Lola Cotton
Lola Carmelita Cotton (born November 15, 1892, in Waterloo, Iowa; died July 9, 1975, San Diego)[1][2] was, as a child, a vaudeville mentalist and hypnotist, whose performance career flourished from about 1899 to 1915. Her shows were particularly popular in Los Angeles, California and New York City. Girl phenomenonAs a six-year-old[3] she performed feats of memory at the Orpheum Theatre in Los Angeles.[4] A particular venue often headlined her ability to solve a psychological puzzle.[5] At Keith's,[6] 14th Street (Manhattan) between Broadway (Manhattan) and 4th Avenue,[7] owned by Benjamin Franklin Keith, she performed a mind reading act in April 1903.[6] Her routine included mental telegraphy with a touch of mystery added. Initially she was introduced by a man who proceeded through the audience. He pointed to objects which members of the audience suggested while Cotton was blindfolded. A sample of the dialogue which transpired between Cotton and her interlocutor is What is this? A gold nugget. Right. And this? A railroad pass. The number. The number is 10,961. It is dated April 28. She named all types of things from buttons to the color of a woman's eyes. Then the man requested the audience to call out numbers. He transcribed them on a board. They read 38171562, 49078399, 672872217. Without hesitating Cotton said the totals of each column with her eyes remaining blindfolded.[5] At the Orpheum in October 1899 she made the combination moves of the Knight (chess) on a chessboard while blindfolded. She could begin from any number on the board. Her moves were carried out so rapidly that one's eyes could barely follow her.[3] The Eight Vassar Girls and singer Charles Vance entertained at the Alhambra Theater,[8] 2110 Adam Clayton Powell Jr. Blvd., New York City,[9] in April 1907. Cotton was among the attractions in this vaudeville show.[8] Billed as a hypnotist, she was in a September 1907 production staged at Keith & Proctor's 125th Street Theatre,[10] in Harlem, New York.[11] She appeared with singer Emma Carus at Hammerstein's Victoria Theatre of Varieties,[12] 1481 Broadway,[13] in March 1908.[12] A few weeks before she was again at the Alhambra Theatre with Gertrude Hoffman. The latter gave an imitation of Eva Tanguay singing I Don't Care. The song had sparked a rivalry between the two women.[14] FamilyLola was the daughter of John L. Cotton, a San Diego barber and actor, and Della (Delia) Lorette Cotton.[15] On May 20, 1914, Lola married Roby Charles Jonesin San Diego, though only for a month. On May 23, 1914 – three days after their wedding – Lola deserted Roby on the grounds that, "her husband's love was too violent in its nature to meet with her approval."[16] A month after their wedding, Lola filed for divorce on the grounds that Roby, a special policeman with the City of San Diego, had threatened to kill her.[17] In 1915, Roby married Mabel B. Slaff, then divorced her in 1918, then, subsequently married Bertha Kamer (1888–1988). On August 21, 1915, Lola married Earl Frank Brown.[18] Together, they had a son, Frank Leo Brown (1918–1976). References
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