Willa Holt Wakefield (November 9, 1870 – June 3, 1946) was an American vaudeville performer. Wakefield told stories and recited in the "pianologue" style, and was billed as "the Lady of Optimism". [1]
Willa Holt was born in Cuthbert, Georgia, the daughter of Peyton Robert Holt and Harriet (Hattie) Missouri Platt Holt. Her father was a pharmacist and a Confederate States Army veteran of the American Civil War. She studied piano with Theodor Leschetizky. [2]
Wakefield taught school as a young woman. [3] She was a pianologue on the vaudeville stage in the 1910s and 1920s. [4] [5] Her act featured sentimental, patriotic, humorous and nostalgic stories, recitations, and songs, presented with "elegance, refinement, self-control, and dignity". [6] [7] "She is quite the pleasantest entertainer one could wish for," noted a Detroit critic in 1909. [8] In a 1917 interview, she explained her choice of material, saying "We very often move in a veritable mental mist in this sad old grumbling world, a thick mist of prejudice and irritability and hyper sensitiveness--and so we become more and more hypercritical ourselves. Yet, after all, it is a mist that can be easily dispelled by thrilling beams of mental sunshine." [1] Holt was promoted as a rival to the equally popular but more risqué entertainer Eva Tanguay. [4] [6] She performed in England in 1913. [9]
Wakefield had a reputation for making shrewd investments, [10] and owned a farm on Long Island as well as a home on New York's Riverside Drive. [6] She also performed on radio programs. [11]
Wakefield married Vienna-born sculptor Arnold Frederick Foerster in 1915; they divorced in 1936. She died in 1946, in Los Angeles, at the age of 75. [12]
Willa Holt Wakefield (November 9, 1870 – June 3, 1946) was an American vaudeville performer. Wakefield told stories and recited in the "pianologue" style, and was billed as "the Lady of Optimism". [1]
Willa Holt was born in Cuthbert, Georgia, the daughter of Peyton Robert Holt and Harriet (Hattie) Missouri Platt Holt. Her father was a pharmacist and a Confederate States Army veteran of the American Civil War. She studied piano with Theodor Leschetizky. [2]
Wakefield taught school as a young woman. [3] She was a pianologue on the vaudeville stage in the 1910s and 1920s. [4] [5] Her act featured sentimental, patriotic, humorous and nostalgic stories, recitations, and songs, presented with "elegance, refinement, self-control, and dignity". [6] [7] "She is quite the pleasantest entertainer one could wish for," noted a Detroit critic in 1909. [8] In a 1917 interview, she explained her choice of material, saying "We very often move in a veritable mental mist in this sad old grumbling world, a thick mist of prejudice and irritability and hyper sensitiveness--and so we become more and more hypercritical ourselves. Yet, after all, it is a mist that can be easily dispelled by thrilling beams of mental sunshine." [1] Holt was promoted as a rival to the equally popular but more risqué entertainer Eva Tanguay. [4] [6] She performed in England in 1913. [9]
Wakefield had a reputation for making shrewd investments, [10] and owned a farm on Long Island as well as a home on New York's Riverside Drive. [6] She also performed on radio programs. [11]
Wakefield married Vienna-born sculptor Arnold Frederick Foerster in 1915; they divorced in 1936. She died in 1946, in Los Angeles, at the age of 75. [12]