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Elaine Delmar

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Elaine Delmar
Delmar in 1962
Born1 September 1939
Harpenden

Elaine Delmar (born 13 September 1939) is a British singer and actress, with a long career in stage acting, music recording and concert performances. Born in the English town of Harpenden, she is the daughter of Jamaican-born jazz trumpeter Leslie "Jiver" Hutchinson. After learning the piano as a child, including a performance on BBC Radio, Delmar became a singer and toured with her father's band from the age of sixteen.

In 1952/1953, she appeared in Finian's Rainbow in Liverpool. She sang with Coleridge Goode's group 'The Dominoes' for a month in Germany in the mid-1950s,[1] before going solo. She performed in clubs and on overseas tours. She appeared in the Ken Russell film Mahler (1974).

As of 2009, Delmar was living in the north London suburb of Hadley Wood.[2]

Early life

Elaine Delmar was born on 1 September 1939 in Harpenden, in the English county of Hertfordshire. Her parents were father Jiver Hutchinson, a jazz trumpeter born in Jamaica,[3] and mother Phyllis, both of whom moved to the UK in the 1930s. She spent her childhood with her younger brother and sister living in North London, where she attended the Trinity Grammar School in Wood Green (now known as Woodside High School.[4] She began learning the piano when she was six, going on to play the instrument on the radio during the BBC's Children's Hour when she was thirteen.[3] She began touring with her father at the age of sixteen, singing with his band at performances in venues such as US Air Force bases. She was on tour with him when he was killed in a road accident in 1959.[4]

Career

Singer

Delmar's professional singing career began in the mid-1950s when she was selected by bassist Coleridge Goode and Lauderic Caton to sing with their quartet, The Dominoes. She spent a month with them at the Club Ecstase in Bad Harzburg, Germany. Goode later said in his autobiography that "I think it's fair to say that we started off her career".[5] Delmar left the Dominoes after her spell with them in Germany and launched a solo career, including playing at clubs and carrying out overseas tours.[3]

During 2010 she featured in concert with Wynton Marsalis's Lincoln Center Jazz Orchestra.[6][7]

Acting

Delmar made her first stage appearance in the late 1950s when she was cast in the play Finian's Rainbow in a revival production in Liverpool.[4] She then joined the cast of the Richard Rodgers musical drama No Strings in London's West End, as an understudy for Beverly Todd.[8] In 1972 she was part of the original London cast of the musical Cowardy Custard at the Mermaid Theatre, which was based on the songs of Noël Coward.[9] In 1977 she took on her biggest stage position, a starring role in Bubbling Brown Sugar, and then went on to appear in both the London and Broadway versions of Jerome Kern in Hollywood.[10] Another role, in which she was casts purely as an actress, was A Map Of The World at the Royal National Theatre. She was cast as the Bohemian Princess in the Ken Russell film Mahler.[11]

Discography

  • A Swinging Chick[12]
  • But Beautiful[12]
  • Elaine Delmar and Friends[12]
  • Nobody Else But Me[12]
  • S'Wonderful[12]

Theatre appearances

References

  1. ^ Coleridge Goode and Roger Cotterrell, Bass Lines: A Life in Jazz. London: Northway Publications (2002) p.106.
  2. ^ Francine Wolfisz. "Stars line-up for Mill Hill Music Festival". Time Series. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  3. ^ a b c Colin Larkin (2000). Encyclopedia of popular music (4 ed.). Oxford University Press. p. 842. ISBN 9780195313734.
  4. ^ a b c "Elaine Delmar". All About Jazz. Retrieved 12 March 2020.
  5. ^ Coleridge Goode; Roger Cotterrell (2014). "Chapter 2". Bass Lines: A Life in Jazz. Northway Publications. ISBN 9780992822217.
  6. ^ Fordham, John (20 June 2010). "Wynton Marsalis: Barbican, London". The Guardian. Retrieved 28 November 2010.
  7. ^ Massarik, Jack (18 June 2010). "Roots and rites of swing from Wynton Marsalis". This is London. Archived from the original on 26 July 2010. Retrieved 2010-11-28.
  8. ^ Theatre World. Vol. 60. Iliffe Specialist Publications, Limited. 1964. p. 39.
  9. ^ Denny Martin Flinn (2006). Little Musicals for Little Theatres: A Reference Guide to the Musicals that Don't Need Chandeliers Or Helicopters to Succeed. Hal Leonard Corporation. p. 231. ISBN 9780879103217.
  10. ^ "SUNDAY JAZZ LUNCH: Elaine Delmar". Ronnie Scott's Jazz Club. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  11. ^ a b "Bio". ElaineDelmar.com. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  12. ^ a b c d e "Elaine Delmar biography". Michael Valentine Studio. Retrieved 13 March 2020.