Daisy Wood
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Daisy Wood | ||
Background information | ||
Birth name(s): | Daisy Violet Rose Wood | |
Date of birth: | September 15, 1877 | |
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Birth location: | Hoxton | |
Date of death: | October 19, 1961 (aged 84) | |
Death location: | Banstead, Surrey | |
Genre(s): | Music hall | |
Spouse(s): | Donald Alexander Munro 1899–1911 |
Daisy Violet Rose Wood (September 15, 1877 in Hoxton, London – October 19, 1961), was an English Music hall singer.
Contents |
[edit] Life and career
The fifth of nine children, the oldest being Matilda Alice Victoria Wood (1870-1922), performing under the stage name Marie Lloyd. Seven of the siblings took up stage careers. In their earliest years, costumed by their mother (Matilda Mary Caroline), they performed as The Fairy Bells Minstrels, singing temperance songs in local missions and church halls[1]. This ceased, when the eldest sister made her professional debut at the age of fifteen[2]. The children were entranced by music hall, their father (John, an artificial florist) working in the evenings at the nearby Royal Eagle Tavern.
Daisy, made her own first professional appearance in a play entitled My Willie at the South London Palace, on March 17, 1890. She went on to perform a solo musical act, making the most of her petite and dainty figure. She was thought to have been the prettiest of the sisters.
On April 26th, 1899 she married Donald Alexander Munro, an insurance broker and chairman of the Crown Theatre. She was only 21, her husband 26, and she retired from the theatre. They had two children, Donald (1902) and Dorothy Grace (1906). They moved to Kensington, but Donald fell ill the following year, and their fortunes were under pressure.
In her late twenties, Daisy returned to the stage, and due to the increasing fame of her sisters, at the top of the bill. In 1908 she was offered an immense sum to tour New York with her sisters (Marie, Alice and Rosie), by the William Morris Agency, and in the autumn they performed in New York, to great acclaim.
Her husband died on September 24th, 1911, aged 39. His widow continued to tour throughout the British Isles and internationally, until she finally retired in 1928, but occasionally returned to the stage with her sisters Alice and Rosie during the 1930s and World War II.
Daisy Wood died on October 19, 1961, aged 84 at her home in Banstead, Surrey.
[edit] Selected Songs
- Fishing for a Sweetheart
- One of the Ruins Cromwell knocked about a bit (made famous by Marie)
- Oh, Marie Lloyd!
- Popsy Wopsy
- Violets
[edit] References
- ^ In 1881 the family appear to have lived at 3 Bath Place, St Lukes. John Wood is 33, born in Bethnal Green. Matilda, 29, born in Shoreditch FHL Film 1341078 PRO Ref RG11 Piece 0361 Folio 103 Page 33
- ^ Gracie and Alice met a young girl named (Leah) Bella Orchard, while all performing in pantomime, at the Pavilion, Whitechapel Road, they took the 11 year old home for tea. By the following year, she was living with the family and worked as Marie's dresser. Later, she performed with Rosie, as the Sisters Lloyd, and became known as Bella Lloyd.
- The Golden Age of the Theatre - Daisy Wood (1877-1961) by Sidney Higgins, accessed on 12th October 2006
[edit] External links
Persondata | |
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NAME | Wood, Daisy |
ALTERNATIVE NAMES | Wood, Daisy Violet Rose |
SHORT DESCRIPTION | Music hall singer, sister of Marie Lloyd |
DATE OF BIRTH | September 15, 1877 |
PLACE OF BIRTH | Hoxton |
DATE OF DEATH | October 19, 1961 |
PLACE OF DEATH | Banstead, Surrey |