Music Library, University of Nebraska–Lincoln Libraries
Ruth Etting was one of the most popular singing stars of the late 1920s and early 1930s. On radio she established herself as America's pre-eminent popular singer, repeatedly voted as the top female singer on the air in national listener polls. While the radio and the recording industry were still in their early developing years, Ruth Etting recorded over 200 songs by such composers as Irving Berlin, Johnny Green, Richard Rodgers and Lorenz Hart. She was a regular performer on at least eight network radio programs, was featured in six Broadway shows, was highlighted in three major full-length movies, and starred in 35 movie short subjects between 1928 and 1936.
Etting was born in David City, Nebraska on November 23, 1897. After graduation from high school in 1916, she moved to Chicago to attend the Chicago Academy of Fine Arts as a costume designer. From there she joined a chorus line and performed at the Marigold Gardens. In time, she was given solo opportunities which developed into her being billed as "Chicago's Sweetheart" and as a headliner in the Marigold Gardens, the Rainbo Gardens and the Terrace room of the Hotel Morrison in Chicago. She married Moe Snyder. She became a radio star, and her first recording was released by Columbia in 1926.
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