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In 1930 she went to Hollywood.  Under contract with Harry Cohn at Columbia Pictures, Courtney appeared in non-musical roles, usually as the wise-cracking friend of actresses such as Jean Harlow or Ginger Rogers.


Vaudeville days--from dancing to roller skating


By Bob Cudmore


   Red haired Amsterdam native Inez Courtney was 15 when she performed a specialty dance act during a three day run in 1923 in a vaudeville show at the Rialto Theater on Market Street, part of the Keith vaudeville circuit. 


   People referred to her as St. Vitus, Mosquito and Lightning.  Born into a large Irish-American family, Inez took up the stage after her father died.


   Vaudeville was a mix of specialized stage acts including dancers, singers, comedians and even roller skaters.  Vaudevillians toured America, some visiting big cities and others going to smaller towns like Amsterdam.


   My father, a teen ager at the time, recalled he could watch a movie and four or five vaudeville acts at one of Amsterdam’s theaters for 25 cents in the 1920s. 


   One Amsterdam movie theater prided itself on not providing vaudeville.  The Orpheum, on Market Street did feature movie stars on tour making personal appearances.


   Dancer Inez Courtney left vaudeville for Broadway, and was performing in “The Wild Rose” and other musicals in 1926.   She won acclaim for her role in the 1927 musical “Good News” about college life. 


   In 1930 she went to Hollywood.  Under contract with Harry Cohn at Columbia Pictures, Courtney appeared in non-musical roles, usually as the wise-cracking friend of actresses such as Jean Harlow or Ginger Rogers.


   Courtney performed in 58 films between 1930 and 1940 including “The Raven”, “Suzy”, and “Turnabout”, her last movie.


   She was married twice, the second time to an Italian nobleman.  When she retired from the movies in 1940 they moved to Rome Italy where her husband Luigi Filiesi was a wine merchant.  She died of undisclosed causes at a hospital in New Jersey in 1975 at age 67.


   Another vaudeville act that originated in Amsterdam had a long run but never made it to the movies.  Hyman and his brother Barney Nathan were roller skaters.


   According to the American Vaudeville Museum, there was a roller skating vogue in the early 1900s including Dare Devil Frank, Fielding and Carlos and the Skating Macks.


   The Nathan Brothers’ act was created by Hy Nathan when he ran the roller skating rink at a facility called the Colonial on Liberty Street in Amsterdam. 


   Roller skating was advertised four days a week at the Colonial in 1906.


A 1912 newspaper story reported that Hy Nathan canceled a ten mile skating race between Alfred Shrubb, the English champion, and Billy Queal, the American champion, which had been scheduled for the Colonial.  Nathan said there was not sufficient interest in the race.


   Hy and Barney Nathan toured on the Keith vaudeville circuit in America starting in 1918.  They also performed in Europe.  In February 1922 Hy Nathan was quoted by the Recorder as saying that the brothers were on tour in Ireland with their self-described “sensational” roller skating act.  The Nathans performed in Ireland during the first day of freedom for the Irish Free State.


   The news account stated, “They expect to fill a number of European engagements before returning to America.  Hy Nathan was home last summer on a brief visit.”


   In 1924 a newspaper story reported the Nathan Brothers were in Paris and about to tour Germany with stops in Berlin and Munich.  In 1928 the skating brothers sent a card from Hamburg to Amsterdam friend James Aiken via the mail service of the German dirigible Graf Zeppelin.


   A 1929 Amsterdam newspaper account of a contested will involving property in the Nathan family lists Hyman Nathan as one of the heirs.  No further word turns up, however, on the career of Hy and Barney Nathan, the vaudeville roller skaters.


Monday, March 13, 2023-Vaudeville days (the Podcast) from dancing to roller skating


Tuesday, March 14, 2023-History from the Daily Gazette-SIkora family memories 


Wednesday, March 15, 2023-Episode 399 Stephen Riegel is author of Finding Judge Crater: A Life and Phenomenal Disappearance in Jazz Age NY.


Thursday, March 16, 2023


Presumed dead


Friday, March 17, 2023-Episode 466-Kate Fagan is author of HOOP MUSES-An Insider’s Guide to Pop Culture and the (Women’s) Game an Adventure through Basketball History. Fagan is a native of Schenectady. She writes for Sports Illustrated.


The Historians with Bob Cudmore The City of Amsterdam, New York.


The 2023 Historians Podcast Go Fund Me Drive.


Use this Link


The Historians Podcast, organized by Bob Cudmore  


or


U.S. Mail Bob Cudmore 125 Horstman Drive, Scotia, NY 12302.


















Mohawk Valley Weekend Weather, Sunday, March 12, 2023











...WINTER STORM WATCH REMAINS IN EFFECT FROM MONDAY AFTERNOON
THROUGH WEDNESDAY MORNING...

* WHAT...Heavy wet snow possible. Total snow accumulations of 12
to 18 inches possible. Winds could gust as high as 40 mph at
times.

* WHERE...Hudson and Mohawk Valleys of eastern New York as well
as southern Litchfield County in northwestern Connecticut.

* WHEN...From Monday afternoon through Wednesday morning.

* IMPACTS...Travel could be very difficult to impossible. The
hazardous conditions could impact the morning and evening
commutes.

* ADDITIONAL DETAILS...This has the potential of being a long
duration and high-impact snow event for eastern New York and
western New England. Heavy wet snow combined with strong winds
will likely lead to downed trees and power outages across the
area. Please begin preparing now for this upcoming winter
storm event.

PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...

Monitor the latest forecasts for updates on this situation.



























Mohawk Valley News Headlines, Sunday, March 12, 2023

 











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