the info. I thought that upload ee had gone the same way as Rapidshare, It seems I have lost about 65% of my files. I don't mind re-uploading, it's just finding the files as they are all over the place on external hard drives, various flash drives and some even on DVD's! I am at present cataloging them so access will be quicker.
here' Viv as requested.
https://www.upload.ee/files/12988559/Vivian_Dandrige-Collected.rar.html
Regards, Bob
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