PROGRAMMES AND ADVERTS – 1946 – 1947
1946 and 1947 seemed to have been taken up by many concerts presented by Harold Fielding. One of the highlights of 1947 was singing in the broadcast to celebrate the eightieth birthday of Queen Mary. Apparently, Anne and Webster were favourites and she had asked that they should be included in the concert.
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[image error]6 January 1946
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6 February 1946 VARIETY tour (Harold Fielding) Usher Hall, Edinburgh, Harold Fielding presents
WEBSTER BOOTH AND ANNE ZIEGLER, Radio’s Famous Romantic Vocalists. Usher Hall, Edinburgh, Only remaining tickets 4/- and 3/- unreserved,
Town Hall Sheffield, Usher Hall Edinburgh,
St Andrew’s Hall Glasgow,
Caird Hall Dundee, City Hall Newcastle.
Webster was taken ill with ‘flu at the Usher Hall concert. He appeared in the first half and was unable to continue singing after the interval, so Anne finished this concert on her own and played a number of subsequent venues without him.
When he arrived in Edinburgh yesterday he
was feeling unwell, and the medical advice he received was to return
to London. He endeavoured, however, to play his part in Edinburgh
last night, but it was necessary for Miss Ziegler to take the second
appearance on her own.
Mr Booth last night expressed to the
Courier and Advertiser
his extreme disappointment at being unable to come to Dundee. He was
returning to London this morning.
9 February 1946 – Glasgow Herald.
Celebrity Concert in Glasgow – Webster Booth Ill. by Our Music
Critic.
Celebrity
concerts in most cases are in a class by themselves, proclaiming
beforehand the visiting artists only and making no mention of the
music they will play or sing. This emphasising of the personal side
must have made all the more disappointing the absence last evening in
St Andrew’s Hall, Glasgow, of Webster Booth through illness. His
partner, Anne Ziegler, carried on bravely without him, and a crowded
audience gave her the usual warm reception, expressing this time
sympathy as well as pleasure.
Her repertoire is familiar to her host of admirers, who attend to hear their favourites. But the supporting artists might have had some publicity beforehand for their chosen numbers. Vina Barnden, a pianist new to Glasgow, played Chopin, Liszt, and a more modern group. She has nimble fingers, a light touch that did not on the whole give sufficient depth of tone to her interpretations, and a rather restless idea of rubato.
12 May 1946
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Harold Fielding concerts featuring
Webster Booth and Anne Ziegler:
30 July 1946 – Leas Cliffe Hall,
Folkestone. Fee £150
3, 4, August 1946 – Winter Gardens,
Margate, Fee £300 for two nights.
24 August 1946 – Theatre Royal, Dublin, with Beatrix Clare, Herbert Dawson, Webster Booth and Anne Ziegler, fee £250
8 September 1946 – New Opera House,
Blackpool fee £150
22 September 1946 – Winter Gardens,
Eastbourne
26 September 1946 – Leas Cliff Hall,
Folkestone
29 September 1946 – Pier Pavilion, Llandudno

[image error]16 October 1946
16 October 1946 – Town Hall, Birmingham.
Concert presented by the Incorporated Guild of Hairdressers, Wigmakers and Perfumers.
Webster’s father, Edwin Booth and Webster’s brother, Edgar were hairdressers. Edgar was running Booth’s Ladies Hairdressers at 157 Soho Road, Handsworth, which had been the family home of the Booth family when Webster was born.
[image error]1 December 1946
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[image error]12 May 1947
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[image error]10 December 1947
[image error]26 December 1947


