[Preface] 
                  [Orville's 
                  Worlds] [Family] [Young 
                  Orville ] [To New York] [To 
                  London, and back] [The Second Marriage, 
                  1913 – 1917] [The Third Marriage, 
                  Rehabilitation] [The Met Years, 
                  Two careers 1920-1924] [Photogallery]
                 
                The Second 
                  Marriage, 1913 – 1917
                Orville 
                  Harrold appeared secure as an operatic tenor at the opening 
                  of 1913. Despite some near-term uncertainty during construction 
                  of the new Lexington Opera House, he had been regularly employed 
                  by Hammerstein for two years, who always paid his artists for 
                  services rendered (any wage disputes arising from his closings 
                  involved future contract obligations) and who would have paid 
                  his star London tenor very well. One report of their five year 
                  contract arising from the opera franchise scheme stated that 
                  Hammerstein was to pay Orville $700 nightly, for forty nights 
                  per season1, which in today’s values would approach 
                  a million dollars annually. 
                
                Hammerstein 
                  engagements kept Orville busy for the new year, while Orville 
                  soon managed several projects of his own. The Firefly, 
                  with Emma Trentini, had moved to the Casino Theatre, where Orville 
                  was seated in a stage box one evening in early January, 1913. 
                  When prima donna Trentini invited him to entertain the audience 
                  after one of her curtain calls, he sang “I’m Falling in Love 
                  with Some One”, from Naughty Marietta, which had brought 
                  public notice to his high tenor voice2, first from 
                  the box without rising from his seat, and a second time joining 
                  her onstage. He then returned his box seat, where his companion 
                  was former London Opera soprano, Lydia Locke3.
                
                By 
                  February, Orville was touring through Kansas in a concert series 
                  arranged by Harry Paris. They presented their standard show, 
                  in which Orville introduced Canio in costume, and the practiced 
                  piano accompaniment of Agnes Monroe had come to intertwine as 
                  a duet with Orville’s voice. He could talk to the audience of 
                  his early days in Kansas, and was generally well received as 
                  a returning native. They passed through Lawrence, Topeka, Hutchinson, 
                  and Wichita in early February, and on to Kansas City on the 
                  eleventh4, where Orville sang to a nearly empty house. 
                  One reviewer lamented that citizens had missed an excellent 
                  event, as Orville soldiered on with expression and energy for 
                  the few who came5. Kansas City unfortunately perceived 
                  Orville to have snubbed them the previous fall when he boycotted 
                  their Felice Lyne homecoming, for which they reciprocated in 
                  kind, the sympathetic reviewer patiently explaining that the 
                  singer had merely honored his manager and their contract. 
                
                Orville’s 
                  son, Paul, described an event that likely occurred on this tour, 
                  or one of the other 1913 Harry Paris tours, when Paul was about 
                  ten years old. Orville had written that his train would be arriving 
                  in Muncie, so Paul was there to greet him. When all was ready 
                  for departure, Orville spontaneously carried Paul onto the train 
                  and they continued on to St. Louis, wiring Effie along the way 
                  that all was fine5.5. Paul received new clothes in 
                  St. Louis, and continued on to Kansas City, attending concerts 
                  and having a wonderful time. He said that Orville tried to have 
                  the children with him whenever possible, and Paul recalled enjoying 
                  times with his father in Chicago, New York, California, and 
                  at Orville’s later home in Connecticut. 
                
                Harry 
                  Paris had Orville back in Indianapolis on the eve before Valentine’s 
                  Day, for a grand event at English’s Opera House6. 
                  In addition to a large audience was Orville’s friend and mentor, 
                  Alexander Ernestinoff, in a prime box over the stage. Before 
                  Pagliacci, Orville gave a brief speech describing his 
                  joy for the event, at which his mother heard him sing for the 
                  first time in many years, and for the first time in public, 
                  and expressed gratitude to Ernestinoff, who had led him to first 
                  sing with an orchestra in Indianapolis. 
                
