Christine Nelson
|
Roslyn Passilia
aka Mrs. Louis Quinn |
Brooklyn, New York, USA
|
Apr 20 1926 - Aug 15 1988 age 62
|
Official
Site
|
Wikipedia
|
Christine
Nelson was a singer and comedian who was featured as Katie Jones on "The
Ray Bolger Show" in the 1954-55 television season. Over the years she
performed with Milton Berle and Joey Bishop on their TV shows and on the
old "Hollywood Palace" variety program. Source LA Times
~~~
Comedienne
Christine Nelson is a short-haired beauty who does a little comedy then
bursts into a really great old-fashioned vaudeville number, "I'm a
Bridesmaid, Never a Bride."
She's by no means a stripper, but burlesque had several standard components that rarely varied, & the "talking woman" was one of the requisit standards. Very rarely as with burlesque superstar Rose la Rose the stripper had a talking woman act, but in most cases the talking woman was a comic or a comic foil to the emcee or the baggy-pants clown. Christine, however, is much more an authentic stand-up comic than usually required of the talking-woman.
She seems like someone who cut her teeth in the Borsch belt or did Yiddish theater before the war. Christine had a minor acting career in series television through the 1960s. I rather liked her old-fashioned stand-up routine, consisting largely of one-liners strung together as a sort of a story: "If all brides are beautiful how come there are so many ugly wives?" or "He put his head on my shoulder. Up until then I didn't know it came off." Source: weirdwildrealm
She's by no means a stripper, but burlesque had several standard components that rarely varied, & the "talking woman" was one of the requisit standards. Very rarely as with burlesque superstar Rose la Rose the stripper had a talking woman act, but in most cases the talking woman was a comic or a comic foil to the emcee or the baggy-pants clown. Christine, however, is much more an authentic stand-up comic than usually required of the talking-woman.
She seems like someone who cut her teeth in the Borsch belt or did Yiddish theater before the war. Christine had a minor acting career in series television through the 1960s. I rather liked her old-fashioned stand-up routine, consisting largely of one-liners strung together as a sort of a story: "If all brides are beautiful how come there are so many ugly wives?" or "He put his head on my shoulder. Up until then I didn't know it came off." Source: weirdwildrealm
02 Don't Leave The Table
03 Marvin
04 Dr. Moe
05 Beauty Shop
06 Pokeracci
07 Did'Ja Come To Play Cards Or To Talk?
08 Driving Test
09 Hollywood Party
10 Should A Girl Get Married
11 How Did I Do
12 Gripes
Reprise R 6209
|
|
Parody Songs
|
|
Thanks daddio52!
|
0 comments on "Christine Nelson - Did'ja Come To Play Cards Or To Talk 1966"
Post a Comment