Blanche Coleman Explained

Blanche Coleman
Birth Name:Blanche Schwartz
Birth Date:28 February 1910
Birth Place:London, England
Death Date:22 April 2008
Nationality:British
Alma Mater:Royal Academy of Music
Occupation:Band leader, musician
Known For:All Girls Band
Spouse:Henry Coleman (m. 1934)

Blanche Coleman (28 February 1910 – 22 April 2008) was a British musician, the bandleader of the renowned Blanche Coleman And Her All Girls Band, one of the first women's bands of the 1940s.

Biography

Coleman was born Blanche Schwartz in London. Her family owned a fish and chips shop in Westbourne Park. After showing an early talent for violin, she won a scholarship for the Royal Academy of Music. While the violin was her first love, she also played the clarinet and saxophone.[1]

After playing in the orchestra of The Grange Cinema, Kilburn, she played in Harold Ramsey's Girl Friends, and Teddy Foster's Band.

Band leader

She formed her own band in 1938 and won a contract, against great competition, in 1942, to provide a 12-piece girls' band at The Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, which was converted into dance-hall for British and American service personnel during World War II.

She was also featured in regular radio broadcasts, including Saturday night at the Palais, Ocean Revue of 1946 and the Sandown Summer Show (1947).

In 1947, her band was the resident band at 'Radio-Olympia' designed to stimulate interest in the newly revived BBC TV service. After this she led the resident band in Beach Ballroom Aberdeen, between 1948 and 1950 with John Hanson, a popular guest singer.[2]

In the early 1950s, after much seaside work, she and her band were invited to entertain US Army troops in Germany. Given the honorary rank of major in the US Army, she and the band were housed in the infamous "Wannsee Villa" for a time. She wanted to take Cleo Laine with the band as vocalist, but the US Army said the race issue was too sensitive.

In later life, she appeared in several films, including The World of Barry McKenzie, and she was frequently recognised as the "old lady at a bus stop" in Four Weddings & A Funeral.

She is mentioned[3] in Andrew Motion's biography of Philip Larkin as being the inspiration for the pseudonym Brunette Coleman, under which Larkin wrote risqué girls' school stories, mainly to entertain his friend Kingsley Amis.

Personal life

She married Henry Soester[4] in 1934; he died in 1949.

Coleman died on 22 April 2008 at the age of 98.

See also

External sources

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Soester. Jeffrey. 1 May 2008. Obituary: Blanche Coleman. 2 June 2021. The Guardian.
  2. Howes. Frank. Kennedy. Douglas. 1964. Folk Dancing. The Musical Times. 105. 1454. 271. 10.2307/949361. 0027-4666.
  3. http://books.guardian.co.uk/lrb/articles/0,6109,716769,00.html Gym slips and hockey sticks: Jenny Diski on Philip Larkin's schoolgirl stories | LRB essay | guardian.co.uk Books
  4. News: Blanche Coleman . 26 June 2022 . 26 May 2008.
  5. Web site: Lee. Garry. 2016. OBITUARY: JUNE SMITH 1930-2016. live. 1 June 2021. https://web.archive.org/web/20210602214643/https://static1.squarespace.com/static/58bf64e6c534a5e3ac61401d/t/596db9aa197aea41b73f8d37/1500363186534/SmithJuneOBITUARY.pdf . 2 June 2021 .