Stephen Chambers Posted July 29, 2006 Share Posted July 29, 2006 Joseph Bridger Cawthorn is the man. He was born in New York in 1868 and began acting on stage at the age of four. His parents were both from England, where he then began performing in the musical halls there at the age of nine. He then returned to the U.S. where he performed on stage in variety shows and, later, motion pictures. According to the 1910 census, he was living on Bangs Avenue in New Jersy. His wife, Queenie, was born in Scotland and was an actor as well. Mike, In that case; on the 1901 Census he was staying at the St. Ermin's Hotel, Westminster, London, age 33, single, and gave his occupation as Actor, born United States. Whilst four lines above him may well be his future bride (?); Queenie Vassar, 30, widow, Actress, born Scotland. (If you let me have your email address, I can send you the Census return.) And he was living in LA in 1930: Name: Joseph Cawthorn Spouse: Queenie Birth: abt 1868 - location Residence: 1930 - city, Los Angeles, California The California Death Index, 1940-1997 Record lists his death in 1949: Name: JOSEPH BRIDGER CAWTHORN Birth: date - NEW YORK Death: dd mm 1949 - city And I can now confirm that he was indeed married to Queenie Vassar (1870-1960). She was born in Glasgow and first went to the United States in 1884. Joseph Cawthorn was born on 29th March 1867/8, and died on 21st January 1949 following a stroke at his Beverly Hills home. He had moved to Hollywood in 1927, to begin a career as a character actor. There's a good resume of his career here, though no mention of his having played any sort of concertina. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stephen Chambers Posted July 29, 2006 Share Posted July 29, 2006 As he was a concertina player, he must be the one who is grey haired and bald! If anyone thinks that is too much guessing, check out the photos someone posted on the Forum of the attendees at Jody Kruskal's workshops in England earlier this month. I rest my case. I guess there's no hope for me then, being of a hairy disposition. Maybe I should get my head shaved? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike Pierceall Posted July 29, 2006 Author Share Posted July 29, 2006 As he was a concertina player, he must be the one who is grey haired and bald! If anyone thinks that is too much guessing, check out the photos someone posted on the Forum of the attendees at Jody Kruskal's workshops in England earlier this month. I rest my case. I guess there's no hope for me then, being of a hairy disposition. Maybe I should get my head shaved? I just listened to a recording (sans concertina) of Cawthorn singing "I Can Dance With Everyone But My Wife" 1916, for which he wrote the lyrics. He was a tenor. No success finding a recording with his concertina, though, yet. Mike Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stephen Chambers Posted July 29, 2006 Share Posted July 29, 2006 His parents were both from England ... Father: ALFRED CAWTHORNE Mother: SARAH E. WILLETT Alfred Joseph Chittenden Cawthorn was born on 11th April 1825 in Islington, London (father: Robert Cawthorn, Mother: Susan or Susanna) and christened on 24th May 1826 at Saint Luke Old Street, Finsbury, London. Sarah Elizabeth Willett was christened on 15th March 1826 at Saint Mary Magdalene, Bermondsey, London (Father: Thomas Willett, Mother: Ann). They married on 12th April 1849 at Saint Michael Paternoster, London. On the 1851 Census the couple were living at 2, Alfred Place, Bermondsey, and Alfred Cawthorn's occupation was given as Stock Broker's Clerk. It appears that a daughter, Emma Louise, was born in Bermondsey during the second quarter of that year. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan Worrall Posted July 29, 2006 Share Posted July 29, 2006 As he was a concertina player, he must be the one who is grey haired and bald! If anyone thinks that is too much guessing, check out the photos someone posted on the Forum of the attendees at Jody Kruskal's workshops in England earlier this month. I rest my case. I guess there's no hope for me then, being of a hairy disposition. Maybe I should get my head shaved? I still have my hair, too. But then, I play anglo..... One more interesting factoid I picked up from Randy, who seems to know a lot about Mr. Cawthorne, our putative English system concertinist. It seems he also had a brief stint on Broadway, where he starred in "Mother Goose". He played Mother Goose, in drag. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
