This book explores the comedy and legacy of women working as performers on the music-hall stage from 1880–1920, and examines the significance of their previously overlooked contributions to British comic traditions. Focusing on the under-researched female ‘serio-comic’, the study includes six micro-histories detailing the acts of Ada Lundberg, Bessie Bellwood, Maidie Scott, Vesta Victoria, Marie Lloyd and Nellie Wallace. Uniquely for women in the late-nineteenth and early-twentieth centuries, these pioneering performers had public voices. The extent to which their comedy challenged Victorian and Edwardian perceptions of women is revealed through explorations of how they connected with popular audiences while also avoiding censorship. Their ...
This paper will present and theorise aspects of the facture and iconography of the work of pioneerin...
This chapter considers the role of women in British silent film comedy from 1895 to the end of the 1...
The so-called “New Woman”—that determined and free-wheeling figure in “rational” dress, demanding ed...
This article considers the contributions made to UK comic performance history by women serio-comic p...
The essay explores the role of women performers in late nineteenth-century music hall by developing ...
Stage women, 1900–50 explores the many ways in which women conceptualised, constructed and participa...
This thesis investigates the works of the London-based suffrage theatre group, the Actresses' Franch...
Why did some Victorian and Edwardian music-hall acts, namely the swell song and male impersonations,...
This study examines the role that musical comedy on stage played in shaping popular culture in the l...
Stage women, 1900–50 explores the many ways in which women conceptualised, constructed and participa...
Caroline Maria Lupton (10 September 1872 – 10 March 1930),[1] known professionally as Marie Studholm...
This unique book contains the never before published script of the first ever one-woman show, writte...
© 2021 Manchester University Press. This is the accepted manuscript version of a book chapter which ...
This chapter focuses on the ways in which the cultural fascination with the pop diva can be witnesse...
This book was written to accompany the exhibition The First Actresses: Nell Gwyn to Sarah Siddons at...
This paper will present and theorise aspects of the facture and iconography of the work of pioneerin...
This chapter considers the role of women in British silent film comedy from 1895 to the end of the 1...
The so-called “New Woman”—that determined and free-wheeling figure in “rational” dress, demanding ed...
This article considers the contributions made to UK comic performance history by women serio-comic p...
The essay explores the role of women performers in late nineteenth-century music hall by developing ...
Stage women, 1900–50 explores the many ways in which women conceptualised, constructed and participa...
This thesis investigates the works of the London-based suffrage theatre group, the Actresses' Franch...
Why did some Victorian and Edwardian music-hall acts, namely the swell song and male impersonations,...
This study examines the role that musical comedy on stage played in shaping popular culture in the l...
Stage women, 1900–50 explores the many ways in which women conceptualised, constructed and participa...
Caroline Maria Lupton (10 September 1872 – 10 March 1930),[1] known professionally as Marie Studholm...
This unique book contains the never before published script of the first ever one-woman show, writte...
© 2021 Manchester University Press. This is the accepted manuscript version of a book chapter which ...
This chapter focuses on the ways in which the cultural fascination with the pop diva can be witnesse...
This book was written to accompany the exhibition The First Actresses: Nell Gwyn to Sarah Siddons at...
This paper will present and theorise aspects of the facture and iconography of the work of pioneerin...
This chapter considers the role of women in British silent film comedy from 1895 to the end of the 1...
The so-called “New Woman”—that determined and free-wheeling figure in “rational” dress, demanding ed...