                Orville 
                  was in Muncie the following Monday, performing in his own tragic 
                  opera. Effie and Orville Harrold appeared in divorce court on 
                  February 17, 1913, newspaper reports describing their circumstances 
                  all too vividly7:
                
                Effie 
                  Harrold, wife of Orville Harrold, the tenor, obtained a decree 
                  of divorce from her husband this afternoon in the Delaware Superior 
                  Court on the ground of cruelty. Mrs. Harrold told the court 
                  that her husband on several occasions said he wanted nothing 
                  more to do with her. She produced letters in which he said he 
                  did not love her.
                Mrs. 
                  Harrold testified that she and her husband were happy before 
                  he became famous as a singer. Since that time he had been in 
                  New York, Paris, and London, while she had remained here caring 
                  for their three children. She complained that his success had 
                  killed all his love for her. Mr. Harrold was in court with his 
                  attorney and admitted that he did not love his wife. Their stations 
                  in life, he said, had become widely separated.
                By 
                  the decree Mr. Harrold receives the custody of their oldest 
                  child, Adelene, 13…..The singer was ordered to pay $25 a month 
                  each for support of the two younger children.
                
                With 
                  the efficiency of modern rail service, Orville appeared three 
                  days later in New York City Hall, to be married8,
                HARROLD 
                  WEDS AGAIN – Tenor, Divorced Last Monday, Marries Lydia Talbot 
                  at City Hall – Orville Harrold, the operatic tenor, and Lydia 
                  Talbot, who gave her profession as a singer, obtained a marriage 
                  license yesterday afternoon at City Hall and were married shortly 
                  afterward by Alderman James Smith in the building……Harrold gave 
                  his age as 35 and his residence as 262 West Forty-sixth Street. 
                  His bride, who said she was a widow, gave her age as 25 and 
                  her address as 204 West 108th Street….
                
                Orville’s 
                  separation from Effie, after six years away, becomes clear. 
                  Lydia Locke Talbot, statuesque soprano from Hammerstein’s London 
                  Opera, was relatively unknown in New York. While the New 
                  York Times wedding announcement introduced Orville by a 
                  single name as “the operatic tenor”, Lydia was somebody who 
                  “gave her profession as a singer.” She had not been connected 
                  with Hammerstein’s old Manhattan Opera, but Musical America 
                  stated that she and Orville had met while both were pupils 
                  of Oscar Saenger9, which could place the meeting 
                  in New York during 1910 or 1911, when Orville was still unknown. 
                  She thus would have been aware of Hammerstein’s London plans, 
                  and may have ventured independently to London, where Orville 
                  became the season’s reigning tenor, and an excellent catch for 
                  a rising soprano. Reginald Talbot was again mentioned as Lydia’s 
                  previous husband, while Orville announced that they would take 
                  an apartment on Riverside Drive, and would travel to Florence, 
                  Italy after completing his spring commitments to Hammerstein9.5.
                
                In 
                  London, Lydia would have had to earn her place on her own merits, 
                  which were sufficient to garner a number of roles: Hedwige in 
                  William Tell, Countess of Ceprano in Rigolleto, 
                  Alisa in Lucia, Inez in La Favourita, Gertrude 
                  in Romeo and Juliet, Martha in Faust, and Giuletta 
                  in Tales of Hoffman. Along with Orville, Felice Lyne, 
                  and others, she had London portraits taken by Dover St. Studio 
                  in Mayfair (the common photo of Orville as Faust is from Dover 
                  St. Studio.) Lydia went to New York in mid-1912, at about the 
                  time that Orville left London. After attending a Halloween party 
                  with a theatrical agent, she was involved in a New York auto 
                  accident that injured eleven people, and kept her inactive for 
                  a period with a broken limb10. (Orville appears to 
                  have been touring for Hammerstein at this time.) Arrayed in 
                  considerable jewelry, she reportedly identified herself at Bellevue 
                  Hospital as Mrs. Lydia Harrold11, and remained in 
                  the hospital for several weeks. Their wedding announcement in 
                  the New York Herald, headlined “Orville Harrold, Four Days Divorced, 
                  Weds Singer After Opera Romance”, indicated that Orville had 
                  been her singing coach for two years12, and everything 
                  suggests that Orville and Lydia had been building up to a wedding 
                  for much of the previous year. 
                
