Contents


Collection Summary

Biographical Note

Scope and Content Note

Organization of the Harriet Hoctor Collection

Selected Search Terms

Container List

Photographs

Scrapbook

Clippings

Posters, Programs, and Publicity Materials

Choreographic Notes

Monographs and Poems

Correspondence to and from Harriet Hoctor

Music

Magazine Articles about Harriet Hoctor

Personal Papers, Magazines, Costume Designs

Harriet Hoctor Collection

Processed by the Music Division of the Library of Congress

2007

Collection Summary

Creator Hoctor, Harriet
Title Harriet Hoctor Collection
Span Dates 1917-1972(bulk 1923-1937)
Abstract: Harriet Hoctor (1905-1977) was a dancer in vaudeville, on Broadway, and in films during the 1920s, 1930s and 1940s. The collection contains materials that document her professional life in all of these venues. It also contains items related to her early dance training at the Louis H. Chalif Normal School of Dancing in New York and the founding of the Harriet Hoctor Ballet School in Boston in 1945. Materials include correspondence from various notables, including Mary Pickford, Ted Shawn, Walter Winchell, Billy Rose, Milton Berle, and Florenz Ziegfeld; a scrapbook; clippings; contracts; photographs; programs; posters; reviews; publicity materials from various periods of her performing career; choreographic notes; music; personal papers; and costume designs.
Extent: 1,700 items12 containers10 linear feet
Language: Material in English
Identification: ML31.H58

