Yolande Oglesby Theater Programs and Kitty Cheatham Papers

Overview

Scope and Contents

Biographical Note

Subject Terms

Administrative Information

Detailed Description

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Finding Aid for Yolande Oglesby Theater Programs and Kitty Cheatham Papers, 1900-1970 | The Sousa Archives and Center for American Music

By Nolan Vallier

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Collection Overview

Title: Yolande Oglesby Theater Programs and Kitty Cheatham Papers, 1900-1970Add to your cart.View associated digital content.

ID: 12/9/119

Primary Creator: Oglesby, Yolande (1917-2012)

Other Creators: Cheatham, Kitty (1864-1946)

Extent: 1.75 cubic feet

Arrangement: Arranged alphabetically by city and alphabetically by theater or subject therein, with personal papers at the beginning.

Date Acquired: 11/19/1996. More info below under Accruals.

Subjects: Boston, Massachusetts, Chicago, Illinois, Concert Programs, Concerts, Depression, 1929 United States, Films, Musical Repertoires, New York, Opera, Photographs, Prohibition, Theater orchestra music, Theatre, Theatrical Productions, Vaudeville, Vaudeville songs -- United States, Vocal music

Languages: English, French, Italian

Scope and Contents of the Materials

Consists of personal papers, including one piece of sheet music and two photographs, belonging to Kitty Cheatham. Also includes concert programs and theater playbills collected by Kitty Cheatham between 1917-1920 and Yolande Oglesby between 1930 and 1970. There is no clear distinction between these two bodies of programs and playbills, so they remain interfilled as one collection of programs. The concert programs and theatre playbills come from theaters and concert halls in Boston, New York, Paris, Chicago, London, Edinburgh, Dublin, Philadelphia, St. Louis, Atlanta, and Denver.

Of particular note are Vaudeville and Ziegfeld Follies programs featuring Eddie Cantor, W. C. Fields, Ed Wynn, Al Jolson, Rudee Vallee, and Ethel Merman.  In addition, many playbills include premieres and early off-broadway runs of musicals and opera-musicals by Jerome Kern, Oscar Hammerstein, Frank Loesser, Lew Brown, Cole Porter, Irving Berlin, Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart, Sigmund Romberg, Victor Herbert, George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin, Gian Carlo Menotti, Kurt Weill, Marc Blitzstein, Leonard Bernstein, and Meredith Wilson.  Several souvenir programs from the premieres of films are included; among these are: Le Miracle des Loups (1924) and Lawrence of Arabia (1962). The collection also includes premiere playbills for plays by the following playwrights: Tennessee Williams, Arthur Miller, Dubose Heyward, Eugene O'Neil, and George S. Kaufman.  Many of these premiers feature such actors as: Lionel Barrymore, Ethel Barrymore, Walter Hampden, Helen Hayes, Ed Wynn, Fred Astair, George Cohen, Paul Robeson, Ethel Waters, Boris Karloff, and Christopher Plummer. There are also many dance programs, including performances by: the Ballet Russes, Shawn, Uday Shankar, and Veloz and Yolande. A smaller number of fine art music programs are included as well, and feature performances by Serge Kousevitsky, Serge Rachmaninoff, Jascha Heifetz, Fritz Kreisler, Yehudi Menuhin, and Moriz Rosenthal.

See also 35/3/68, Box 3, Folder 41, "Yolande Oglesby".

Biographical Note

Yolande Oglesby (1917-2012) was born in Chicago Illinois on January 13, 1917. She was the daughter of Frederick Wainwright Perkins, a wealthy architect from Chicago, and Yolande Vandeveer Perkins, whose family descended from the Vandeveer Family (one of the first families to settle in New Netherlands). At the age of 2, her family retired to the country in Morrisonville, Illinois. While her father continued his architectural practice in Morrisonville, he also co-owned a sugar plantation in Cuba with his brother that he managed from abroad. Two years later, the family moved to Boston. At the time, her sister Emily, who was four years older than Yolande, enrolled in the Brimmer School near Boston College. Yoldane would enroll shortly thereafter. Outside of school, the girls were raised by a governess and rarely saw their parents. At the age of 6, Yolande's father sent both sisters to the Lebec Boarding School in Paris, France. While attending the boarding school, the girls' father died and their mother transferred them to a boarding school in Sheffield, England for the remainder of the school year. At age 13, the girls moved back to Boston where they attended Windsor School. Oglesby seems to have participated in school plays around this time, which may have later inspired her love for theatrical and musical productions later in life. The Great Depression seems not to have affected the family's lavish lifestyle, Oglesby claims that she never needed to work for a living and that her mother purchased several acres of land in Illinois during the Depression. They even spent several summers away from Boston in order to ride horses at their ranch in Wyoming. After graduating high school, Oglesby did not enroll in college, but instead moved to New York City. Throughout the 1930s and 40s, Oglesby traveled exstensively as is noted by the location and dates of the concert programs and theatre playbills after 1930.

