Florence Bindley

American vaudeville and music hall performer (1868–1951) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Florence Bindley (July 24, 1868 – May 14, 1951) was an American musical theatre, vaudeville, and music hall performer.

Florence Bindley, from a 1904 publication.

Early life

Florence J. Elmer was from Newark, New Jersey, but was raised partly in England. She started on stage at age 3, as "Baby Bindley",[1] dancing and playing novelty instruments made by her father. At age 6, she performed for Queen Victoria.[2]

Career

Poster for Florence Bindley in the Broadway production of The Street Singer by Hal Reid (1904)

Bindley appeared on Broadway and in variety shows, including Heroine in Rags (1887),[3] The Pay Train (1892),[4][5] Captain's Mate (1894),[6] A Midnight Marriage (1904),[7] The Street Singer (1904),[8] The Belle of the West (1905),[9] The Girl and the Gambler (1906),[10] In the Nick of Time (1908), and Major Meg (1916),[11] which included a display of "her famous zylophone specialty."[12] "She is at all times charming, magnetic, and possesses a beautiful singing voice," commented the Pittsburgh Press in 1904, "together with marked emotional and comedy ability."[13] She was billed as "The Girl with the Diamond Dress,"[2] for an unusual costume she wore, first on the vaudeville stage and later in The Street Singer.[14] A later vaudeville act of Bindley's, "An Afternoon at Home" (1909), featured musical monologues, singing and dancing.[15]

Personal life

Florence Elmer married twice. Her first marriage, to her cousin Edward Everett Bindley, ended in divorce in 1890.[16] She remarried to silent film actor Darwin Karr by 1910.[2] She was widowed when he died in 1945. Florence Bindley died in 1951, aged 82 years, in Los Angeles, California.

References

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