Biographical Note

Date Event
1905, Sept. 25 Born in Hoosick Falls, New York, to Timothy and Elizabeth Kearny Hoctor.
1917 Hoctor moves to New York City to live with her Aunt Annie Kearney and to study dance at the Louis H. Chalif Normal School of Dancing. Later she studies with Ballets Russes member Ivan Tarasov, as well as with notable ballet stars Anton Dolan and Nicholas Legat.
1918 Hoctor appears in minstrel shows in her hometown of Hoosick Falls.
1920 Makes her Broadway debut in the chorus of Sally (music by Jerome Kern; ballet music by Victor Herbert; produced by Florenz Ziegfeld; and starring Marilyn Miller).
1922 Hoctor begins to work in vaudeville on the Keith and Orpheum Circuits. She also begins to study with dancer, teacher, and choreographer Merriel Abbot, who would choreograph many of Hoctor's specialty acts.
1923 Hoctor is hired by vaudeville superstars Vivian and Rosetta Duncan (known as the Duncan Sisters) to dance in Topsy and Eva (music and lyrics by Vivian and Rosetta Duncan), the Sisters's musical comedy adaptation of Harriet Beecher Stowe's novel Uncle Tom's Cabin. The show previews in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Detroit, and Cincinnati.
1924 While in Chicago, Hoctor choreographs her first show, a Chicago Junior League production of Wizard of Oz. She also performs three solos as part of the Chicago Theatre's "Mighty Twin Organ" concerts.
1924 Topsy and Eva opens in New York City on 23 December at the Sam H. Harris Theatre and plays for twenty weeks.
1925 Topsy and Eva tours in Boston and Chicago.
1926 Hoctor returns to San Francisco to perform vaudeville on the Orpheum Circuit and begins a life-long dance partnership with William Holbrook, whom she meets at Ivan Tarasov's ballet studio.
1927 After tryouts in Boston, the Broadway revue A La Carte opens in New York City's Martin Beck Theatre (music and lyrics by Herman Hupfeld, Louis Alter, Norma Gregg, and others; dances and ensembles staged by Sam Rose; special ballet direction by Theodore Bekeli; produced by Rosalie Stewart). Critics say that "Harriet Hoctor is the only member of the cast who is certain to be pleasantly remembered." After A La Carte closes, Hoctor returns to vaudeville.
1928 Hoctor stars in Florenz Ziegfeld's Broadway musical, The Three Musketeers (music by Rudolf Friml; lyrics by P.G. Wodehouse and Clifford Grey; choreography by Albertina Rasch), which previews in Washington D.C. and Boston, opening in New York City at the Lyric Theatre.
1928 In the spring of 1928, Hoctor presents a series of Sunday evening recitals and includes her interpretation of Debussy's "Claire de Lune" and "The Raven," based on Edgar Allen Poe's poem. She also receives permission from Ziegfeld to dance in a series of Sunday night entertainments at the Selwyn Theatre.
1928 Hoctor is selected as leading prima ballerina on the American stage.
1929 Hoctor opens in Show Girl, produced by Florenz Ziegfeld (music by George Gershwin; lyrics by Ira Gershwin and Gus Kahn; dances staged by Beth Connell and ballets created by Albertina Rasch). Harriet Hoctor becomes the first dancer to dance to Gershwin's "American in Paris."
1930 Hoctor opens in the Broadway musical, Simple Simon (music by Richard Rodgers; lyrics by Lorenz Hart; book by Ed Wynn and Guy Bolton; sets by Joseph Urban; produced by Florenz Ziegfeld).
1932 Hoctor arrives in England to star in the musical revue, Bow Bells. One critic noted "the audience gave her an ovation such as London's representatives only give to artistes of the very front rank."
1932 Hoctor opens in Earl Carroll's Vanities (music by Harold Arlen; lyrics by Ted Koehler; costumes created by Vincent Minnelli; ballets created by Gluck Sandor, other dances by Ned McGurn; production conceived and produced by Earl Carroll).
1933 Hoctor opens in New York City's RKO Music Hall Stage with her work, "The Nightingale and the Rose," based on a work by Oscar Wilde. New York critics hail the work as "an awe-inspiring performance which one cannot forget."
1933 Hoctor appears in previews for Hold Your Horses (music and lyrics by [Robert] Russell Bennett and others; scene and costume design by Russell Patterson; ballets created and staged by Harriet Hoctor; produced under the supervision of John Shubert). After previews in Boston and Pittsburgh, the show opens at the Winter Garden on 25 September 1933. Even though the show survives a mere eleven weeks, Hoctor receives the best reviews: "Except for Miss Hoctor's really lovely dancing, there isn't much about Hold Your Horses to recommend it to your attention."
1934 A revamped and pared down Hold Your Horses tours Chicago and Washington, D.C.
1934 The Harriet Hoctor Ballet Revue opens in New York City's Belasco Theatre. Hoctor presents six new ballets of her own creation.
1935 Columnist Louella O. Parsons announces in the New York American that the noted dance team of Fred Astaire and Ginger Rogers are to split and Hoctor is to star in Astaire's next film, Shall We Dance (1937). Regrettably for Hoctor, Rogers decides to appear in the film. Hoctor is given a ballet at the end of the film.
1936 Hoctor opens in Florenz Ziegfeld's The Ziegfeld Follies of 1936 (music by Vernon Duke; lyrics by Ira Gershwin; scenery and costumes by Vincent Minnelli; dances by Robert Alton and George Balanchine). Reviews consistently praise the show's three stars: Josephine Baker, Fannie Brice, and Harriet Hoctor.
1936 Hoctor appears as herself in the Hollywood film, The Great Ziegfeld (directed by Robert Z. Leonard; music by Walter Donaldson, starring Myrna Loy and William Powell).
1936 Hoctor signs as premier ballerina for the tenth edition of Earl Carroll's Vanities and spends the summer in St. Louis dancing in productions of Mark Twain's A Connecticut Yankee and Noel Coward's Bitter Sweet.
1937 Hoctor stars in Billy Rose's musical revue, Casa Manaña, in Fort Worth, Texas. More than 10,000 attend the show's four performances. One critic declares "The ballerina does her exquisite toe work so lightly it actually looks as though the breeze were blowing a slim boneless body from side to side."
1937 Hoctor appears in the musical revue Chez Paree Revue with orchestra leader Vincent Lopez.
1937 The New York Times announces that Hoctor is to be Fred Astaire's leading lady in RKO's film Damsel in Distress (1937). The part eventually goes to Joan Fontaine.
1937-1941 Hoctor appears in stage shows that preview movies, often with her own company.
1941 Hoctor is billed as "Favorite Ziegfeld Ballerina" at the Latin Quarter in Boston and appears in a solo recital at the Malden (MA) Auditorium.
1942 Hoctor appears in Billy Rose's Diamond Horseshoe revue, Mrs. Astor's Pet Horse, New York City.
1943 Hoctor performs in Beverly Hills in All American Revue.
1945 Hoctor choreographs the dances and performs in Billy Rose's Diamond Horseshoe revue, Toast of the Town.
1945 Hoctor opens a ballet school in Boston and devotes herself full-time to teaching.
1974 Hoctor retires and moves to Lorton, Virginia.
1977, June 9 Harriet Hoctor dies in Arlington, Virginia.

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Scope and Content Note

The Harriet Hoctor Collection is comprised of materials that document her professional life as a vaudeville, Broadway, and film dancer. The collection contains materials that span her early dance training at the Louis H. Chalif Normal School of Dancing in New York in 1917 to the founding of the Harriet Hoctor Ballet School in Boston in 1945.

Some of the highlights of the collection are correspondence (letters, cards, and telegrams) and contracts. Represented in the correspondence sent to Harriet Hoctor are Mary Pickford, Ted Shawn, Walter Winchell, Billy Rose, Milton Berle, and Florenz Ziegfeld.

