O'Connor Sisters





LADIES & GENTLEMEN


Clan Fraser of West Hill

Is Proud to Present


Our Tribute to Canada's own

gift to the World of Musical Entertainment


The O'Connor Sisters



Vaudeville Stars from 1910 to 1937



Mary, Anna, Ada, Kathleen, Vera & Nellie







The O'Connor Sisters were the daughters of John O'Connor and Ellen O'Leary. Born on their parents pioneering farm in southern Etobicoke, they made their 1910 singing debut at Shea's in Buffalo. They appeared with the likes of Eddie Cantor, Will Rogers, Jimmy Durante, Buster Keaton, Sophie Tucker, Red Skelton, George Burns and Gracie Allen. The Sisters played the major vaudville houses throughout the North East United States and Canada.


Shea's Hippadrome in Toronto






Among the theatres where they appeared were Shea's Hippadrome in Toronto,Fox Theatre in Detroit, Majestic in Chicago and Fifth Avenue in New York. When sisters left the group to marry, three of the sisters continued as a trio, working into the 1930's. The members of the group had always been fluid, beginning as a quartet, it became a sextet when their manager decided that would be original. They were the subject of a major CBC special in 1973 with music arranged by Moe Koffman and Peter Appleyard.








Billed as the "Greatest Singing Voices in Vaudeville", some of their earliest numbers were arranged by a young composer just beginning his career, George Gershwin. Comedians as well as singers, their 12 minute act featured much playful comedy, especially when one of the sisters discovered she could sing baritone. The Sisters were also natural atheletes, with Mary holding the World record for running the half mile. Their costumes were almost always mentioned in reviews of their act, some of their gowns costing up to $1,000.-- an amazing sum for 1920.






The Sisters never let the world of show business erode their deep religious faith. They often sang on Sunday mornings at major churches as they travelled the country, "Leonard's Mass" being their favourite.