.
So what to do for
five whole damp and chilly days. Ah! Tidy my computer. What are some of these
files lingering on my desktop? Bits and pieces of ‘interesting stuff’ that I’ve
saved, at one time or another. Clues, and suchlike.
Ah, here’s a hard
one. Wharton. ‘[William] Henry Wharton’ was a baritone from Manchester. A fine
baritone. He sang in the best English companies, in America, and he became a
star in Australia. But he broke down and went home to Manchester to die. When
it, suddenly, was revealed (to me) that he had a wife. And there she is,
travelling with the Lyster Opera Company in 1865. But not 1864. Who is she? Is
she a singer? A chorine perhaps? Well, I’m still searching … but during my scanning of the chorus lists, I
gathered a handful of ‘candidates’, ladies to whom I couldn’t put a history.
Miss Shirley, Miss Ainsworth, Miss Gregory and one, Mrs Andrews or Andrew, who
sometimes appeared as a principal and sometimes as leader of the sopranos. I
know all the other principals, even the very bit part-cum-chorus men, but who
was this Mrs Andrew(s), who held the same spot in the Lyster company from 1862
to 1868?
And Edwin? When
one of his children was born, he posted in the Australian press that he was
‘late of Dean Water Hall, Wilmslow, Cheshire’. Sounds grand? It wasn’t. His
father didn’t reside in marble halls, he was a tailor and Edwin was brought up
to the same trade, before becoming a ‘clerk’.
Shortly after
their marriage, Edwin and Theresa emigrated to Australia, and ‘Theresa Shirley’
made her Aussie debut.
Probably the main reason for her invisibility, through
much of the next decade, was children. Five of them, the last (which died) in
1864. By which time, Theresa had become longterm comprimaria prima with
Australia’s best opera company. And in 1868, she travelled to America with
them.
Did she come back?
A Mr Edwin Andrew,
‘storeman’, of Windsor, Melbourne was in the bankruptcy court, in 1867,
complaining that his wife had more or less abandoned him and the children. Is
that our Edwin or another one? Our one is supposed to be in Beechworth.
Well, I don’t know
whether Mrs Andrew came home, and back to her husband. He died at 58 Newtown,
Beechworth 12 August 1889 (though the family historians insist he lived till
1905). And she … well, now I know who she was, but not what became of her.
Maybe the family
knows. The Andrews, the Whitelaws, the Diedrichs and the Macnamaras, the
Southams …
Oh, and if Theresa
Shirley Andrew was ‘Mrs Andrew’, who the hell was ‘Miss Shirley’? One thing
leads to another. Or a mother.
2 comments:
Thank you for the article Kurt. Kurt made me aware of the article he was writing recently but its great to see it up and with attachments. Only by supporting such great research and commitment by historians such as Kurt will we learn those hidden truths about ourselves. Being a keen Family historian I was aware of the family tree below Therese Shirley Nolan (Mrs Andrew) but am still unaware of what happened after Kurts account. I am of course now inspired to do so and will combine my efforts with his. I also will pass on this info to her descendants 'and put them in touch with Kurt. Well done and to your readers, Stay tuned.
Dear Mr Gänzl,
I am very keen to communicate with you if at all possible. I have been commissioned to write a book about a louche character whom Emily Soldene mentions in her Recollections. He was later thrown into Mazas prison in Paris after he stole diamonds to present to Hortense Schneider. Clearly this is a world you know inside out and outside in, and I would love to ask you a couple of questions. I don't know how else to contact you other than like this. If you could possibly respond, I would be very grateful! If it is too much bother, I quite understand.
Yours,
Rebecca : reb.gowers@gmail.com
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