The collection also contains one scrapbook, which includes articles, clippings, photographs, and posters, detailing the early career of Hoctor (1923-1925) as well as programs, posters, and publicity materials. A few of Hoctor's choreographic notes are in the collection, including sketches for the "Hurdle Ballet," which was originally staged by Seymour Felix for Hoctor in Ziegfeld's Simple Simon.

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Selected Search Terms

People

  • Berle, Milton--Correspondence.
  • Hoctor, Harriet--Archives.
  • Hoctor, Harriet--Correspondence.
  • Hoctor, Harriet--Photographs.
  • Hoctor, Harriet.
  • Hoctor, Harriet.
  • Pickford, Mary, 1892-1979--Correspondence.
  • Rose, Billy, 1899-1966--Correspondence.
  • Shawn, Ted, 1891-1972--Correspondence.
  • Winchell, Walter, 1897-1972--Correspondence.
  • Ziegfeld, Flo, 1869-1932--Correspondence.

Subjects

  • Choreography--United States.
  • Costume design--United States.
  • Dance in motion pictures, television, etc.--United States.
  • Dance music.
  • Dance schools--United States.
  • Dance--United States.
  • Musical theater--United States.
  • Vaudeville--United States.
  • Women dancers--United States.

Form/Genre

  • Clippings (Information artifacts)
  • Correspondence.
  • Photographic prints.
  • Programs (Documents)
  • Scrapbooks.

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Organization of the Harriet Hoctor Collection

The Harriet Hoctor Collection is organized into ten series:

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Container List

Photographs

Harriet Hoctor Alone

Hoctor, dancing as a child

Topsy and Eva

A La Carte

Three Musketeers

Simple Simon

Hold Your Horses

"The Raven" from Ziegfeld Follies of 1936

Billy Rose's Diamond Horseshoe

Show Girl

Shall We Dance (RKO Film)

The Great Ziegfeld (Universal)

Unidentified photographs

Publicity photographs

Negatives

Photograph of portrait of Harriet Hoctor by Abram Poole

Headshots

Harriet Hoctor with Others

Hoctor, dancing as a child

Hoctor and Edward Chalif at Chalif's dancing school, New York

Hoctor and Chalif's dancing school

Hoctor and others (unidentified)

Hoctor and others at London's Hippodrome

Hoctor and sculptor Jacob Epstein

Hoctor and William Holbrook in A La Carte

Hoctor and unidentified partner in Three Musketeers

Locations

Hoctor's New York City apartment

Unidentified set locations

Hoctor Family Members

Unidentified Hoctor family members

Identified Hoctor family members, including Anna Carney Elizabeth Kearney Hoctor (grandmother) Eloise Hoctor (sister) Frank Hoctor (brother) Frank Hoctor's children (Elizabeth, Frances, and Harriet) Fred Hoctor (nephew) John Hoctor (brother) Tim and Elizabeth (Libby) Hoctor (parents) Pat Kearney (uncle) Marguerite Sage Oetjen (niece)

Harriet Hoctor's students and dance school

Students and dance school (negatives, slides, and contact sheets)

Others-Identified, including The Bennetts Tom Chatterton Dennis King Anna Ludmila (a.k.a. Jean Marie Gee) Mario and Desha Alicia Markova Edwin Tyler Walter Winchell

Others-Unidentified

Others-Identified, including Lester Allen Edwin Booth Clarence Derwent Jimmy Durante Leon Errol Ruth Etting Rupert Hughes Marilyn Miller Wendy Toye

Scrapbook

1923-1925

Clippings

1920s

1930s

1940s; 1970s

Undated clippings

Harriet Hoctor Ballet School

Fred Hoctor and John Hoctor

Miscellaneous typed reviews

Posters, Programs, and Publicity Materials

Posters

Ballet Revue preview to W.C. Fields's film It's a Gift

The Manchester Hippodrome, June 1932

Leo Litwin and his Concert Orchestra, with the Harriet Hoctor Dancers, undated

The Three Musketeers, Lyric Theatre, New York, 1928

Programs

Souvenir program: Ziegfeld Follies, 1936

Harriet Hoctor presents The Dollies' Follies, Boston Opera House, 1945

Harriet Hoctor Ballet (Dance Recitals), 1943-1972

The Boston Ballet Company, The Nutcracker [choreography and costumes for "Candy Canes" by Harriet Hoctor]

Simple Simon, Majestic Theatre, New York City, 1931

Harriet Hoctor and her Ballet Revue, Belasco Theatre, Los Angeles, undated

Souvenir program: The Great Ziegfeld (MGM, ) 1936

Second Twilight Concert Benefit Building Fund, The University of the American Theatre, East Hampton, L.I., New York, undated

