- Wilson, Keppel and Betty
Infobox performer
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name = Wilson, Keppel and Betty
imagesize = 250px
caption = Eccentric dance act
birthname = Jack Wilson
Joe Keppel
Betty Knox
"Her daughter - Patsy"
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genre =Music hall sand dance
spouse =Wilson, Keppel and Betty were a popular British
music hall act in the middle decades of the 20th century who capitalised on the trend for Egyptian imagery following the discovery of the tomb ofTutankhamun . Their stage act, called the "sand dance", was a parody of Egyptian postures, combined with references toArabic costume. The lithe and extremely lanky Wilson and Keppel, who wore long mustaches and made up to emphasize the sharp angularity of the features so as to appear almost identical, would demonstrate their impressive suppleness in adopting wild gestures and dancing in identical "stereo" movements (using gestures vaguely reminiscent of Egyptian wall paintings), while Betty watched their antics. Theirs was a soft-shoe routine performed on a layer of sand spread on the stage to create a rhythmic scratching with their shuffling feet. The act was usually performed to the familiar "Egyptian Ballet" (1875), byAlexandre Luigini .The people of
South Shields are popularly referred to as "Sand-dancers" with reference to this act.Early life
Jack Wilson (
29 January 1894 -24 August 1970 ), was born inLiverpool in theUK , and emigrated to the USA at a young age, making his stage debut in 1909 as a high-kicking dancer. He then travelled toAustralia , where he joined Colleano's Circus. During theFirst World War Wilson served with theRoyal Navy . Returning to Australia after the war, he met Joe Keppel (May 10 ,1895 - 1977), who was born inCounty Cork inIreland . Like Wilson, Keppel had emigrated to the USA at a young age, and in 1910 made his stage debut in Albany as atap dancer . During the First World War he served in theRoyal Flying Corps , and after made his way to Australia, also joining Colleano's Circus, where he teamed up with Jack Wilson. [http://www.lukemckernan.com/wilsonkeppelbetty.pdf]International celebrity
Travelling to the USA together they appeared in
New York in 1919 as a comedy acrobatic and tap dancing act. They started their trio act withKansas born Betty Knox atDes Moines inIowa in 1928. Knox had been a stage partner ofJack Benny . The act came to Britain to appear at theLondon Palladium for a few weeks in 1932 and stayed permanently. Over the years there were between 8 and 12 'Bettys', most of these appearing during the act's later years: Betty Knox retired from the act in 1941 to go intojournalism , becoming awar correspondent during theSecond World War , [http://216.239.59.104/search?q=cache:3wxQFstAeUYJ:www.glbtq.com/arts/mann_e.html+betty+knox+nuremberg&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=3&gl=uk] and reporting on theNuremberg Trials for three years as the correspondent for the BritishBeaverbrook press'sEvening Standard . [http://216.239.59.104/search?q=cache:lVqqHRm2UZQJ:www.fredautley.com/nuremberg.htm+betty+knox+nuremberg&hl=en&ct=clnk&cd=1&gl=uk] For that newspaper she was among the first to report the suicide of Nazi leaderHermann Göring [http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,804023,00.html?promoid=googlep] Her daughter, Patsy, (born 1924 inSalina, Kansas ), took over as 'Betty' in 1941, staying with the act until 1950. The trio, in its various line-ups, appeared at theRoyal Variety Performance in 1934, 1945 and 1947.Their "Cleopatra's Nightmare" routine was performed in 1936 in Berlin and condemned by
Josef Goebbels as indecent. [cite web|title=Herr Göbbels Flunks The Ballet Egyptien Test|author=Ronnie Bray|work=Open Writing|url=http://openwriting.com./archives/2007/03/herr_goebbels_f_1.php|month=March | year=2007] In the UK they were regarded as one of the best 'speciality acts' - acts designed to balance and support the star of a variety programme. Typically these acts would last about ten minutes, and be repeated twelve times a week (matinee and evening performance, every day except Sunday) in variety theatres all over the country. A fine example of the "Cleopatra's Nightmare" routine can be seen in theHarold Baim film 'Starlight Serenade". In 1950 they appeared at the London Palladium on the same bill withFrank Sinatra . They toured all over the world, performing at shows in London,Europe , Las Vegas,India , theFar East andNear East , Australia,Scandinavia andSouth Africa . They finally retired in 1963. ['Kindly Leave the Stage - a history of Variety, 1919 - 1960', by Roger Wilmut (ISBN 0-413-48960-4)]George Melly , the celebratedjazz vocalist is quoted in hisbiography as saying "There were several Betty's, they would get rid of one after about 10 years. I knew the last Betty, her son was a brilliant female impersonator...."Terry Pratchett paid homage to the trio with Gulli, Gulli, and Betti in "Jingo". [cite web|url=http://peopleplayuk.org.uk./collections/object.php?object_id=1472|title=Wilson, Keppel, and Betty|publisher=PeoplePlay UK|work=Collections]References
External links
*imdb name|id=1028129|name=Wilson, Keppel and Betty
* [http://www.britishpathe.com/product_display.php?searchword=wilson+keppel+betty Video of a 1933 performance at the Trocadero restaurant in London]
* [http://www.lukemckernan.com/wilsonkeppelbetty.pdf A detailed look at the act]
* [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pkhJpr2zR8s] YouTube snippet of the Sand Dance.
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