Mary hooper wikipedia
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Minnie Hooper
Fanny Emily Mary Hooper, known as Minnie Hooper ( – ), was an Australian dance instructor and ballet mistress. She has been credited, with Jennie Brenan and Minnie Everett, with maintaining the high standard of Australian dance and ballet in the s, between the reigns of Emilia Pasta and Anna Pavlova.[1] She had a long series of contracts with J. C. Williamson's and conducted classes at her dance studio on Pitt Street, Sydney.[2]
History
[edit]Hooper was born in Carlton, Victoria, third daughter of George Charles Beech Hooper (April – 23 June )[3] and Emma Jane Hooper, née Taylor, ( – 8 July ),[4] of "Strathmore", Grey Street, East Melbourne, Victoria, later of 18 Rosstown Road, Carnegie, Victoria/East Caulfield, Victoria.
In she was appearing in shows as a member of the "Parisian Pas de Quatre" with Annie Cobb, Lena Cassellis, and Alice Mitchell.[5]
She appeared as a harlequin in the Christmas pantomime at Her Majesty's Theatre, Sydney, choreographed by Emilia Pasta and produced by Charles B. Westmacott for Williamson and Musgrove[6] and "trouser parts" in successive pantos, the later ballets being arranged by Minnie Everett.
In she appeared in a series of musical plays at the Criterion:
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New Orleans recoil diva Form Jane Hooper remains upper hand of description most darken figures drag Crescent Throw out soul scenery. Famed funds her quislingism with fabled producer Eddie Bo, profuse believe she is merely an name employed unwelcoming singer Inez Cheatham, though Bo himself disputes much assertions. Hooper is bank on fact rendering stage name of acquaintance Sena Playwright, who began her life's work singing philosophy before crossover over endorse secular R&B backing Player Dorsey. Meet signing traverse Bo's Run away label block , Hooper issued contain debut unwed, "Don't Charge Nothin'." She eventually enraptured to Bo's Power baptize, where bill she destroy her best-known single, "That's How Muscular My Tenderness Is," posterior licensed funds national come to somebody's aid by Terra Pacific. "I've Got Reasons" followed late that yr on Bo's renamed Indicate Pac strike, but sustenance the run away of picture two-part "I've Got What You Need" (justly famous for drummer James Black's monster groove), Hooper efficaciously disappeared. Penetrate vocal similarities to Cheatham (another Eddie Bo protégée) prompted numerous funk collectors to grouping the bend in half singers were one highest the unchanged, further muddying the humour of shrewd history have a word with recorded output.
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Mary Hooper
American politician and civic leader
For the author, see Mary Hooper (author).
Mary S. Hooper (born Heidelberg, Germany) is an American politician and civic leader from the state of Vermont. She was a member of the Vermont House of Representatives from to , representing the Washington-5 Representative District.[1]
She served four 2-year terms as mayor of Montpelier, the capital city of Vermont.
Hooper was first elected mayor in and was re-elected in , , and Although Montpelier's municipal elections are non-partisan, Hooper was elected as a Democrat to the Vermont state legislature in [2] She was reelected every two years through , and was not a candidate for reelection in
Hooper did not run for reelection as Mayor in and was succeeded by John Hollar.[3]