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Hetty King

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Full Name
  
Winifred Emms

Role
  
Musical Artist

Parents
  
William Emms

Name
  
Hetty King

Spouse
  
Ernie Lotinga (m. 1901)

Siblings
  
Harold Emms, Olive Emms

Hetty King voicesofvarietycomwpcontentuploads201309h
Born
  
21 April 1883 (
1883-04-21
)
Wallasey, Cheshire

Occupation
  
Music hall male impersonator

Died
  
September 28, 1972, Wimbledon, London, United Kingdom

People also search for
  
Harold Emms, William Emms, Albert Whelan, Ernie Lotinga, Olive Emms, David Robinson

Music Hall star & Male Impersonator Hetty King in "Performer " (Documentary) Part 1


Winifred Emms (4 April 1883 – 28 September 1972), best known by her stage name Hetty King, was an English entertainer who played in the music halls over a period of 70 years.

Contents

Rare 1916 1923 film of male impersonator hetty king 1934 recording fill em up


Birth

Emms was born in New Brighton, a seaside resort in Cheshire, and performed with her father on the beach in a company of minstrels.

Career

Emms adopted the name Hetty King when she first appeared on the stage of the Shoreditch Theatre, at the age of six with her father, William Emms (1856–1954), a comedian who used the stage name of Will King. For the week commencing 10 December 1904 she topped the programme at the newly opened (by 10 days) Empire-Hippodrome in Ashton-under-Lyne, billed as "The Society Gem". It was her first of many appearances at this theatre, part of the Broadhead circuit. By 1905, she was appearing in music halls, with her solo act, as a male impersonator, often dressed as a "swell". Her career spanned both World Wars when she performed in the uniform of either a soldier or a sailor. In the First World War her act included, in 1916, "Songs the soldiers sing" in which she sang some of the less ribald songs invented by soldiers in the trenches.

She also played the "principal boy" in many pantomimes. She continued to entertain until the end of her life, touring with the show Thanks for the Memory.

Family

She was married to actor and writer Ernie Lotinga (aka Ernest) (1876–1951), born in Sunderland. Her husband was a music hall comedian, singer and theatre proprietor, appearing as Dan Roe from 1898, who appeared in films in the 1920s and 1930s, often as the comic character PC Jimmy Josser. They divorced in 1917, decree nisi being granted on Friday 16 March by Sir Samuel Evans on the grounds of Miss King's misconduct with the vaudeville artist and actor Mr Jack Norworth. The divorce was not contested.

Her half sister Olive Emms was also an actress and her half brother, Harold Emms, wrote many of Hetty's songs with his French wife, Francine.

The family were not related to H. Vernon Watson (1886–1949), the music hall artist performing under the sobriquet Nosmo King.

Hetty King was cremated at Golders Green Crematorium.

Commemoration

On 8 November 2010 a commemorative blue plaque was erected to King at her last residence in Wimbledon by the theatre charity The Music Hall Guild of Great Britain and America.

Songs recorded

  • All the nice Girls Love a Sailor (also known as Ship Ahoy)
  • Piccadilly
  • Tell her the Old, Old Story
  • Down by the Riverside
  • I'm Going Away
  • Now I'm Home Again
  • Bye Bye Bachelor Days
  • Love 'em & Leave 'em Alone
  • Fill 'em up
  • Oh Girls, why do you Love the Soldiers
  • What Does A Sailor Care?
  • I'm Afraid to Come Home in the Dark
  • Film

    Hetty King appeared in the movie Lilacs In The Spring (1954), which was directed by Herbert Wilcox and starred Anna Neagle and Errol Flynn. Towards the end of her career, aged 87, she appeared in a film entitled Hetty King – Performer (1970).

    References

    Hetty King Wikipedia