                Patti 
                  Harrold had probably reached the same conclusion upon arriving 
                  in New York the previous fall. Patti had been reared for much 
                  of her life by Effie alone, who continued to care deeply for 
                  Orville. For the adolescent daughter, Lydia was likely the woman 
                  who had divided her family, while Lydia’s auto accident perhaps 
                  placed Orville in a protective stance toward her, exacerbating 
                  an awkward situation. It also turns out that Lydia may have 
                  been neither maternal nor receptive to competition. The new 
                  family likely had a difficult start, whatever the circumstances, 
                  and Patti forever held a vitriolic view of Lydia while remaining 
                  quite in love with her father and New York theatre.
                
                The 
                  divorce grew excruciatingly public and controversial, becoming 
                  syndicated news as a classic marital travesty of a husband abandoning 
                  his wife and family. A full page spread in the Salt Lake Sunday 
                  Tribune was headlined, How He “Outgrew” His Wife. While 
                  the article offered no editorial comment13, Effie 
                  eloquently and simply described her distress and sorrow, as 
                  Orville clumsily declared that, “A man must fulfill his destiny” 
                  and concluded that, “I had to go on and she would not – that 
                  is all there is to it.” This perhaps caused few ripples in New 
                  York City, but left lasting negative impressions elsewhere.
                
                The 
                  Hutchinson (Kansas) News, where Orville was a virtual native 
                  son, declared (tongue in cheek), “SUCCESS FOR HARROLD – Caruso 
                  Has Nothing on the Kansas Singer Now.” While Orville had already 
                  been called an “American Caruso”, they were not referring to 
                  opera. Caruso had appeared before a New York court in 1906 on 
                  charges of pinching an unsuspecting lady in a crowd at the zoo. 
                  Orville had now surpassed Caruso by joining the “alimony class.” 
                  Dwelling on Effie’s tearful testimony of how fame had crushed 
                  their love14, the article was relentlessly sarcastic 
                  of Orville’s “growth” from loving grocery clerk to callous opera 
                  star. But, the couple agreed that their relationship was beyond 
                  reconciliation. It was perhaps inevitable that the forces were 
                  just too great, given the two people, their circumstances, and 
                  their differences. All that was left was to live on. 
                
                While 
                  live on they did, it can be said that Orville paid far less 
                  child support than was commensurate with his earning power since 
                  entering Mr. Hammerstein’s employ in 1910. At $25 each for two 
                  children, Orville’s support payments were slightly above the 
                  $10 per week he had earned in Muncie, in that sense constituting 
                  a full average income level for the family. Effie’s and the 
                  children continued for a time in their Muncie duplex, with income 
                  solely from Orville and piano lessons, and then moved into the 
                  house of Effie’s sister, Emma Kiger, who was a single schoolteacher. 
                  Having stayed with Orville through the lean Bohemian years, 
                  the family remained in modest circumstances while Orville’s 
                  income elevated into the substantial level of successful New 
                  York entertainers. 
                
                As 
                  divorce scandal swirled on, Orville was back touring through 
                  the spring of 1913, without his new wife. In mid-April he shared 
                  a double bill of classical music, the last in a series of Artist’s 
                  Concerts, in Portland, Oregon with noted Swiss pianist and conductor, 
                  Rudolph Ganz15 (who claimed direct decent from Charlemagne). 
                  This was part of a continuing tour, such that Orville reached 
                  Indianapolis from the west on May 31, for a large Wagner choral 
                  festival led by Alexander Ernestinoff. Lydia arrived from New 
                  York the same day, and the festival began the following afternoon. 
                  A very large combined chorus, derived from a variety of the 
                  region’s German choruses, presented several concerts16. 
                  Soloists were Marie Rappold and Henri Scott, both of the Met, 
                  and Orville Harrold, singing individually and with the chorus. 
                  
                
                The 
                  Indianapolis event concluded Orville’s spring obligations to 
                  Hammerstein, leaving the newlyweds to plan their summer. They 
                  considered a summerhouse at Bradley Beach, New Jersey17, 
                  but it appears that they opted for a honeymoon in Florence, 
                  Italy to study opera, as indicated at the time of their wedding. 
                  According to an un-attributed article in Effie Kiger’s scrapbook, 
                  Orville studied intently in Italy on improving his French, German, 
                  and Italian, in addition to learning new operatic librettos18. 
                  It also appears that they managed several concerts and opera 
                  engagements while there19.
                
