Moving to Los Angeles

Ursula Cheshire, age 4

Ursula at age 4

The year after Ursula’s parents traveled to Hawaii, Clara and Alfred’s names started appearing in the society news in the Los Angeles Times. More precisely, mentions of them ran in the Arts and Leisure section’s “Out-of-Town Society” column, under the goings on of Monrovia, California, between April and late August 1907. This leads me to believe the Cheshires left San Francisco earlier that year to set up temporary residence in Monrovia, a residential community in the foothills of the San Gabriel Mountains, about 20 miles northeast of Los Angeles. At the time, Ursula would have been four, going on five.

Pacific Electric depot

Pacific Electric’s main depot circa 1910.

Just a few years before, the Pacific Electric mass transit system was opened, providing convenient transportation to and from LA for residents of Monrovia (and other suburbs), like the Cheshires. We don’t know why they left San Francisco—perhaps it was too chaotic for them during the city’s recovery and massive rebuilding projects following the great earthquake of 1906. Or, perhaps Alfred, who is referred to as a capitalist in a later news item, was seeking to do business in the LA area.

While in Monrovia, one of the events Clara attended, according to the Times, was a luncheon at La Vista Grande hotel for the P.E.O. Sisterhood, a fraternal organization still in operation today. For the event, deemed one of the “delightful affairs of the week,” the hotel’s reception hall, parlors and private dining room “were artistically decorated in gold and white with rare flowers from Mr. Best’s tropical gardens.” Clara not only attended, but also was one of two guests who entertained the group with a “musical programme,” probably playing piano (the news clip mentioned below describes Clara as “an accomplished pianist”).

La Vista Grande

In 1907, Ursula’s mother, Clara, was a guest and entertainer (piano) at a luncheon held in La Vista Grande hotel, Monrovia, CA

It seems Monrovia was a stepping stone to more permanent residence in Los Angeles. A November 1907 society item in the Los Angeles Herald announced that “Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Dudley Cheshire and little daughter Ursula” had moved to 1422 Malvern Avenue in LA, and “may possibly make [the city] their permanent home”—which they indeed did.

cheshires in LA

A blurb in the Los Angeles Herald’s “Society” column, November 22, 1907

Ursula and her parents will start the new year of 1908 in a new home and in a new city. What adventures are in store for them there? As this is my last post of the year, I’m afraid we will have to wait until the new year of 2014 to find out! I will be taking a brief hiatus from the Mystery Dancer blog during this busy holiday season but will be back with Ursula, Clara and Alfred Cheshire in January. Stay tuned…and best wishes for the holidays!

Ursula’s Teachers: The Best in the West

Ursula, age 11

At age 11, Ursula was a student at the Egan School of Drama in Los Angeles

I couldn’t contain my curiousity any longer, and finally paged through the entire album to get a sneak peek of the clues to come. While I didn’t read all the newsclippings or the penciled photo captions, I became even more intrigued and eager to keep going on this historical adventure.

In the last post, we learned about Frank C. Ego (I mean, Egan), the director of Ursula’s drama school. In this post, we meet Ursula’s other esteemed instructors, starting with dramatic teacher Florence A. Dobinson, the “best Shakespeare coach on [the] Pac[ific] coast,” according to the inscription on the back of the Russian dancer photo.

Described in the LA Times as “a pioneer in the study of drama and its allied arts,” Mrs. Dobinson joined the Egan School faculty in 1911. Prior to that, she taught at the Dobinson School of Expression, established by her husband, George A. Dobinson, probably around 1908. Mr. Dobinson, LA’s “dean of local dramatic critics” and a real estate pioneer, died after a short illness in 1910. The Dobinson school sebsequently closed, and Mrs. Dobinson then taught at the Egan School, possibly until 1915, when she established a school for training of the speaking voice, called the Florence Dobinson Studios of Expression and Dramatic Arts. Apparently, Mrs. Dobinson taught Ursula well. From the inscription, we learn that Ursula played Ophelia in the “mad scene from Hamlet…on every dramatic program of the Egan Dramatic sch[ool] at 11 yrs [old].” (What I would give to have seen that; guess I’ll have to settle for YouTube snippets of modern performances like this one by Maria Gale on BBC.)

Ursula also sang in Thomas Taylor Drill’s Children’s Choir. Head of the school’s music department and Ursula’s opera coach, Drill was born in England and grew up in New York City, where he was an accomplished young choral singer. When he was a young man living in Minneapolis, according to a book published in 1895, he was “known better than any other vocalist west of Chicago [where he later resided], and being but a young man, his many admirers anticipate for him a career of unusual success and renown.” They were not wrong. By 1911, when he moved to Los Angeles to head the vocal department of the Egan School, he was described by the press as “the foremost American vocal authority” and “one of the most interesting additions to the Los Angeles music colony this year.”

Senora Matildita in 1906, San Francisco

Senora Matildita in 1906, San Francisco

Ursula learned dancing under the tutelage of Spanish dancer Senora Matildita. In 1895, publicity for a burlesque piece called “The Black Crook-Up-to-Date,” in which Matildita performed the headline act, noted that she was “actually the premiere danseuse to the Court of Spain.” In 1904, Matildita was teaching dance in San Francisco at Paul Gerson’s School of Acting. In 1907, The San Francisco Call newspaper published a hilarious article about Matildita teaching Spanish dance to “society girls.” As of 1913, she had joined the Egan School. I found a 1940 article in the Las Cruces Sun-News mentioning Matildita as having “trained many movie stars.”

“Herr Müller from Heidleburg,” who taught Ursula fencing, remains a mystery; I was not able to find any information about him.

Until next time…