Kitty_Doner

Kitty Doner

Kitty Doner

American vaudeville performer and male impersonator


Kitty Doner (born Catherine Donohoe, September 6, 1895 — August 26, 1988) was an American vaudeville performer. She was a male impersonator, actress, and dancer, specializing in boy roles, and later in life worked as a choreographer and television producer.

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Early life

Catherine Donohoe was born in Chicago, Illinois. Her parents Joe Doner and Nellie Doner, both born in England, were also vaudeville performers, as were her siblings Ted and Rose.[1][2][3]

Career

Kitty Doner was considered the best American male impersonator of her day, compared favorably to British acts such as Vesta Tilley and Ella Shields.[4] She was petite, and her characters were often youthful.[5] She was known for changing from masculine to feminine clothing on stage, in view of the audience, to demonstrate how much of her impersonation was skill rather than elaborate costume.[6] In 1921, she performed at a benefit for the Women's Auxiliary of the National Disabled Soldiers League at the Apollo Theater.[7] That same year, she also performed at a benefit for the American Committee for Relief in Ireland, at the Metropolitan Opera House.[8]

Her Broadway credits included The Passing Show of 1913, Dancing Around (1914, with Al Jolson),[9] Robinson Crusoe Jr. (1916, again with Jolson),[10] Sinbad (1918, again with Jolson), and The Dancing Girl (1923, appearing with her brother and sister).[2] Doner's act was preserved in an early sound short film, A Bit of Scotch (1928).[11]

In 1945 she co-produced a now-lost musical television series for CBS, Choreotones, with dancer Pauline Koner. After that, the pair produced some shows for "Holiday on Ice". Koner remembered, "With a famous show biz career behind her, Kitty was still looking for new trends. Her taste was impeccable. A lively force behind the scenes, she was always scouting material and interesting talent."[12] Her last work before retirement was auditioning acts for Ted Mack's Amateur Hour in the early 1950s.[4]

Personal life

Kitty Doner died in 1988, aged 92 years, in Los Angeles, California.[13] There is a collection of Doner's papers, including an unpublished autobiography, photographs and scrapbooks, archived at the University of California Santa Barbara Library.[14]


References

  1. Frank Cullen, Florence Hackman, Donald McNeilly, Vaudeville Old & New: An Encyclopedia of Variety Performances in America (Psychology Press 2007): 319-320. ISBN 9780415938532
  2. "Ted Doner Coming Back" New York Times (July 18, 1929): 14. via ProQuest
  3. Anthony Slide, The Encyclopedia of Vaudeville (University Press of Mississippi 2012): 133-136. ISBN 9781617032509
  4. "Born to Dance – And She's Doing It" New York Times (October 18, 1914).
  5. "Kitty Doner Comes Back to Colonial" The Morning Call (February 3, 1929): 11. via Newspapers.comOpen access icon
  6. "Stars to Aid Soldiers" New York Times (May 7, 1921): 8. via ProQuest
  7. "Stage Stars Raise $57,000 for Irish" New York Times (April 4, 1921): 2. via ProQuest
  8. "Clothes and the Girl" Green Book Magazine (September 1916): 545.
  9. Edwin M. Bradley, The First Hollywood Sound Shorts, 1926-1931 (McFarland 2009): 369. ISBN 9781476606842
  10. Pauline Koner, Solitary Song (Duke University Press 1989): 139-148. ISBN 9780822308782
  11. "Kitty Doner, Male Impersonator in Vaudeville" Los Angeles Times (September 3, 1988).
  12. Guide to the Kitty Doner Papers, University of California Santa Barbara Library, Special Collections.

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