The Ingenues were a vaudeville all-female jazz band.
Early career
The Ingenues toured the United States and other countries from 1925 to 1937. William Morris started the group.[1] Managed by Edward Gorman Sherman (1880–1940), the orchestra performed with great popularity around the world in variety theater, vaudeville and picture houses, often billed as "The Girl Paul Whitemans of Syncopation."
[2]
They performed many songs in the Ziegfeld Follies of 1927, Glorifying the American Girl, including the first act finale, "Melody Land," featuring 12 white baby grand pianos. Other Follies numbers featured violins, banjoes and saxophones from The Ingenues. The group performed popular songs, light classical works and novelties. They were celebrated for their versatility, as most members, including star soloist and "trick trombonist" Paula Jones, both novelty (accordions, harmonicas, banjos) and symphonic instruments.[3]
The group toured Europe, South Africa, Asia, Australia and Brazil (where they also recorded for Columbia Records). The band appeared in film shorts including The Band Beautiful,[4]Syncopating Sweeties[5]
and Maids and Music.
[6]
Maids and Music was produced independently by Milton Schwarzwald's Nu-Atlas Productions and released as a 16mm home movie by Pictoreels. Sequences from this and other Schwarzwald short subjects were also re-edited into Soundies; in the case of Maids and Music the Soundies excerpt was titled "Ray Fabing's Versatile Ingenues".
Members
According to Variety magazine in 1927, the players were:
[7]
Mary Novak and Blanche Olson, piano
Mary Donohue, Alice Plies, Dorothy Donohue, and Genevieve Brown, saxes and reeds
The band's last major tour was in 1932. While it is said that one of the group's last engagements was "at a Mount Morris High School in Freeport, Illinois,"
[8]
the latest primary source documentation has the group appearing in Monticello, IN in July 1938.
[9]