Sold Date:
August 10, 2023
Start Date:
April 10, 2014
Final Price:
£12.00
(GBP)
Seller Feedback:
13914
Buyer Feedback:
0
AN EXCELLENT COPY OF THIS CLASSIC SOPHIE TUCKER 78 featuring TED SHAPIRO & HIS ORCHESTRA
THE MAN I LOVE
b/w LIFE BEGINS AT FORTY
THERE IS A STANDARD DISPATCH TIME OF TEN DAYS FOR THIS ITEM - PLEASE LET ME KNOW IF YOU NEED IT FASTER! Sophie Tucker was born as Sophia Kalish on January 13, 1884 in Russia. When she was still an infant, her parents emigrated to the United States and settled near Hartford, Connecticut. In 1903, she was briefly married to Louis Tuck; from which she decided to change her name to Tucker. In 1917, Tucker played piano and sang in Burlesque and Vaudeville, at first in blackface as a Coon Shouter performing songs with an African American Influence. At a 1908 Vaudeville appearance her luggage and makeup kit were stolen shortly before the show, and Tucker hastily went on stage with no makeup, and to her surprise she was a bigger hit with the audience than she had been in blackfaceshe never wore blackface again. In 1921 Tucker hired pianist Ted Shapiro as her accompanist and musical director; Shapiro would remain with Tucker the rest of her career, and was also her lifelong friend. Tucker made her first movie appearance in the 1929 early sound motion picture Honky Tonk where she was billed with her nickname, The Last of the Red Hot Mammas. Her hearty sexual appetite was a frequent subject of her songs, unusual for female performers of the era. In 1938, due to her efforts to unionize professional actors, she was elected President of the American Federation of Actors. In the 1950s and into the early 1960s, Tucker made frequent television appearances and continued performing in the US and the UK until shortly before her death. Sophie Tucker died of lung cancer February 9, 1966 and was buried as Emmanuel Cemetery in Wethersfield (Middlesex County), Connecticut. DISC DETAILS UK PARLOPHONE R 3181 10" 78rpm SHELLAC THE MAN I LOVE (pressed from the original 1928 US stamper NICE!) LIFE BEGINS AT FORTY CONDITION - EX/EX+
Sophie Tucker who billed herself as "The Last Of The Red Hot Mammas" was one of the most popular singers of the Teens and 1920s. Her style is rarely considered to be Jazz, but rather harked back to the "Coon Shouter" or Ragtime vocal style. Occasionally she employed Jazz bands to back her up on her records and and in her live performances.
She made her debut in the Ziegfeld Follies in 1909 and made the first of her recordings, including Some of These Days for Edison in 1911. The tune, written by Shelton Brooks became an instant hit and her theme song, and later was the title of her autobiography published in 1945
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10" 78 RPM RECORDS NEED CAREFULLY PACKING, AND I CLAIM TO HAVE THE BEST PACKAGING IN THE WORLD FOR DISPATCHING THEM!!
THE GREG'S GREAT'S SYSTEM CONSISTS OF A SPECIALLY DESIGNED INNER BOX MADE OUT OF 1" THICK POLYSTYRENE, WHICH THEN GOES INSIDE A DOUBLE CORREGATED STIFF OUTER CARDBOARD CARTON. THE BOXES CAN TAKE UP TO 21 RECORDS,
USUALLY FOR MAILING OVERSEAS, I RECOMMEND NO MORE THAN 7 IN A BOX, OTHERWISE IT GOES OVER THE AIRMAIL SMALL PACKET MAXIMUM WEIGHT OF 2Kgs WHICH CAUSES A LARGE HIKE IN POSTAL RATES.
I SEND OUT ON AVERAGE ABOUT 30 PARCELS A WEEK AND DISPATCH IS NORMALLY DONE ONCE A WEEK