Lottie Collins (16 August 1865 – 1 May 1910) was an English singer and dancer, most famous for introducing the song "Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-ay!" in England.

Lottie Collins
Born
Charlotte Louisa Collins

(1865-08-16)16 August 1865
East End, London
Died1 May 1910(1910-05-01) (aged 44)
Resting placeSaint Pancras and Islington Cemetery, East Finchley, London
Occupation(s)Singer and dancer
Spouse(s)Stephen Patrick Cooney
James W. Tate
ChildrenJose Collins

Early life

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She was born Charlotte Louisa Collins in the East End of London in 1865.[1] Her father was a woodworker and music hall entertainer.[2] She started out in music hall at the age of 11 or 12 in 1877 in a skipping rope dance act with her younger sisters, Eliza (Lizzie) and Mary Ann (Marie) as The Three Sisters Collins.[3][4]

Career

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In 1886, Collins became a solo act in music hall. She also played in theatre, appearing the same year as Mariette in the Gaiety Theatre's burlesque, Monte Cristo Jr.[5] She first toured America in 1889[6][7] with the Howard Atheneum Company, during which she accepted the proposal of Samuel P. Cooney[8] whom she married in St. Louis.[9] According to her obituary in The New York Times she and Cooney had three children.[10]

 
Collins doing her most famous number around 1892

While touring in vaudeville in the United States she heard the song "Ta-ra-ra Boom-de-ay!"[11] After she sang it at the Tivoli Music Hall in London in November 1891, it became her signature piece. She would sing the first verse demurely and then launch into the chorus and an uninhibited and exhausting skirt dance with high kicks (especially on the word "BOOM") that exposed her stockings held up by sparkling garters, and bare thighs. She sang the song at performances of the Gaiety Theatre's burlesque Cinder Ellen up too Late beginning on 14 March 1892[12] and according to her obituary, at the height of the craze was performing it five times nightly at different venues in London.[13]

She returned to America in September 1892 to perform "Ta-ra-ra-Boom-de-ay" as an entr'acte at the Standard Theatre, New York, but received a bad review from the critic of The New York Times, who described her as 'a mature woman', referred to her as 'Charlotte Collins' and mentioned she had been detained in quarantine when arriving 'on an infected ship'.[14] Another of Collins's dance sketches in the 1890s was The Little Widow, and she also had a hit with the song Daddy Wouldn't Buy Me A Bow-wow.[15] On 29 November 1897 she opened in New York again at the Garden Theatre, part of a triple bill with two short plays.[16] She became an icon of the "Naughty Nineties" and her risqué style led to some criticism, against which she defended herself.[17] A century later, her garters were sold by auction at Sotheby's.[3]

Family

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Lottie had three daughters, Lottie Lucia, José and Cleopatra.

  • José Collins[2] went on to be a musical comedy star. In 1902 she married her second husband, the composer-producer James W. Tate.[18]
  • Lottie Lucia (or Lucia Lottie) Collins, a mezzo soprano, appeared in vaudeville on the Australian Tivoli circuit, March–August 1911. She was at the time married to one J. A. R. Cargill; they divorced in 1912.[19] She returned to Australia in 1921 to play "principal boy" pantomime roles.[20] She had undergone a form of marriage with one John Sydney Phillips in London in October 1917, but discovered when she arrived in Sydney that he already had a wife and was penniless.[21]

Death

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In 1898, she apparently attempted suicide by cutting her wrists and neck with a penknife,[9] but her wounds were minor and she was discharged from hospital the same day.[22]

She died on 1 May 1910[23] at St Pancras of heart disease[10] and is buried at St Pancras and Islington Cemetery, East Finchley, London.[24]

References

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  1. ^ GRO Register of Births: September 1865 1c 424 St GEO East – Charlotte Louisa Collins
  2. ^ a b Jewish Virtual Library
  3. ^ a b Lottie Collins profile Archived 1 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine, PeoplePlayUK Theatre website
  4. ^ 1881 census: RG11/1003 f.11 p. 16, at 29 York Street, Dover, Kent – Charlotte Collins aged 15 singer and dancer, with sisters Eliza (11) and Mary A. (9)
  5. ^ The Times, Wednesday, 29 December 1886; pg. 6
  6. ^ The New York Times, 20 September 1892: '...she made her first appearance here at the Bijou Opera House 7 October 1889, as a member of the Howard Athenæum Company.'
  7. ^ A theatre column in the New York paper The Evening World, 5 October 1889, p.3 refers to her forthcoming appearance at the Bijou with the Boston Howard Star Specialty Company. She is described as a "skirt dancer". George Thatcher, whose minstrel company later appeared in Tuxedo, is a member of the same company.
  8. ^ "S. P. Cooney" is named as manager of the Howard Athenæum Company in the New York paper The Sun, 23 January 1890.
  9. ^ a b New York Times, 10 November 1898: "Lottie Collins Tries Suicide"
  10. ^ a b The New York Times, 3 May 1910:'Lottie Collins Dead'
  11. ^ According to a report in The New York Times, the song was given to her husband and manager Samuel P. Cooney by theatrical impresario William Harris when Cooney arrived in America to manage a play for him. See The New York Times, 10 November 1898: 'Lottie Collins Tries Suicide'
  12. ^ The Times, Saturday, 12 March 1892:'SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT of Miss LOTTIE COLLINS, the originator of the celebrated song Ta-ra-ra-Boom-de-ay, which she will sing nightly on and after Monday next – GAIETY THEATRE'
  13. ^ New York Times, 3 May 1910:'Lottie Collins Dead:...Lottie Collins found herself driving round to four music halls a night at a salary of $100 for each hall just to sing "Ta-ra-ra-Boom-de-ay" with her rhythmic dance. In addition George Edwardes engaged her at $300 a week to give the song in one of the scenes of a musical comedy he was running at the Gaiety Theatre in the Strand. That made five performances nightly.'
  14. ^ The New York Times, 20 September 1892: 'More London Gayety'
  15. ^ The New York Times, 3 May 1910:'Lottie Collins Dead'
  16. ^ The New York Times, 28 November 1897:'...She has some new songs, including "The Little Widow", "The Girl on the Ran Dan Dan" and "A Leader of Society".'
  17. ^ The New York Times, 17 July 1897:'Lottie Collins Gets £25 Damages'. The report, from London, refers to a successful legal action against the newspaper Society which 'had published an article accusing her of singing vulgar songs'.
  18. ^ GRO Register of Marriages: September 1902 7b 538 Nottingham – James William Tate = Charlotte Louise Cooney
  19. ^ "Sydney Snapshots". Truth. No. 640. Queensland, Australia. 19 May 1912. p. 6. Retrieved 17 March 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
  20. ^ "The Theatre & its People". Table Talk. No. 1888. Victoria, Australia. 6 October 1921. p. 17. Retrieved 17 March 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
  21. ^ "A Very Casual Digger". The Richmond River Herald and Northern Districts Advertiser. Vol. 35, no. 2433. New South Wales, Australia. 11 April 1922. p. 2. Retrieved 17 March 2022 – via National Library of Australia.
  22. ^ The Times, 10 November 1898, p.9
  23. ^ Headstone, St Pancras and Islington Cemetery
  24. ^ GRO Register of Deaths: June 1910 1b 7 PANCRAS – Charlotte Louisa Tate aged 43
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