- Born
- Died
- Birth nameEmma Lilly Carus
- Emma Carus a beautiful and highly well-known contralto singing star who was in the cast of the original Ziegfeld Follies, frequently sang in vaudeville and Broadway theatre's in many musical dramas, appearing in 'Rally Round the Flag' at the Union Square Theatre in 1897. She appeared in only one film as herself in a short with some of the most popular celebraties of the day such as George M. Cohan, James J. Corbett, Marie Dressler, Eddie Foy and Annie Oakley and many more made by the Vitagraph Film Company in 1910. In 1911, Carus is said to have been largely responsible for helping introduce and popularize Irving Berlin's first major hit song 'Alexander's Ragtime Band' in Chicago, it especially became identified with her. Carus returned for a fourth year on the interstate Vaudeville circuit in 1914, this time she was accompanied by a dance partner, Carl Randall, she had a new stock of songs that included 'an Irish Suffragette'. Also notable for songwriting herself which includes 'Would You Be Satisfied Sally...' and also 'In the War of Hearts and Eyes'.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Paul Rothwell-Smith
- Emma Carus was was born Lily Emma Carus on March 18, 1879 in Berlin, Germany. She moved to New York City with her family when she was a child. The talented contralto singer made her stage debut at age six. Sadly her mother, singer Henrietta Roland, died in 1891. After completing her opera training Emma began her career in vaudeville. Tragedy struck in 1897 when her boyfriend, theater manager James Burrows, committed suicide. She was so devastated that she tried to kill herself. Her big break came in 1900 when she played Lady Gabriel in the Broadway show The Giddy Thong. Then in October of 1900 she married Nils Mattson, the son of the Minnesota governor. The couple separated the following year. She spent three years performing with the New York theater musical stock company. Emma appeared in numerous Broadway musicals including Woodland, The Medal And The Maid, and The Defender. Although she was not considered a great beauty she became a very popular stage star. She loved performing and said "Never think you are better than your audience, or that you know more than they. Be one of them; take them into your confidence, as it were, as they are for you."
In 1905 she married Harry James Everall, a New York businessman who became her manager. She was a featured singer in the very first Ziegfeld Follies in 1907. Her success continued with the hit shows The Jolly Bachelors and The Wife Hunters. Emma introduced the popular song Alexander's Ragtime Band in 1911. She divorced Harry in 1913 claiming he had cheated on her. Soon after she returned to vaudeville. As she got older her health started declining and she was eventually diagnosed with bulbar paralysis. Emma performed at Chicago's Blackstone theater in January of 1925. It would be her final show. She married piano player Joseph Walter Leopold in on April 4, 1926. A few months later she filed for divorce. Then in October of 1926 she was declared incompetent and was sent to a sanitarium in Los Angeles. She would remain there until her death on November 18, 1927. Emma was only forty-eight years old. Sadly very few of her friends attended her modest funeral. She was buried at Forest Lawn Memorial Park at Glendale, California.- IMDb Mini Biography By: Elizabeth Ann
- SpousesLeopold J. Walter(April 6, 1926 - November 18, 1927) (her death)Harry J. Everall (broadway producer)(June 25, 1905 - December 17, 1913) (divorced)N. Sture Mattson (businessman)(October 20, 1900 - 1902) (divorced)
- According to Ray Faiola in his commentary on the DVD of Alexander's Ragtime Band (1938), Emma Carus was the vaudeville performer responsible for making the song "Alexander's Ragtime Band" a huge hit for Irving Berlin. Berlin had first introduced the song in 1911 at a Friars Club frolic where it was only politely received. It took the great singing verve of Emma Carus to make the song a big hit, and soon Al Jolson was also singing it. By the end of 1911, the song was so popular that it sold over two million copies. By the end of 1912, Irving Berlin had earned over $100,000 in royalties.
- Emma Carus was in the process of divorcing J. Walter Leopold at the time she died.
- Father: Carl Carus; Mother: Henrietta Rohland.
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