The Hour of Charm was a 22 piece all girl orchestra and choir, considered to be a novelty act. However, while the gimmick got listeners to tune in initially, the music quality kept the audience tuning in week after week. Spitalny formed the group after being moved by a concert featuring Julliard School of Music graduate Evelyn Kaye?s violin performance. He recruited her to help him interview and hire the other female performers. All the women agreed to strict rules concerning their rehearsals and personal lives, including hair style (long and flowing), who they could date (a committee would quiz the member on her suitor?s background), no marriage for at least two years after joining the ensemble, 6-8 hour daily rehearsals, and memorizing every note and bar of the music (Spitalny didn?t allow the orchestra to use music stands during performances). Phil Spitalny (November 7, 1890, Tetiev, Ukraine (territory of Russian Empire) ? October 11, 1970, Miami Beach, Florida) was a musician, music critic, composer and bandleader heard often on radio during the 1930s and 1940s. He rose to fame after he brought together an orchestra with only female musicians, a novelty at the time. On radio, Spitalny was introduced as Phil Spitalny and His All-Girl Orchestra featuring Evelyn and her Magic Violin. The magic violinist was Evelyn Kaye Klein, who used the professional name, Evelyn Silverstone. She helped Spitalny find the women he needed to assemble his all-female orchestra. Together, they auditioned more than 1000 musicians in New York, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit and Pittsburgh. Spitalny’s 22-piece band was known as the Hour of Charm Orchestra during the time it appeared on the radio program, The Hour of Charm, hosted by Arlene Francis.
Includes 10 Episodes On 1 MP3 CD-R!
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