Friday, December 11, 2015

YANKEE FIBBER FIDDLER WOWED AUSTRALIAN AUDIENCES

In 1938 the  elegant  American  band leader  and composer , Jay Whidden ,  a violin player with  the tips of   his left hand missing, came to Australia . Over the years, he had  passed himself off  as a  cowboy from Montana where his cattleman  father  had cut off  his frost bitten  finger tips  with  a  knife.  In addition, Whidden  entertained audiences with  accounts of  exciting  life in the  wild  north west-Indian raids, stampeding horses .

In  fact, he had  been born in Brooklyn in 1890 and lost his  fingertips while working with  his  father  on  the docks in New York . He got the chance to play cowboy when he entered into a bigamous marriage  and  his second partner  had a ranch in California , where Hollywood friends dropped in  from time to time .
 
Whidden apparently picked up the desire to play  the violin from  his father who  entertained the  family playing  Irish jigs . Early in his life, Jay teamed up with a talented young  composer  and  lyricist, Con Conrad, and  they toured  together in  ragtime vaudeville  shows  and  played  Broadway .

Going to London , they became the darlings of the West End, playing  jazz, attired in sophisticated   Saville  Row clobber . In 1934 Betty Grable was  the leading  female  vocalist in  one of   Whidden's  bands in  San  Francisco .   

Whidden  was invited to come to Melbourne   by  the  ABC  and performed at the St Kilda  Palais de Danse , broadcasted nationally over  3LO and encouraged  young talent , including the Lester Sisters , Nola , Betty and Olive. He  also performed at the Tivoli , Sydney. 

A Little  Darwin scavenger  recently  found  in Townsville  the  above  1938  piece of Australian  sheet music featuring a photo of him posing with his violin. Advertisements  on  the  back  are  for Gone With The Wind , The  Girl In The Alice Blue  Gown , songs from Snow White and  the Seven Dwarfs and the smash hit of the year and  the most played song on  air...WHERE  THE  DOG SITS  ON THE  TUCKERBOX ( five miles from Gundagai ).