                It 
                  is uncertain where Patti was during this. She could have summered 
                  in Muncie. Orville had formal custody of her, so that she might 
                  have remained in New York, relatively alone, or joined in an 
                  Italian vacation. Wherever she was at the time, Patti mentioned 
                  to her niece years later (ca. 1960) that Lydia had shot across 
                  a room at Orville20 while the couple was in Italy 
                  (apparently on their honeymoon)! Although this is hardly objective 
                  proof of the event, such an assertion is credible. It is difficult 
                  to guess how much Orville ever really knew of Lydia, or when 
                  he knew it, for she was an audaciously complex woman who wove 
                  a long intricate history. 
                 
                Lydia 
                  Mae Locke was among the youngest daughters of Civil War Veteran, 
                  Newton Bushnell Lock (they interchanged Lock and Locke), who 
                  had a farm in Adams County, west central Illinois, near the 
                  Mississippi River town of Quincy. She was likely born in or 
                  before 1884, being about six years younger than Orville, although 
                  age is just one area that she obscured. The family relocated 
                  during the hard times preceding the crash of 1892, to be near 
                  relatives in Hannibal, Missouri, where Mr. Lock worked as a 
                  day laborer. Lydia ran away from Hannibal and later lived with 
                  a married older sister in St. Louis21, Mrs. Jane 
                  Schmitt, events suggesting that this was a considerably traumatic 
                  time. 
                
                Lydia 
                  Mae seemed to go by her middle name during this period, and 
                  the varied mix of turn of the century St. Louis is when and 
                  where Mae cultivated operatic aspirations and dramatic flair, 
                  which she never limited to the stage. Continuing a feral streak, 
                  she met Albert W. Talbot during 1902, an exotic French-speaking 
                  black sheep in white suits, in a St. Louis “immoral house22” 
                  when she was perhaps 18 and Albert was about 43. Albert became 
                  Mae’s first husband the following year in Denver, when she became 
                  his fourth wife23. Albert had strayed a bit also, 
                  for he was the brother of Québécois Colonel Arthur Talbot, of 
                  the Canadian federal parliament24, and they had a 
                  sister who was a nun. The Talbot couple moved to San Francisco 
                  and on to Reno, Nevada, Albert’s talents being gambling, horsemanship, 
                  and bookmaking, to the extent that they owned real estate in 
                  both cities25. Between financial worth and dandy 
                  dress, he was known as Prince Albert. They owned a home and 
                  a bowling alley in Reno, and Mae sometimes performed vaudeville 
                  and opera at the Wigwam Theatre, under the name of Madame “Talbo” 
                  26. 
                
                Albert 
                  perhaps supported Mae’s operatic yearnings, as he seems to have 
                  been genuinely sympathetic toward her, so that Mae claimed to 
                  have studied opera in Milan, Italy. She stated that she had 
                  debuted in Carmen, going on to appear in Rigoletto, 
                  La Gioconda, Il Trovatore, and Aida, both 
                  in Milan and Venice27, and at the time of marrying 
                  Orville, she stated that her first husband had lived with her 
                  in Italy28. Returning home, she appeared in concerts 
                  in San Francisco and her husband’s homeland of Canada. It also 
                  seems that the couple was somewhat volatile, gradually escalating 
                  into verbal and physical abuse. By late 1909, having lived in 
                  Reno for three years, they filed for divorce and began negotiating 
                  division of property. 
                
                Mae 
                  had an apartment, where the couple reportedly fought one evening, 
                  and where both neighbors and police were familiar with similar 
                  events. Mae and Albert then met the following morning (October 
                  28, 1909) at the office of her attorney, Judge W. D. Jones, 
                  to continue discussing property, of which Mae wanted 50% on 
                  the basis that she had helped Albert obtain all that he owned. 
                  With cool October weather in Reno, Mae had arrived wearing fur 
                  and a muff, and still had her hands in the muff as they talked. 
                  As voices and emotions escalated, Mae stood up over Albert, 
                  and when he stood to face her she pushed the muff into his chest 
                  and fired a shot from a small revolver29. A second 
                  shot went into a doorframe as Albert and Attorney Jones struggled 
                  to restrain her. Mae then ran from the office, where Albert 
                  lay mortally wounded in the right lung. Mae rushed to her apartment, 
                  informing the landlady that she was leaving, and to tell friends 
                  that she would not be returning. She then retired to a lady 
                  friend’s apartment, where Sheriff Farrell found Mae on a couch, 
                  wearing a kimono30, denying any knowledge of the 
                  shooting.
                
