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Thu, 05.01.1890

Ada Brown, Singer and Actress born

Ada Brown

*Ada Brown was born on this date in 1890. She was an American blues and jazz singer and actress.

Ada Scott Brown was born and raised in Kansas City, Kansas. She was born into a musically inclined family and grew up singing in church as a child. In 1910, she successfully launched her career at Bob Motts' Pekin Theatre in Chicago. Her cousin James Scott was a ragtime composer and pianist.

Her early career was spent primarily on stage in musical theater and vaudeville. She worked in clubs in Paris and Berlin before focusing on recording. She recorded with Bennie Moten and Mary H. Bradford in 1923; the track "Evil Mama Blues" is possibly the earliest recording of Kansas City jazz. Aside from her time with Moten, she did several tours alongside bandleaders such as George E. Lee. Her tours took place in theaters throughout the United States and Canada. During this time, Brown also appeared in black revues and musical comedies up and down Broadway.

Brown was a founding member of the Negro Actors Guild of America in 1936. to eliminate the stereotyping of African Americans in theatrical and cinematic performances. She worked with Fredi Washington, Leigh Whipper, and others to provide financial and social resources for African American entertainers. She worked at the London Palladium and on Broadway in the late 1930s. She sang "That Ain't Right" with Fats Waller in the musical film Stormy Weather (1943). Brown was regularly reviewed in the Black Press from 1920 to 1929 as her career grew in vaudeville theaters. Unlike country bluesmen who accompanied themselves on acoustic guitar and harmonica, she worked with jazz pianists to give her songs a beat. Her style of blues was "blues wedded to jazz."

She also appeared in Harlem to Hollywood, accompanied by pianist Harry Swannagan. Brown was featured on two tracks of the compilation album Ladies Sing the Blues ("Break o' Day Blues" and "Evil Mama Blues"). Shortly before her retirement, one of her last appearances was in Memphis Bound. Ada Brown, best known for her recordings of "Ill Natural Blues," "Break o' Day Blues," and "Evil Mama Blues," died in Kansas City of kidney disease on March 31, 1950.

To Become a musician or Singer
To become an Actor or Actress

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