Evelyn Dove
Evelyn Mary Dove (11 January 1902–7 March 1987) was a British singer and actress, who early in her career drew comparisons with Josephine Baker.[1][2] Of West African and English parentage, Dove built a solid reputation in Britain through her work with the BBC in the 1940s, and also performed internationally, travelling to France, Germany, Italy, Austria, the Netherlands, Hungary, the United States, India and Spain.[3]
Family background
Evelyn Mary Dove was born at the Lying-in Hospital, Endell Street, London, the daughter of leading Sierra Leonean barrister Francis (Frans) Dove (1869–1949)[4] and his English wife Augusta, née Winchester. Evelyn's older brother Frank Dove, who studied law at Oxford University, in 1915 was called up by the British army and fought at the Battle of Cambrai (1917), being awarded the Military Medal.[1][5]
Early years
Evelyn Dove studied singing, piano, and elocution at the Royal Academy of Music from 1917 until 1919, when she graduated, and on 27 September that year married Milton Alphonso Luke in London.[3] Howard Rye records that she was using the name "Norma Winchester" when she became a member of the Southern Syncopated Orchestra (SSO),[3] a band composed of British West Indian and West African and American musicians who were popularising black music on the UK club scene.[6] She was with them on 9 October 1921 when they were sailing on the SS Rowan from Glasgow to Dublin when their ship accidentally collided with another and eight or nine members of the SSO were among the 35 passengers who died when the Rowan sank.[7] Dove and other SSO members such as Cyril Blake who survived the disaster took part on 14 October in the "Survivors Sacred Concert".[7]
When in 1925 the all-Black revue Chocolate Kiddies toured Europe from New York, she joined the cast, replacing Lottie Gee,[8] who had to return to the US, and the show toured western Europe for a year, before going to Russia to play in Leningrad and Moscow, where the audience included Stalin, according to Stephen Bourne, who has researched and written about Dove for the Dictionary of National Biography and elsewhere.[1] Dove's career burgeoned internationally in the 1920s and '30s. She was performing at London's Mile End Empire in June 1926, then five months later Evelyn Dove and Her Plantation Creoles — "the only singing and dancing act of its kind in Europe" — appeared at Wintergarten in Berlin, and her revue appeared in the Netherlands in February 1927.[3] She went to France to replace Josephine Baker starring in a revue at the Casino de Paris, and then to the US, where in 1936 she appeared in cabaret at the famous Harlem nightclub Connie's Inn. In New York she was photographed by the celebrated photographer Carl Van Vechten.[9]
Her travels also took her to Bombay, India, where on 7 October 1937 The Evening News of India reviewed her opening night performance at the Harbour Bar: "She is an artist of international reputation, one of the leading personalities of Europe's entertainment world. She is described as the closest rival of the great Josephine Baker herself. Evelyn didn't get just the big hand. She got an ovation, a roaring welcome."[1]
1939–49
The decade from 1939 to 1949 marked the height of Dove's career, when she did much notable radio work broadcasting with the BBC. A memo from producer Eric Fawcett to a colleague on 6 June 1947 states: "She is a contralto with a perfect microphone quality and although I have used her mostly in music of negro origin this has ranged from spirituals to Samuel Coleridge-Taylor. She is, of course, a highly trained singer. She is an extremely charming person with a very attractive personality. I would rate her the best coloured contralto in this country."[10] (Dove features on the two-CD compilation Negro Spirituals - The Concert Tradition 1909 - 1948 singing the spiritual "Couldn't Hear Nobody Pray".)[11] She appeared regularly on such popular music and variety radio programmes as Rhapsody in Black, Calling the West Indies, Variety Bandbox, Music For You, Caribbean Carnival, and Mississippi Nights.[12] Particularly successful was the series Serenade in Sepia (1945–47), for which she made more than 50 broadcasts with Trinidadian folk-singer Edric Connor, attracting so many listeners that the BBC decided to make a television version.[13]