allan atlas Posted July 29, 2006 Share Posted July 29, 2006 MIKE: you might also try looking him up in: G.C.D. Odell, Annals of the New York Stage, 15 vols. (New York, 1927-49; reprint: New York, 1970). . . . . allan Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stephen Chambers Posted July 30, 2006 Share Posted July 30, 2006 I still have my hair, too. But then, I play anglo..... Didn't the people at Jody Kruskal's workshops? And I thought I still had all mine from playing the English - you know, all that clean living! One more interesting factoid I picked up from Randy, who seems to know a lot about Mr. Cawthorne, our putative English system concertinist. It seems he also had a brief stint on Broadway, where he starred in "Mother Goose". He played Mother Goose, in drag. I guess you're not familiar with our strange English pantomime customs then? That would be normal for the "Dame" in any pantomime, and the "Principal Boy" is always a pretty girl in tights! (Very daring in the 19th century! ) The Music Hall star Dan Leno was a famous Mother Goose, around the same time. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Stephen Chambers Posted July 30, 2006 Share Posted July 30, 2006 It seems he also had a brief stint on Broadway, where he starred in "Mother Goose". Oh, and I meant to mention that Joseph Cawthorn first appeared on Broadway in the 1895 musical Excelsior Jr, and two years later he got his biggest break when he replaced William Collier as principal comedian in Miss Philadelphia (1897). Other Broadway appearances included The Fortune Teller (1898), The Rounders (1899), The Singing Girl (1899 - 1900), The Sleeping Beauty and the Beast (1901 - 1902), Mother Goose (1903 - 1904), Fritz in Tammany Hall (1905), The Free Lance (1906), The Hoyden (1907 - 1908), Little Nemo (1908 - 1909), Girlies (1910), The Slim Princess (1911), The Sunshine Girl (1913), The Girl from Utah (1914), Sybil (1916), Rambler Rose (1917), The Canary (1918 - 1919), The Half Moon (1920) and The Blue Kitten (1922). But by the time he appeared in the 1925 Marilyn Miller vehicle Sally, he was being written off as a "fading star" (after 30 years on Broadway), hence his move to Hollywood in 1927, where he began a whole new career as a character actor in films. I wonder what they were performing in London in 1901, when he was staying in the same hotel as Queenie Vassar and several other American actors/actresses? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Dan Worrall Posted July 30, 2006 Share Posted July 30, 2006 Well, not so brief a Braodway stint, then! Thanks for the panto links....I had no idea! Interesting that Mother Goose was being played in London just a couple of years before, likewise with a drag 'dame'. It seems the play Cawthorne was in must have been a UK import, not unlike those of recent years on Broadway. BTW, George M. Cohan also was in the 1903 production with Cawthorn. Since we are being so complete with his acting history, here are his Hollywood film credits, along with the characters he played in them. EC players must have lots of energy: The Postman Didn't Ring (1942) .... Silas Harwood So Ends Our Night (1941) .... Leopold Potzloch Scatterbrain (1940) .... Nicholas Raptis Lillian Russell (1940) .... Leopold Damrosch Hot Money (1936) .... Max Dourfuss One Rainy Afternoon (1936) .... Monsieur Pelerin ... aka Matinee Scandal (USA: reissue title) Brides Are Like That (1936) .... Uncle Fred Schultz The Great Ziegfeld (1936) .... Dr. Florenz Ziegfeld Sr. Freshman Love (1936) (as Joe Cawthorn) .... Robert C. Wilson ... aka Rhythm on the River Crime Over London (1936) .... Mr. Sherwood Harmony Lane (1935) .... Professor Henry Kleber Page Miss Glory (1935) .... Mr. J. Horace Freischutz Bright Lights (1935) .... Oscar Schlemmer ... aka Funny Face (UK) Smart Girl (1935) .... Karl Krausemeyer Gold Diggers of 1935 (1935) .... August Schultz Naughty Marietta (1935) (as Joseph Cawthorne) .... Herr 'Schumie' Schuman Sweet Music (1935) .... Sidney Selzer Maybe It's Love (1935) .... Adolph J. Mengle Sr. Sweet Adeline (1934) .... Oscar Schmidt Music in the Air (1934) .... Hans Uppman Young and Beautiful (1934) .... Herman Cline The Human Side (1934) .... Fritz Speigal Housewife (1934) (as Joe Cawthorne) .... Krueger The Last Gentleman (1934) .... Dr. Wilson Twenty Million Sweethearts (1934) (as Joseph Cawthorne) .... Mr. Herbert 'Herbie' Brokman Glamour (1934) .... Ibsen Lazy River (1934) .... Mr. Julius Ambrose The Cat and the Fiddle (1934) .... Rodolphe 'Rudy' Brieux Broken Dreams (1933) .... Pop Made on Broadway (1933) .... Maxie Schultz ... aka The Girl I Made (USA) Best of Enemies (1933) .... Gus Schneider Blondie Johnson (1933) .... Manager Grand Slam (1933) (uncredited) .... Alex Alexandrovitch (Peter's Investor) Whistling in the Dark (1933) .... Otto Barfuss ... aka Scared! (USA: TV title) Men Are Such Fools (1932) .... Werner They Call It Sin (1932) (as Joe Cawthorne) .... Mr. Robert A. Hollister ... aka The Way of Life (UK) Love Me Tonight (1932) (as Joseph Cawthorne) .... Dr. Armand de Fontinac White Zombie (1932) .... Dr. Bruner (missionary) Peach-O-Reno (1931) .... Joe Bruno The Runaround (1931) .... Lou ... aka Lovable and Sweet ... aka Waiting at the Church ... aka Waiting for the Bride (UK) A Tailor Made Man (1931) .... Huber Kiki (1931) .... Alfred Rapp Princess and the Plumber (1930) .... Merkl Dixiana (1930) .... Cornelius Van Horn, Carl's Father Dance Hall (1929) .... Bremmer Jazz Heaven (1929) .... Herman Kemple The Taming of the Shrew (1929) .... Gremio Street Girl (1929) .... Keppel (cafe owner) ... aka Barber John's Boy (USA) Speakeasy (1929) .... Yokel Hold 'Em Yale (1928) .... Professor ... aka At Yale Silk Legs (1927) .... Ezra Fulton Very Confidential (1927) .... Donald Allen Two Girls Wanted (1927) .... Philip Hancock Secret Studio (1927) .... Pa Merton It's a pity there are no records found (yet) on his vaudeville/music hall/opera house concertina material...such is much more difficult to come by. I did briefly check the minstrel collection at the University of Texas Ransom Center; nothing. Somewhere in the US there will be similar collections of vaudeville stuff, and his concertina photo will be there....any leads, Michael? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Leo Posted July 30, 2006 Share Posted July 30, 2006 (edited) This might be appropriate, maybe not. Maybe too late in time?? At worst I hope it's the right guy?? But here's something: One of his movies is in the public domain. "White Zombie". He plays a missionary. It's on Google Video here: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=84...eph+cawthorn%22 Or this might interest you Audio: http://www.archive.org/details/JosephCawthorn Another short clip half way down the page under Hit Broadway shows: http://www.archeophone.com/product_info.php?products_id=63 Some Sheet Music. Apparently he wrote the above song: http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/sheetmusic/n/n01/n0198/ More sheet music by, about, or performed by Joseph Cawthorn with pictures. 2 pages: http://levysheetmusic.mse.jhu.edu/otcgi/llscgi60 (unfortunately won't allow direct link. Click new search, then in top left block type Cawthorn {search for block}, then search will bring them up). Picture of him and Queenie, and where they are burried: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?p...emPhotos=Y& But alas nothing concertina...................................yet. Thanks Leo Edited July 31, 2006 by Leo Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kcbell Posted December 19, 2007 Share Posted December 19, 2007 This might be appropriate, maybe not. Maybe too late in time?? At worst I hope it's the right guy?? But here's something: Hi Joseph Cawthorn and Queenie Vassart are my great grand mother and great grand father if you woul dlike to contact me. Karin One of his movies is in the public domain. "White Zombie". He plays a missionary. It's on Google Video here: http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=84...eph+cawthorn%22 Or this might interest you Audio: http://www.archive.org/details/JosephCawthorn Another short clip half way down the page under Hit Broadway shows: http://www.archeophone.com/product_info.php?products_id=63 Some Sheet Music. Apparently he wrote the above song: http://scriptorium.lib.duke.edu/sheetmusic/n/n01/n0198/ More sheet music by, about, or performed by Joseph Cawthorn with pictures. 2 pages: http://levysheetmusic.mse.jhu.edu/otcgi/llscgi60 (unfortunately won't allow direct link. Click new search, then in top left block type Cawthorn {search for block}, then search will bring them up). Picture of him and Queenie, and where they are burried: http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?p...emPhotos=Y& But alas nothing concertina...................................yet. Thanks Leo Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kcbell Posted December 19, 2007 Share Posted December 19, 2007 Hi Joseph Cawthorne and Queenien Vassar are my grand mother and Grand father if you wish to contact me Karin Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Mike Pierceall Posted December 19, 2007 Author Share Posted December 19, 2007 Hi Joseph Cawthorne and Queenien Vassar are my grand mother and Grand father if you wish to contact me Karin Karin, As the one who opened this thread on your Grandfather, I'm pleased to welcome you to Cnet. How did you come to hear about us? I'm sure we'd all like know more about your grandparents and especially your grandfather's association with the concertina. Mike Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kcbell Posted December 19, 2007 Share Posted December 19, 2007 I just found you on the interent by doing a search for links to joe cawthorne K Hi Joseph Cawthorne and Queenien Vassar are my grand mother and Grand father if you wish to contact me Karin Karin, As the one who opened this thread on your Grandfather, I'm pleased to welcome you to Cnet. How did you come to hear about us? I'm sure we'd all like know more about your grandparents and especially your grandfather's association with the concertina. Mike Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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