Louise Le Baron
{{short description|American actress}}
{{distinguish|Louis LeBaron}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Louise Le Baron
| image = Louise Le Baron 003.JPG
| image_size = 150px
| caption = Portrait from The Cosmopolitan Magazine, 1909
| birth_name = Louise Shepherd
| birth_date = October 1874
| birth_place = Winchester, Massachusetts
| death_date = February 11, 1918
| death_place = Lincoln, Nebraska
| spouse =
}}
Louise Le Baron (1874–1918) was an American contralto{{citation | last=Trapper | first=Emma Louise | title=The Musical Blue Book of America, 1915- | publisher=Musical blue book corporation | place=New York | page=208 | url=https://archive.org/stream/musicalbluebooko00trapuoft#page/208/mode/1up}} singer who performed in opera and musical theatre during the early years of the twentieth century.
Biography
Louise Le Baron (née Shepherd) was born in Winchester, Massachusetts in 1874,{{citation | newspaper=The Lincoln Daily Star | title=Obituary | date=February 12, 1918 | page=3}} and at around the age of sixteen began singing with a church choir at Boston area engagements. She received her early training at the Boston Conservatory and under various private instructors including Madame Etta Edwards, then in Boston. Le Baron first sang with the Bostonian Opera Company before joining Fritzi Scheff and her famous company. During this time she played Lady Jane in The Two Roses by Ludwig Engländer and Stanislaus Stange, with a libretto adapted from Goldsmith's She Stoops to Conquer,{{citation | title=Tribute of Bouquets to Fritzi Scheff | newspaper=The New York Times | date=November 22, 1904 | url=https://timesmachine.nytimes.com/timesmachine/1904/11/22/101401663.pdf | accessdate=2012-01-23}} and as Marie Louise de Bouvray in Mlle. Modiste by Victor Herbert and Henry Blossom.{{citation | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=B9NKAQAAMAAJ&pg=RA1-PR5 | journal=The Theatre Magazine | title= The Current Plays | year=1906 |page=v}} Over the following seasons she would perform with the Castle Square Opera Company, San Carlo Company and on two separate occasions the Aborn Opera Company. With the latter she played the title role in Carmen, Seibel in Faust and Suzuki in Madame Butterfly. In 1913 she shared the male role of Alan-a-Dale with actress Florence Wickham in the comic opera Robin Hood by Reginald De Koven and Harry B. Smith.
As her career began to wind down Le Baron settled in Lincoln, Nebraska where she had always been well received and opened a voice school. She died there on February 11, 1918, after struggling with a long and painful illness.{{citation | newspaper=Bakersfield Californian | date=February 12, 1918 | title=Louise Le Baron dead | page=7 | url=https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=zX8_AAAAIBAJ&sjid=FVUMAAAAIBAJ&pg=2596%2C2231794 | accessdate=2012-01-23}} She was survived by her son, Ernest Gillmore (or Gilmore), whose father she had married at an early age. At the time of his mother's death Ernest was serving aboard a US Navy torpedo boat.
References
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External links
{{commons category}}
- [https://archive.org/details/LouiseLeBaron-WhisperAndIShallHear1904 Louise Le Baron singing Whisper and I Shall Hear (1904 recording)] on archive.org
- [https://archive.org/details/LouiseLeBaron-ThatsWhatTheRoseSaidToMe1907 Louise Le Baron singing That's What the Rose Said to Me (1907 recording] on archive.org
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Le Baron, Louise}}
Category:American operatic contraltos
Category:American musical theatre actresses
Category:19th-century American actresses
Category:People from Winchester, Massachusetts
Category:19th-century American women singers
Category:19th-century American singers