Unique Sunday Night Divertissements, Selwyn Theatre, 1928

Flyer: Ziegfeld Follies [] 1936

Topsy and Eva, Sam H. Harris Theatre, New York City, 1925

The Three Musketeers, Lyric Theatre, New York City, 1928

Other Publicity Materials

Postcards: The Manchester Hippodrome, 1932

Mail order application: Belasco Theatre, undated

Flyer: The Three Musketeers, 1928

Farewell supper in honor of the Duncan Sisters, 1923

Flyer: The Three Musketeers, 1928

Sample stationery: Harriet Hoctor's Boston Ballet School, undated

Publicity materials, Harriet Hoctor School of Ballet, 1969-1970; 1970-1971

Miscellaneous items: students, Harriet Hoctor Ballet School

Choreographic Notes

Notes for The Blue Danube Ballet and Hurdle Ballet

Monographs and Poems

Poem: "To Harriet Hoctor Dancing"

Poem: "Dancer" by Jack Walsh

Poem: "A Ballade to Harriet Hoctor"

"Ballet is Magic: Harriet Hoctor," by Walter Ware

The Ballet in England (1932) "Dedicated to Harriet Hoctor," by Arnold L. Haskell

Unidentified

Correspondence to and from Harriet Hoctor

Family Members

Harriet [Hoctor Groeschel] (niece)

Eloise [Hoctor] (sister)

Elizabeth Kearney Hoctor (mother)

Frances H. Hoctor (niece)

John Hoctor (brother)

Tim Hoctor (father) to his sister

Laurel [?] (niece)

Jane Moon Love (niece)

Nancie [?] (niece)

Jane Simms (niece)

Others

Mrs. John W. (Maryann) Antoine

Marlena Atamanui

Gladys Balestrassi

Sandra Balestrassi

John Gibson Bliss

Marcy Blinderman

Edward Caton

Louis H. Chalif

Ed Corcoran

Frank Crowninshield

Joyce Cuoco

Mary H. Dockham

Renée George

Connie Herbert

Mrs. F. Sheppard (Emily) Holt

La Bossiere Family

Sophie S. McMillen

Mrs. Charles (Vivian) W. Middleton

Marilyn Miller

[Robert?] Newman (with synopsis for revue)

Mrs. Morgan (Gloria) Nilsen

Mrs. Gustav Oetjen

Mary Pickford

Ted Shawn

Mary Vasel

Allen S. Wilber

Walter Winchell

Virginia [?]

Florenz Ziegfeld

Former students and fans

Business correspondence to Hoctor (1931-1934)

Unidentified and Fragments

Telegrams from well-known producers, composers, photographers, performers, writers, film and stage directors, casting directors, and other show business luminaries: [John] Murray Anderson; Bobbie Arnst; Milton Berle; Ben Bernie; Anatole Bourman; Russel Crouse; Clarence Derwent ; Ralph G Farnum; Rudolf Friml; Daniel Frohman; Arnold Genthe; Billy Grady; Cornwell Jackson; Jules Lande; Arthur S Lyons; William Morris; Billy Rose; Madam and Monsieur Senia Russakoff; Milton Schwarzwald; Louis Shurr; Margit and Ivan Tarasoff; Ed Wynn.

Telegrams from Broadway and film performers

Telegrams, various

Various

Music

"Petite Suite de Concert," S. Coleridge-Taylor Piano conductor's score with some choreographic notes

"I wish I had never seen sun shine" [Jimmy Davis] Piano vocal score

"Hora Staccato," Dinicu-Heifetz Piano score

"Tarentelle" op. 85, no. 2, Stephen Heller Piano part

"Gallop," Aram Khachaturian Piano conductor's score with choreographic notes

"Waltz at Maxims," Frederich Loewe Piano; for Hoctor Dancers

"Valse Bleue," A. Margis Parts

"Orpheus Can Can" [Jacques Offenbach] Parts (negatives)

"Poupée Valsante," Ed. Poldini Piano score

"Pas de Quatre," Pugni (Markova Dolin Ballet) Parts

"A Game of Tag," Geo. J. Trinkaus Piano conductor's score

"The Cockatoos" [unidentified] Piano part

Magazine Articles about Harriet Hoctor

Theatre Magazine, "The Homes of American Celebrities," , no. 7, p. 57. December 1928

The Dance Magazine, "The All-American Choice of Dancers for 1928," , pp. 34-35. January 1919

Vanity Fair, "The Theatre," , pp. 40-41. December 1933

Picture Play, , p. 20. February 1936

Motion Picture, , p. 55. June 1937

Dance, , cover and p. 13. June 1937

Dance Magazine, , pp. 112-117. December 1965

Magazine clippings, 1920s

Magazine clippings, 1930s

Magazine clippings, undated

Personal Papers, Magazines, Costume Designs

Newspapers, publications, and magazines relating to Hoctor's hometown of Hoosick Falls, New York

Elementary school papers

Magazine covers

Costume sketches

Prints and postcards

Magazines, programs, and non-dance newspaper clippings

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