Oglesby was married three times during her life. At age 25, she married Tom Ponting; the two were divorced soon after they were wed. In 1943, she married, Dick Oglesby, with whom she had two children; the two were divorced by the late 1940s. After moving to Florida in the early 1950s, she married Mark Lasswell, with whom she had one child. After an unhappy and abusive marriage, the two divorced in 1953. Sometime after the 1960s, she moved back to her family's estate in Morrisonville, Illinois. Oglesby died in 2012.

Throughout her life, Oglesby attended numerous theatrical, musical, and dance programs in theatres around the world. Although it is unclear how she came to be in the possession of Kitty Cheatham's personal materials, it seems she not only collected programs attended by Cheatham but also amassed her own collection of theater programs.

Subject/Index Terms

Boston, Massachusetts
Chicago, Illinois
Concert Programs
Concerts
Depression, 1929 United States
Films
Musical Repertoires
New York
Opera
Photographs
Prohibition
Theater orchestra music
Theatre
Theatrical Productions
Vaudeville
Vaudeville songs -- United States
Vocal music

Administrative Information

Repository: The Sousa Archives and Center for American Music

Accruals: December 20, 1996.

Acquisition Source: Yolande Olgesby

Acquisition Method: Gift

Related Materials:

See 35/3/68, Box 3, Folder 41, "Yolande Oglesby" contains original control file created by MPAL.

See also Kitty Cheatham Personal Papers at the Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville. http://tsla.tnsosfiles.com.s3.amazonaws.com/history/manuscripts/findingaids/CHEATHAM_KITTY_PAPERS_1892-1946.pdf

Related to Yolande Oglesby, see the Frederick Wainwright Perkins Papers at the University of Illinois, Illinois History and Lincoln Collections: https://www.library.illinois.edu/ihx/archon/?p=collections/controlcard&id=851

As well as the Oral History of Yolande Oglesby, located at the University of Illinois at Springfield: http://www.idaillinois.org/cdm/ref/collection/uis/id/4752

For Theatre Programs related to Chicago Theatres see: https://www.chipublib.org/fa-chicago-theater-collection-historic-programs/

For Theatre Programs related to Boston and New York see: https://guides.library.harvard.edu/htc AND https://collections.mcny.org/Explore/Highlights/Broadway%20Productions/


Box and Folder Listing


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Box 2Add to your cart.
Folder 1: New York, Metropolitan Opera House Programs, 1930-1959Add to your cart.
Folder 2: New York, Morosco Theatre Programs, 1933-1955Add to your cart.
Of Note: Arthur Miller's "Death of a Salesman," 1949 (contains advertisement for Marc Blitzstein's Regina); Tennessee Williams' "Cat on a Hot Tin Roof," 1955.
Folder 3: New York, Music Box Theatre Programs, 1932-1957Add to your cart.
Of Note: George Gershwin and Ira Gershwin's "Of Thee I Sing," 1932; George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart's "Merrilly We Roll Along," 1934; Maxwell Anderson and Kurt Weill's "Lost in the Stars," 1949.
Folder 4: New York, National Theatre Programs, 1937-1956Add to your cart.
Of Note: "The Tragedy of Julius Caesar," production by Orson Wells with Music by Marc Blitzstein, 1938; Ethel Barrymore in "The Corn is Green," 1941.
Folder 5: New York, New Amsterdam Theatre Programs, 1931-1932Add to your cart.
Of Note: Irving Berlin and Moss Hart's "Face the Music," 1932.
Folder 6: New York, The Playhouse Theatre Programs, 1931-1954Add to your cart.
Folder 7: New York, Plymouth Theatre Programs, 1919-1955Add to your cart.
Of Note: John Barrymore and Lionel Barrymore in "The Jest," 1919.
Folder 8: New York, Radio City Music Hall Programs, 1947-1959Add to your cart.

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