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Hollace Shaw

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Hollace Shaw

Birth
Death
2 Mar 1976 (aged 62)
Burial
Inglewood, Los Angeles County, California, USA Add to Map
Plot
Mausoleum of the Golden West, Sanctuary of Hope, Alcove of Summer, niche 158
Memorial ID
View Source
Shaw was born in Fresno, California. Her father, Rev. Shirley R. Shaw, was a minister, and her mother was a concert singer. She was the oldest of five children, one of whom was Robert Shaw, who founded the Robert Shaw Chorale and directed symphony orchestras in Atlanta, Georgia, and Cleveland, Ohio.

Shaw was a featured soloist on Blue Velvet Music, Saturday Night Serenade and the featured female soloist on Song Time and was a member of the cast of The Hour of Charm, on which she was known as "Vivian." She also had her own weekly program on CBS.

Shaw's Broadway credits include Higher and Higher (1939) and Very Warm for May (1939). The latter production included her introduction of the song All the Things You Are.

Shaw sang frequently with symphony orchestras around the United States and at Radio City Music Hall, in New York City. She also performed in night clubs. Eugene Burr wrote about Shaw in a review in Billboard's October 12, 1940, issue: "She has an outstanding voice, one of the few real voices that have been developed in recent years..."

On April 12, 1944, Shaw married Clarence Turner Foster, a major in the Air Transport Command, in New York, New York. She later married Dr. Frederick C. Schlumberger, a surgeon.

Shaw died March 2, 1976 in Los Angeles, California, at age 62. She was survived by her husband, two stepchildren, a sister and two brothers.

- Source Wikipedia
Shaw was born in Fresno, California. Her father, Rev. Shirley R. Shaw, was a minister, and her mother was a concert singer. She was the oldest of five children, one of whom was Robert Shaw, who founded the Robert Shaw Chorale and directed symphony orchestras in Atlanta, Georgia, and Cleveland, Ohio.

Shaw was a featured soloist on Blue Velvet Music, Saturday Night Serenade and the featured female soloist on Song Time and was a member of the cast of The Hour of Charm, on which she was known as "Vivian." She also had her own weekly program on CBS.

Shaw's Broadway credits include Higher and Higher (1939) and Very Warm for May (1939). The latter production included her introduction of the song All the Things You Are.

Shaw sang frequently with symphony orchestras around the United States and at Radio City Music Hall, in New York City. She also performed in night clubs. Eugene Burr wrote about Shaw in a review in Billboard's October 12, 1940, issue: "She has an outstanding voice, one of the few real voices that have been developed in recent years..."

On April 12, 1944, Shaw married Clarence Turner Foster, a major in the Air Transport Command, in New York, New York. She later married Dr. Frederick C. Schlumberger, a surgeon.

Shaw died March 2, 1976 in Los Angeles, California, at age 62. She was survived by her husband, two stepchildren, a sister and two brothers.

- Source Wikipedia


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  • Created by: JimmerP
  • Added: Jul 17, 2020
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/213114865/hollace-shaw: accessed ), memorial page for Hollace Shaw (24 Jul 1913–2 Mar 1976), Find a Grave Memorial ID 213114865, citing Inglewood Park Cemetery, Inglewood, Los Angeles County, California, USA; Maintained by JimmerP (contributor 49336799).