Kate Drew

From ESAT
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Kate Drew (fl. 1900) was a singer.

Biography

Born Kate Greaves Rickards, daughter of William Rickards and the music teacher Georgina Louisa Rickards, in Kensington, London, on 4 March 1863. (She took her surname after her mother's second husband, Walter Paul Drew). Probaly had her first musical training with her mother, perfoming at various local events, and was one of the earliest students at the Royal College of Music in the early 1880s. Her student performances (e.g. in The Marriage of Figaro and Cherubini’s The Water Carrier) then led to an engagement with the Carl Rosa Opera Company.

Contribution to SA theatre, film, media and/or performance

Kate Drew accompanied her husband to South Africa in December 1895, and seems to have taken up performing again, for according to The Stage of 30 March 1899 (in the section "South African Stage") Madam Kate Drew was associated with a performance of Trial by Jury in Johannesburg in that year.

She is also mentioned by D.C. Boonzaier, who refers to her as one of the "popular singers of the day", she was one of the solo participants in the Bloemfontein Flood Benefit (a matinee benefit performance for the sufferers in the disastrous flood in Bloemfontein), put on in the Cape Town Opera House on 28 January, 1904, by a company brought together for the purpose by Grant Fallowes.

She died in South Africa on 23 April 1940.

Sources

"Kate Drew", The Carl Rosa Trust: www.carlrosatrust.org.uk[1]

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: p. 418.

Go to the ESAT Bibliography

Return to

Return to ESAT Personalities D

Return to South African Theatre Personalities

Return to The ESAT Entries

Return to Main Page