- Vaughn De Leath
Vaughn De Leath (1894 - 1943) was a famous female radio jazz singer who gained popularity in the 1920s and became known as "The Original Radio Girl" and "First Lady of Radio". She was also one of the early
crooners . One of her songs was "Are You Lonesome Tonight?", recorded in 1927 and later recorded byElvis Presley in 1960. Although popular in the 1920s, De Leath is little known today.She was born as Leonore Vonderlieth in the midwestern town of
Mt. Pulaski, Illinois in 1894. Her parents were George and Catherine. At age 12, she moved to Los Angeles with her mother and sister, where she finished high school and studied music. While at Mills College, she began writing her own songs, but later dropped out to pursue a singing career. Later she changed her name to Vaughn De Leath.De Leath's vocals ranged from
soprano to deepcontralto and easily adapted to the Jazz and radio age in the 1920s. Her first break was in January of 1920 when the inventorLee DeForest brought her to his studio in New York City's World Tower. Vaughn De Leath sang "Swanee River", in a cramped room, and most of her listeners were only equipped withcrystal radio . This was said to be the first live singing broadcast, although some modern historians now question this.By 1921, in the formative years of commercial radio, she began singing at
WABC (AM) WJZ, then in Newark NJ, which was later known as WABC in New York City. She had also performed on the New York stage in the early to mid 1920s, but radio became her first love, and she made a name for herself as a radio entertainer. In 1923, she became one of the first female executives to run a radio station, WDT in New York City, where she also performed. In 1922 she had begun recording on different labels, includingEdison Records . In 1928, she appeared on an experimental television broadcast and later became a special guest for the debut broadcast of "Voice of Firestone Radio Hour".In 1931, she sued
Kate Smith for using the "First Lady of the Radio" designation. Although Smith stopped for a while, she resumed after De Leath's death. De Leath made her last recording in 1931 under Eli Oberstein's Crown label. In her final years, she continued to make radio appearances on New York stations, including WBEN in Buffalo, although she hadn't made any network appearances since the early 1930s. She was married twice, to Leon Geer (an artist whom she married in 1924, and from whom she was divorced in 1935) and then to Irwin Rosenbloom, a musician. Her obituary in the New York Times incorrectly said she was 42 when she died, but she was actually 48. Prior to her death, which occurred in Buffalo, she had considerable financial difficulty, complicated by the drinking problem which contributed to her early death. Her ashes were buried in her childhood home of Mt. Pulaski IL.
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