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Eileen Boyd

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Eileen Boyd
Miss Eileen Boyd
Born
Eileen Alberta Boyd

13 December 1890
Died14 September 1975
NationalityAustralian
Other namesMrs Gordon Lane
Occupationsinger
Known forcontralto
Spouse(s)Hugh Ernest Roberts
Gordon Lane
Childrentwo and step-daughter

Eileen Alberta Boyd became Mrs Gordon Lane (13 December 1890 – 14 September 1975) was an Australian singer. She began as a child performer and she toured in the UK during World War One.

Life

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Boyd was born in 1890 in Sydney to Margaret (born Shalvey) and Albert Boyd. Both her parents had been born in Australia and her father ran a hotel. Her parents arranged lessons for her in singing and elocution and she was a child singer. She toured New Zealand in 1900 when she was known as the "The Baby Baritone, Clog Dancer and Whistler". She continued her education with a tutor while on tour.[1] In 1910 a concert was arranged in Sydney to mark her transition from a child performer to a singer with a fine contralto voice.[2] In 1915 she married in Britain in May and in October she was a widow with a child and a young teenage step-daughter. Her husband, Hugh Ernest Roberts had been a master mariner.[1]

In 1917 she sang at the Royal Albert Hall in London and many prestigious venues when she joined a tour in support of the Red Cross starring and organised by Clara Butt and Kennerley Rumford. She and Butt were "favourably compared" and they sang The Dream of Gerontius being George V and Queen Mary in 1917. By 1925, she had two children although she still found time to sing as Mrs Gordan Lane.[3]

In 1934 she was still using the name "Eileen Boyd" when recording. In 1937 it was "Mrs Gordon Lane" who commissioned a pastel portrait from the Australian artist Dora Wilson. It was called "Nada" and it was exhibited at Margaret MacLean's Gallery in Melbourne.[4]

Boyd died in 1975 in Hammondville.[1]

Recordings include

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Stranger of Galilee

References

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  1. ^ a b c Broomham, Rosemary, "Eileen Alberta Boyd (1890–1975)", Australian Dictionary of Biography, Canberra: National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, retrieved 14 September 2024
  2. ^ "THE EILEEN BOYD CONCERT". Sydney Morning Herald. 2 April 1910. Retrieved 15 September 2024.
  3. ^ "Australian Home Vol. 32 No. 901 (22 May 1925)". Trove. Retrieved 15 September 2024.
  4. ^ "Melbourne Chatter in Vol. 58 No. 2983 (14 Apr 1937)". Trove. Retrieved 15 September 2024.
  5. ^ 78 Record: Harold Black - Fall In (1914), retrieved 14 September 2024
  6. ^ "Eileen Boyd". 45worlds. Retrieved 14 September 2024.
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