                This 
                  was page-one news in Reno, and as Albert lingered for a week 
                  he maintained that, “She did not mean to shoot me. It was an 
                  accident. We’ve both been pretty hard on each other many times, 
                  we have both made mistakes, too.” He went on to say that should 
                  he die, it would merely be the culmination of a life wasted, 
                  and that his wife should be left alone31. Instead, 
                  she was tried for 2nd degree murder, over loud prosecution 
                  protestations of more sinister intent. Mae was acquitted in 
                  December on self-defense, at least partially because of previous 
                  physical abuse and consequent fear for her wellbeing. A matter 
                  of later inconvenience for Mae was that details of her meeting 
                  and shooting Albert Talbot became public record during the trial, 
                  somewhat offset because all Reno sources referred to her as 
                  Mae Talbot.
                
                Mae 
                  Talbot put Reno behind her to become operatic soprano, Lydia 
                  Locke. She could not have reached Hammerstein’s Manhattan Opera 
                  before it folded in early 1910. One source suggests that she 
                  traveled to Chicago and on to Paris to study singing, presenting 
                  the possibility that she was in Paris with Orville prior to 
                  the London Opera32. Her Reno life became non-existent. 
                  Prince Albert was elevated to a deceased English military officer 
                  named Reginald, and later in America became Lord Reginald Talbot, 
                  until Lydia’s Reno affairs were uncovered in 1923. Whoever Lydia 
                  Mae was in 1913, she was Orville’s. 
                
                Lydia’s Midwest farm origins 
                  were similar to Orville’s, but she probably did not portray 
                  these, as that image did not suit the sophisticated persona 
                  that she had evolved. She must have told him that she was from 
                  somewhere, and one wedding clipping described Lydia’s mother 
                  as on her way to New York from her “country home” near St. Louis33. 
                  It remains unclear how Lydia contained information of her past, 
                  especially throughout the wedding gathering, although it is 
                  possible that her family knew nothing at all of the Talbot marriage. 
                  At the least, however, Orville might have returned from Italy 
                  in 1913 with a cautious new view of his second wife. Clouds 
                  were building, divorce and marriage being among several fateful 
                  decisions Orville made during this period.
                 
                Home 
                  from Italy, the couple finally spent early September at Bradley 
                  Beach, near Asbury Park and Ocean Grove New Jersey, summering 
                  and practicing voice and opera roles for the coming New York 
                  winter season34. Construction on the Lexington Opera 
                  House was lagging, so that the newlyweds were again touring 
                  the Midwest through late September and October 1913, managed 
                  by Harry Paris. Paris likely presented a convenience to Hammerstein, 
                  who was considerably burdened with deteriorating affairs in 
                  New York. 
                 
                Beginning 
                  at Orville’s old Wysor Grand Theatre in Muncie35 
                  (appearing there with the new wife must have been strangely 
                  stressing), the group traveled through Indianapolis, Richmond, 
                  Anderson, and Terre Haute in Indiana, as well as Lima and Columbus 
                  Ohio36. Harry Paris’s sixty-voice Ensemble Club choir 
                  embellished concerts in Muncie and Anderson. Their standard 
                  show, accompanied by Agnes Monroe, was expanded to include Lydia 
                  Locke solos and duets (still by her stage name), although she 
                  missed some shows because of illness. Generally excellent reviews 
                  were not surprising, and Lydia was well received even in Muncie. 
                  Her voice was described as most pleasing in middle and lower 
                  registers, her acting was splendid, and their duet from Madame 
                  Butterfly was superb37. Although her voice was less 
                  robust than Orville’s, reviews credited her with impressing 
                  audiences by her grace and personal charm38. A Richmond 
                  newspaper reported that, “Mr. and Mrs. Harrold are engaged to 
                  sing in the Hammerstein opera winter season…”, indicating that 
                  Lydia may have remained on Hammerstein’s roster39. 
                  She gave a motivational talk to girls in Terre Haute, stressing 
                  the virtues of study and hard work to achieve success40, 
                  and was typically described off-stage as delightful and proper. 
                  After completing the tour, Orville may have returned west to 
                  San Francisco, where he was reportedly scheduled to appear at 
                  the Mechanics Fair in November41. 
                
