About this item
Highlights
- Raised in poverty on an Iowa farm, the Cherry Sisters had little education and no training.
- About the Author: The late Darryl W. Bullock was the author of several books and posted weekly on his popular obscure music blog, worldsworstrecords.
- 214 Pages
- Biography + Autobiography, Entertainment & Performing Arts
Description
About the Book
"Raised in poverty on an Iowa farm, the Cherry Sisters had little education and no training. But they possessed a burning desire to take to the stage and show the world what they could do. Their unique act was "so bad it was good.""--Book Synopsis
Raised in poverty on an Iowa farm, the Cherry Sisters had little education and no training. But they possessed a burning desire to take to the stage and show the world what they could do--and what they could do was awful. Their unique act was "so bad it was good." When the sisters took the stage, they were met with rotten fruit and vegetables, festering meat, dead cats... Riots often broke out after (and sometimes during) their concerts, but they carried on, changing attitudes--and laws--along the way.
This book follows the five women through their forty-year career in vaudeville theaters across the U.S. Proud, fearless and fiercely independent in a time when women were treated as second-class citizens, the Cherry Sisters insisted that their voices be heard.
About the Author
The late Darryl W. Bullock was the author of several books and posted weekly on his popular obscure music blog, worldsworstrecords. He lived in Bristol, England.