In 1947 Dove and Connor — along with other artists including Mable Lee, Edric Connor, Cyril Blake and his Calypso Band, Buddy Bradley, Winifred Atwell, and Adelaide Hall — performed in Variety in Sepia, an early example of a UK television special dedicated to Black talent, which was filmed live on 7 October 1947 at the RadiOlympia Theatre, Alexandra Palace, London, and aired on BBC TV.[14]
Later career
Leaving the BBC in 1949, Dove worked in cabaret in India, Paris and Spain. When she returned to Britain at the end of 1950, as Stephen Bourne has written, she struggled to find work, "though she did appear in the cast of London Melody with ice-skater Belita and comedian Norman Wisdom at London's Empress Hall in 1951. Despite her experience and talent, she found herself understudying Muriel Smith in the role of Bloody Mary in the Rodgers and Hammerstein musical South Pacific at Drury Lane." In 1955, her search for work led her to apply for a job as a Post Office telephonist, asking the BBC for a reference. In 1956 the BBC cast her as Eartha Kitt's mother in a television drama called Mrs Patterson, and more television work followed, and then a role on the West End musical stage, as one of the stars of Langston Hughes's Simply Heavenly, directed by Laurence Harvey. Bourne notes that another cast member was Isabelle Lucas, who later recalled: "We became friends, but Evelyn's life took a bad turn. Her reputation as a singer faded, and she became very ill. She lost contact with her family. Her spirit was broken."[10]
Evelyn Dove died of pneumonia at Horton Hospital in Epsom, Surrey, aged 84, on 7 March 1987, registered as "Evelyn Dove, otherwise Brantley"[3] (she had married her third husband William Newton Brantley, in 1958, having previously been married to Felix John Basil Inglis Allen in 1941.)[15]
On 18 September 1993, Moira Stuart featured Evelyn Dove in Salutations, a BBC Radio 2 series celebrating black British and British-based musical entertainers who came to fame between the 1930s and 1950s.[16]
Selected filmography
- 1958 The Green Pastures — Noah's wife
- 1957 Another Part of the Forest — Coralee
- 1956 Mrs. Patterson — Anna Hicks
- 1954 Halcyon Days — Mrs Carter
References
- 1 2 3 4 Stephen Bourne, "Dove, Evelyn Mary (1902–1987)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, January 2011.
- ↑ Samuel A. Floyd Jr, "The Negro Renaissance: Harlem and Chicago Flowerings", in Darlene Clark Hine, John McCluskey Jr (eds), The Black Chicago Renaissance, University of Illinois Press, 2012, p. 22.
- 1 2 3 4 5 Howard Rye, "Southern Syncopated Orchestra: The Roster", Black Music Research Journal, Volume 30, Number 1, Spring 2010.
- ↑ Nigel Browne-Davies, "Lieutenant Macormack Charles Farrell Easmon: A Sierra Leonean Medical Officer in the First World War", The Journal of Sierra Leone Studies, Autumn 2014, p. 4, note 8.
- ↑ Jeffrey Green, "Before the Windrush", The Black Presence in Britain, 26 September 2010.
- ↑ "London's jazz legends — Southern Syncopated Orchestra", BBC, 24 September 2014.
- 1 2 "The Southern Syncopated Orchestra remembered", Jazz Age Follies, 6 July 2013.
- ↑ Chip Deffaa, Voices of the Jazz Age: Profiles of Eight Vintage Jazzmen, Illini Books/University of Illinois Press, 1992, p. 14.
- ↑ "Evelyn Dove wearing a mantilla and carrying a folding fan". Photograph by Carl Van Vechten, 27 December 1935.
- 1 2 Stephen Bourne, "Spirit of a Dove", Pride, July 1999, pp. 112–13.
- ↑ "Negro Spirituals - The Concert Tradition 1909 - 1948" (Frémeaux & Associés – FA 168, 1999) at Discogs.
- ↑ Radio Times listings, BBC.
- ↑ Stephen Bourne, Black in the British Frame: The Black Experience in British Film and Television, Continuum, 2001, pp. 62, 82.
- ↑ "Variety in Sepia (1947)", IMDb.
- ↑ "Evelyn Mary Luke (born Dove), 1902 - 1987" at MyHeritage.
- ↑ "Salutations", Radio Times, Issue 3637, 16 September 1993, p. 90.
External links
- "Couldn't Hear Nobody Pray (Negro Spiritual)" by Evelyn Dove, soprano, c. 1926.
- "My Heart Belongs to Daddy, Billy Cotton, 1939".
- "Evelyn Dove (1902-1987)", Devotional by Sonia Boyce, at National Portrait Gallery, London.
- "Evelyn Dove (1902–1987)" at IMDb.
- Evelyn Dove at Vintage Black Glamour by Nichelle Gainer.