                In 
                  mid-November, Oscar Hammerstein announced that opera at his 
                  new Lexington Avenue Theatre would not be given in its native 
                  languages. He instead would present opera in English, opening 
                  January 15 with Romeo and Juliet, having Orville and 
                  Frances Siemon in the principal roles42. (apparently 
                  referring to Mabel Siemonn, who debuted with the Met later in 
                  1914 under her maiden name, Mabel Garrison.) The new organization 
                  would present two operas each week, rather than one for the 
                  whole week, but the second opening opera was not announced. 
                  This plan was slipping away by the first week of January, 1914. 
                  Progress was seen to have ceased on the building, as Oscar announced 
                  that construction delays prevented opening until the fall. More 
                  seriously, an injunction brought by the Met prevented Hammerstein 
                  from presenting grand opera at all. He had soon paid off the 
                  chorus, placed several of the principal singers with other companies, 
                  and retained Orville, soprano Alice Gentle, and several other 
                  singers to present a traveling concert tour under the name of 
                  the Hammerstein Grand Opera Concert Company43. In 
                  mid-January, Orville sang backup in the chorus for Lydia Locke, 
                  billed as leading soprano of Hammerstein’s London Opera, before 
                  a banquet of the Society of the Genesee at New York’s Biltmore 
                  Hotel44. Orville was considering his options and 
                  looking at alternatives.
                
                Hammerstein 
                  (and talent) had catapulted Orville to top level international 
                  grand opera after only a couple of seasons, where he hoped to 
                  remain. An important consideration was the exclusive nature 
                  of top tier opera, cost being a major factor. While one might 
                  attend a concert one week and theatre another, opera was both 
                  at the same time. The concert required a full orchestra, the 
                  theatre required a cast, scenery and costumes and their makers. 
                  Musical theatre required a supporting chorus. All required supporting 
                  directors, stage-hands, and management. They all had to be paid 
                  for rehearsals in addition to the night’s performance, and top 
                  tier performers commanded high salaries. Their theatre building 
                  had landlord costs, to be covered every day of the year. Opera 
                  patrons required deep pockets, and Hammerstein had found insufficient 
                  deep pockets in either New York or London to support two top 
                  tier opera companies. 
                
                Life 
                  after Hammerstein thus required careful planning. Top tier opera 
                  in New York was owned by the Met, where general manager Giulio 
                  Gatti-Casazza had Caruso as lead tenor, plus a stable of other 
                  excellent tenors. Opportunities at the Met were by invitation, 
                  and Gatti-Casazza was generally reputed to favor foreign artists. 
                  He was apparently not inclined toward Orville, in any event, 
                  who had little American reputation and who still had limited 
                  experience and repertoire. The best chances to remain in top 
                  tier opera probably resided in other major American cities. 
                  Orville had been very well received abroad, but WWI made 1914 
                  an inopportune time for returning to Europe. It is not clear 
                  if Patti was still living in New York in early 1914; she returned 
                  to Muncie at some point, graduating from high school there in 
                  1917. In any event, after a life of wandering, Orville (or Lydia) 
                  was unwilling to move from New York, so that Orville appeared 
                  in Romeo and Juliet with the Century Opera Company on 
                  January 27, 1914.
                
                The 
                  Century Opera Company had been incorporated in May of 1913, 
                  at the behest of the City Club of New York45. They 
                  had formed a Committee on Popular Opera to pursue a plan of 
                  presenting moderate quality opera at popular prices, with about 
                  half of performances being in English and half in their original 
                  languages. A stock company was formed, the primary backer being 
                  Otto H. Kahn, Board Chairman of the Met, who had been favorably 
                  impressed in London by Hammerstein and Orville Harrold. The 
                  aggressive plan was to present over thirty operas during a forty-week 
                  season, taking off the summer quarter. The City Club selected 
                  brothers Milton and Sargent Aborn to manage the business, who 
                  had operated for ten years their own opera enterprise built 
                  on similar objectives, but with a different and more modest 
                  business plan.
                
