Difference between revisions of "Florence Calzado"
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Coming to South Africa with the [[Poussard-Bailey Opera Company]] in 1867, she was billed as [[Florence Calzado]] and gave more than 150 performances in most of the major centres of the country. | Coming to South Africa with the [[Poussard-Bailey Opera Company]] in 1867, she was billed as [[Florence Calzado]] and gave more than 150 performances in most of the major centres of the country. | ||
− | When Smythe and Poussard left for England and France just after their last | + | When Smythe and Poussard left for England and France just after their last concert in November of 1868, the two singers stayed on at the Cape until June 1869 to present a few more concerts (''inter alia'' in the [[Mutual Hall]], Cape Town), now billed as [[Calzado-Bailey]]. They then sailed directly back to Melbourne to rejoin the rest of the company and reconstitute the [[Poussard-Bailey Company]]. |
== Sources == | == Sources == |
Revision as of 05:33, 24 December 2021
Florence Calzado (fl circa 1860s)[1] is one of the professional names of the "serio-comic vocalist" Florence Beverley.
Contents
Biography
According to the blog Out of the In Bottle[2], virtually nothing seems to be known about either Florence Beverley or Florence Calzado (her stage name for a while - she is also referred to Floraette Blanche Beverley on at least one occasion). While in South Africa she was billed as a "serio-comic vocalist" and having linked up with him, apparently she became the "wife" of violinist Horace Poussard, having had a child by him.
She definitely joined forces with him, the manager Robert Smythe and the latter's wife, the soprano Amelia Bailey, to found the Poussard-Bailey Opera Company and undertake a 4-year "Grand Tour" of India and South Africa. In 1869 the company was also known as the Calzado-Bailey Company
The blog further mentions that she later listed herself as a widow, and goes on to marry a miner named Samuel Paynter Thomas Cornish in Hill End NSW. After that nothing more seems to be heard of her.
Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance
Coming to South Africa with the Poussard-Bailey Opera Company in 1867, she was billed as Florence Calzado and gave more than 150 performances in most of the major centres of the country.
When Smythe and Poussard left for England and France just after their last concert in November of 1868, the two singers stayed on at the Cape until June 1869 to present a few more concerts (inter alia in the Mutual Hall, Cape Town), now billed as Calzado-Bailey. They then sailed directly back to Melbourne to rejoin the rest of the company and reconstitute the Poussard-Bailey Company.
Sources
http://outoftheinkbottle.blogspot.com/2009/06/calzado-who.html
D.C. Boonzaier, 1923. "My playgoing days – 30 years in the history of the Cape Town stage", in SA Review, 9 March and 24 August 1923. (Reprinted in Bosman 1980: pp. 374-439.)
F.C.L. Bosman. 1980. Drama en Toneel in Suid-Afrika, Deel II, 1856-1916. Pretoria: J.L. van Schaik: pp. 223, 243-6,
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