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  1. Lotta Crabtree was perhaps the most significant stage genius of this sort. Cute rather than beautiful, improvisational rather than schooled in her acting technique, a perpetual ingenue caught in a time warp for thirty years that arrested her age somewhere between sixteen and twenty, an eccentric dancer, an audacious banjo player, "Little Lotta" emerged as a girl entertainer in the California ...

  2. 11 de dic. de 2020 · Montez took a young Lotta Crabtree under her wing and taught her song and dance routines. Southworth & Hawes People walk past Lotta’s Fountain on Market Street in San Francisco on April 16, 2018.

  3. 8 de mar. de 2016 · Lotta, who was named “The Nation’s Darling,” was able to tour the United States and Europe before retiring in her forties.Troupers of the Gold Coast captures the rise of one America’s most beloved entertainers, as well as the formation and excitement surrounding one of the most popular and successful American theater troupes of all time.Skyhorse Publishing, along with our Arcade, Good ...

  4. Lotta Crabtree (1847-1924) A true child of the Gold Rush, Lotta Crabtree was raised in California's gold country and performed in San Francisco's vaudeville houses. She became the most popular comedienne of her era and the highest paid performer on the Broadway stage.

  5. Lotta Crabtree, 1847–1924, American actress, b. New York City. A protégée of Lola Montez, she became, while still a child, a favorite in California mining camps with her sprightly singing, dancing, and reciting.

  6. 16 de oct. de 2023 · Years active. 1853–1892. Charlotte Mignon " Lotta " Crabtree (November 7, 1847 – September 25, 1924), also known mononymously as Lotta, was an American actress, entertainer, comedian, and philanthropist. Crabtree was born in New York City and raised in the gold mining hills of Northern California. There she rose to fame as a child performer.

  7. 18 de may. de 2023 · Lotta Crabtree, a vaudeville dancer, gifted it to the city in 1875—57 years before the Arts Commission was chartered in 1932. The fountain was one of the few functional water sources after the 1906 earthquake, and it served as a meeting point where people would post messages searching for loved ones.