Alice J. Shaw

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Alice J. Shaw, in an 1896 publication.

Alice J. Shaw was an American musical performer, who was billed as "The Whistling Prima Donna" and, in French, "La Belle Siffleuse."

Early life[]

Alice Horton was born in Elmira, New York, the daughter of William Horton, a stock broker.[1]

Career[]

Alice J. Shaw toured the Europe and India performing as a whistler, starting in 1886 with a performance for teachers at Steinway Hall in New York City. In England the following year, she whistled for the Prince of Wales.[2]

Because a "whistling woman" was sometimes considered vulgar or unwise,[3] Shaw was careful to craft her shows with the utmost decorum, both in her physical movements and in her facial expressions. Reviewers remarked on her ability to follow sheet music, which emphasized her self-discipline.[4] An anonymous New York Times reviewer, however, commented that "her notions of melody are weird and uncanny ... and reminds one of little children, in that she ought to be seen but not heard. However, she seems determined to make a noise ..."[5] Another reviewer that year acknowledged her uniqueness, and hoped she would remain so, because "a generation of whistlers is an appalling thing to imagine."[6]

Later in life, she performed with two of her daughters, Ethel and Elsie, whistling and singing twins known as "the May Blossoms."[3] Shaw also made some of the earliest recordings of whistling. In 1888, while touring England, she made wax cylinders with Edison's representative, George Edward Gouraud. She later made commercial recordings, some of which have survived.[4] She was also one of the earliest celebrity spokeswomen for a weight loss product, in 1897 ads for "Dr. Edison Obesity Pills and Obesity Fruit Salts".[7]

Personal life[]

Alice Horton married William Holland Shaw. They had four daughters before they divorced in 1888.[8] There was a rumor that she divorced to marry "Buffalo Bill", William Cody.[9] She testified that she had no material assets and lived with her aunt in 1903.[10] She hoped to marry again, to David L. Howell, but he died in 1907 before their wedding.[11]

References[]

  1. ^ Walter Gerard Cooper, The Cotton States and International Exposition and South, Illustrated (Illustrator 1896): 192.
  2. ^ Frank Wilson, "Mrs. Alice J. Shaw" Topeka Daily Capital (June 17, 1888): 10. via Newspapers.comopen access
  3. ^ a b Daniel H. Resneck, "Whistling Women" American Heritage 33(5)(August/September 1982).
  4. ^ a b Jacob Smith, Eco-Sonic Media (University of California Press 2015): 58-60. ISBN 9780520961494
  5. ^ "The Financial Whistle" New York Times (November 15, 1888): 5.
  6. ^ Alexandra Petri, A Field Guide to Awkward Silences (Penguin 2016): 53. ISBN 9780451469618
  7. ^ "She Was Fat" (advertisement), Philadelphia Inquirer (April 4, 1897): 35. via Newspapers.comopen access
  8. ^ "Mrs. Shaw's Husband" New York Times (February 25, 1889): 1.
  9. ^ "Amusements" Inter Ocean (May 15, 1888).
  10. ^ "Mrs. Alice J. Shaw's Debt" New York Times (February 10, 1903): 16. via Newspapers.comopen access
  11. ^ "Answers Miss Shaw's Suit" New York Times (May 2, 1909): 1.

Sample from 1907[]

Alice J. Shaw and her daughters whistling

A 1907 recording of Alice Shaw and her twin daughters performing a whistling trio, "Spring-tide Revels"

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