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In 2004, Ross was presented with the Nightlife Award for 'Outstanding Cabaret Male Vocalist'. The Mabel Mercer Foundation awarded him with a 'Mabel Award' in 2006. He received a MAC Lifetime Achievement award from the Manhattan Association of Cabarets & Clubs in 2015; [14] and in 2016 Ross was inducted into the Cabaret Hall of Fame. [15]
Beretta was a cabaret singer based first in San Francisco, [2] and for most of her career in New York. [3] Early in her career she worked with composer John Wallowitch [4] and singer Johnny Mathis; she was also associated with Tommy Tune and actress Kathleen Chalfant in her career. [5] "Clubs are probably the best training anyone could possibly ...
Singer Leonard Warren died after performing in the opera La forza del destino at the New York Metropolitan Opera. He had sung Don Carlo's act III aria, which begins Morir, tremenda cosa ("to die, a momentous thing"), when he started coughing and gasping. He fell face first to the ground and it was revealed he had died of a massive heart attack.
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Jimmie Daniels performed primarily music by George Gershwin, Cole Porter, and Harold Arlen. He moved on the stages of New York, Paris, London and Monaco. [3] In 1933 and 1934, Daniels toured Europe and performed at different places like Summer Sporting Club in Monte Carlo and Ciro's in London (with Reginald Forsythe). Back in the United States ...
She was also nicknamed the First Lady of the Supper Clubs by Eleanor Roosevelt. [4] She was once referred to as a "luscious, hazel-eyed Milwaukee blonde who sings the way Garbo looks". [5] During the peak of Hildegarde's popularity in the 1930s and 1940s, she was booked in cabarets and supper clubs at least 45 weeks a year.
A former New York prosecutor and retired judge reportedly took his own life Tuesday during an apparent shootout with the FBI as agents descended on his home to arrest him in a federal corruption case.
Julius Withers Monk (November 10, 1912, Spencer, North Carolina – August 17, 1995, New York City) was an American impresario in the New York cabaret scene. His 1956 revue, Four Below, has been characterized as "the first legitimate cafe revue in New York City" [1]