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Dolly Sisters

 

Dolly Sisters, singing‐dancing team. Jennie Dolly [née Janszieka Deutsch] (1892–1941) and Rosie Dolly [née Roszika Deutsch] (1892– 1970), two small, dark‐complexioned, almond‐eyed beauties, were the most successful sister act of their day, their four‐week run at the Palace being the longest such stand for any sister act at that theatre. Born in Hungary, but raised on New York's Lower East Side, they were headliners in vaudeville before they were chosen to sing and dance in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1911. Other major appearances included A Winsom Widow (1912), the national tour of Oh, Look! (1918), and Greenwich Village Follies of 1924. Rosie appeared alone in The Whirl of New York (1914), after Jennie temporarily broke up the act to team with her husband, Harry Fox.

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Dolly Sisters

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Their billing order was usually "Rosie and Jenny Dolly" so we can only presume that's the order they posed for photographs in.

The Dolly Sisters, twins Roszika (Rosie) and Janszieka (Jenny) Deutsch were Vaudeville performers.

Biographies

They were born October 25, 1892 in Hungary, and emigrated to the United States in 1905. They perfected a single-sex "tandem" dance act - practising in front of mirrors - under the name of 'The Dolly Sisters' they began earning money in beer halls as early as 1907. Barred for being under age by the New York City stage, they toured the Orpheum Circuit until 1909 when they debuted on the Keith Vaudeville Circuit till 1911 when they signed with the Ziegfeld Follies for two seasons.

In addition to making about a half dozen films from 1913 to 1920, they toured the theatres and dance halls of Europe. Sometimes they would appear with separate partners as "rival" acts to boost ticket sales. Their gambling "career" was nearly as successful. They won $850,000 in one season at Deauville and one evening in Cannes, Jenny won 4 million francs, which she converted to a collection of jewelry; she then went on to win another 11 million.

The Dolly Sisters onstage

Their private life was as melodramatic as their public life was stellar. Circa 1918, they became lovers of Harry Gordon Selfridge.

Onstage (center) at the Ziegfeld Follies. Their friend Olive Thomas can be seen just above the leftmost Dolly Sister

Jenny was involved in a serious car crash near Bordeaux with her former lover Max Constant. It took six weeks, 15 painful surgical procedures and the sale of most her jewelry to restore Jenny to some semblance of her former beauty but it left her "a broken shell", as she would say to friends.

Jenny died on May 1, 1941, having committed suicide by hanging herself in the shower of her apartment in the Shelton Hotel.

Rosie lived long enough to see a biopic made in 1945 of their lives called, inevitably The Dolly Sisters - starring June Haver and Betty Grable - but in 1962 she attempted to follow her sister in suicide. The bid failed. She died on February 1, 1970, succumbing to heart failure.

Sources

  • Farnsworth, Marjorie. The Ziegfeld Follies. With an introduction by Billie Burke Ziegfeld. New York: Putnam. 1956.
  • [1]
  • The Delectable Dollies by Gary Chapman. Stroud. Sutton. 2006.

External links


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Oxford Companion to American Theatre. The Oxford Companion to American Theatre. Copyright © 2004 by Oxford University Press, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia on Answers.com. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Dolly Sisters Read more

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