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Madame Cora: Difference between revisions
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== Biography == | == Biography == | ||
She was the first lady magician to tour Australia, opening a show in Sydney at the Prince of Wales Opera House in 1873. Many of her reviews of her Australian reviews were republished in [[ | She was the first lady magician to tour Australia, opening a show in Sydney at the Prince of Wales Opera House in 1873. Many of her reviews of her Australian reviews were republished in [[Ireland's Year Book]] by Laurie Ireland. She was also the first lady magician to appear in New Zealand, the first to present mesmerism (hypnotism) and to introduce [[Troublewit]]. <ref>Madame Cora du Lamond No 16 in a series by J.V.Reilly, Magicana (New Zealand), FEBRUARY/MARCH 1993</ref> | ||
She murdered a young female vocalist in her troupe while she was in South Africa in 1877, but her death sentence was commuted.<ref>Barton Whaley. Whaley's Who's Who in Magic. (1990): 84</ref> | She murdered a young female vocalist in her troupe while she was in South Africa in 1877, but her death sentence was commuted.<ref>Barton Whaley. Whaley's Who's Who in Magic. (1990): 84</ref> |
Latest revision as of 07:07, 14 January 2024
Madame Cora | |
Born | Ursula Bush ? United States |
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Died | 1902 Durban, South Africa |
Madame Cora de Lamond (?-1902), traveled all over the world from the early sixties to about 1892.[1]
Biography
She was the first lady magician to tour Australia, opening a show in Sydney at the Prince of Wales Opera House in 1873. Many of her reviews of her Australian reviews were republished in Ireland's Year Book by Laurie Ireland. She was also the first lady magician to appear in New Zealand, the first to present mesmerism (hypnotism) and to introduce Troublewit. [2]
She murdered a young female vocalist in her troupe while she was in South Africa in 1877, but her death sentence was commuted.[3]
The Hawaiian Gazette of September, 1871, reports her performing to capacity crowds at Buffum's Hall in Honolulu.
Her manager in Australia, possibly her husband, appears to have been Mr. T. W. Bush.[4]
References
- ↑ Sidney W. Clarke. Annals of Conjuring. (2001): 353
- ↑ Madame Cora du Lamond No 16 in a series by J.V.Reilly, Magicana (New Zealand), FEBRUARY/MARCH 1993
- ↑ Barton Whaley. Whaley's Who's Who in Magic. (1990): 84
- ↑ http://thehistorybucket.blogspot.com/2012/04/in-puff-of-smoke.html