Tag: Elsie Janis

  • Elsie Janis

    It is difficult to attach a label to Elsie Jane Bierbower (1889-1956). She was, amongst other things, a stage and screen actor, a singer, a screenwriter, a lyricist, NBC’s first female announcer, an author, and one of the first people to entertain troops on the frontline, when she became known as ‘the sweetheart of the American Expeditionary Force’.

    As ‘Baby Elsie’, Janis started singing at church aged two and a half. She made her stage debut aged six, in a professional production of East Lynne. Next came vaudeville, where she demonstrated her skill at impersonating celebrities. In 1906, she appeared on Broadway for the first time. By 1914, Janis was writing songs for herself and for other performers, including Vernon and Irene Castle. 

    After the United States joined in the First World War, Janis  and a small troupe toured the battle zones; she even learned some French so she could entertain French troops. 

    She wrote a memoir in 1925, and by 1930 was writing for the cinema. She worked on the screenplay for Madam Satan, as well as contributing songs written in collaboration with Jack King.

    During the Second World War, Janis toured for the troops again, even performing with Bob Hope, who was following where she had led.

    Show business glamour was maintained to the very end. When Janis died in 1956, her friend Mary Pickford was at her bedside. 

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