                The 
                  Aborns were dedicated to popularizing grand opera, much like 
                  Hammerstein, but at a more common level that was priced for 
                  more general consumption. For a three-month spring season, their 
                  six traveling casts appeared in about ten cities (Boston, Providence, 
                  Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Newark, Baltimore, Washington, Pittsburgh, 
                  and Chicago) that could support opera and maybe even had a permanent 
                  resident opera company. Each city was set up with a fixed chorus, 
                  orchestra, and artistic staff, which rented venues where the 
                  traveling casts and sets circulated through46. The 
                  scale and efficiency of this system were economically self-sufficient. 
                  The timing appeared aimed at utilizing artists and staff available 
                  after the close of the winter opera season, when they would 
                  have welcomed the work, and many notable singers came up through 
                  the Aborn operas.
                
                The 
                  Century Opera planned a permanent company in a renovated theatre 
                  on Central Park West, renamed the Century Theatre, as an alternative 
                  New York opera venue. (This had previously been the New Theatre, 
                  where the Met had staged operas competing with Hammerstein.)  
                  Century Opera thus needed to establish credibility and support 
                  in the critical New York entertainment environment. From the 
                  outset, the Century made clear a plebian approach in which good 
                  quality opera would be presented, by economic necessity, without 
                  star quality performers47. It would draw from the 
                  more general stock of operatic artists, Milton Aborn going to 
                  Europe during the summer of 1913 to recruit Americans who trained 
                  there and had found receptive audiences in the numerous smaller 
                  opera companies scattered around Europe48. (American 
                  performers in Europe perhaps shared the cachet of foreign performers 
                  in America.) Orville’s limited American credentials made him 
                  a good match with Century’s charter and budget. Century performances 
                  had begun in September 1913, being through about half their 
                  season when Orville arrived in late January. To get there, Orville 
                  had to go to court.
                
                Orville 
                  had obviously shared his intent with Hammerstein sometime previously, 
                  whereupon Oscar had filed for a court injunction on the basis 
                  of his exclusive contract with Orville49. Justice 
                  Giegerich reserved decision in a hearing on the afternoon before 
                  Orville’s Century debut, during which Orville’s attorney argued 
                  that, as Hammerstein was legally prevented from presenting opera 
                  in major cities, Orville was prevented from practicing his art, 
                  at injury to his professional standing. The matter was settled 
                  on February 11, when Justice Giegerich ruled that Orville was 
                  not bound by the contract, because Hammerstein had not given 
                  written notice at the close of the year of his intent to renew 
                  the contract, as stipulated by the contract50. 
                
                This 
                  move was perhaps more bold than Orville realized, but he seemed 
                  passionate in pursuing his art. A contrasting view is that the 
                  contract was a two-sided obligation that bound Hammerstein to 
                  provide Orville very lucrative employment. A more dispassionate 
                  and practical approach might have been to continue collecting 
                  on the contract while negotiating some sort of buyout from Hammerstein, 
                  who seemed equally passionate about pursing his dreams. It appears 
                  that Orville simply left his cards on the table and walked away, 
                  but the Century would seem to have proffered a reasonably attractive 
                  offer. 
                
                Having 
                  sung Romeo and Juliet with Hammerstein in London, Orville 
                  now played Romeo at the Century opposite Beatrice La Palme, 
                  a Canadian formerly of Covent Garden and the Montreal Opera. 
                  Orville sang several of his familiar roles with Century, plus 
                  learning Aida and Martha, before the company ended 
                  a shortened season in April. Besides Miss La Palme, he appeared 
                  regularly with Century’s principal soprano, Lois Ewell. Originally 
                  from Tennessee, Miss Ewell had grown up in Brooklyn, trained 
                  in New York, and then entered classical burlesque there (reportedly 
                  under Victor Herbert51). After some opera in Boston, 
                  she sang grand opera in Cleveland and then with the Aborns before 
                  going to Europe in 1910, where Milton Aborn signed her for the 
                  Century52 in 1913. The aggressive schedule of presenting 
                  seven or eight performances per week (both in English and original 
                  language), plus debuting frequent new operas, was wearing on 
                  the company and lowering presentation quality because of very 
                  limited rehearsal time. Lois Ewell seemed visibly tired and 
                  even robust Orville was wearing, not being fully himself during 
                  Martha53, while young Beatrice La Palme permanently 
                  retired at the end of 1914, exhausted. Opera productions could 
                  run smoothly only after the repetition of many rehearsals and 
                  full presentations. After a successful first half of the season, 
                  such problems were eroding the Century’s reputation and attendance, 
                  running them into a deficit.
                
                The 
                  Century Opera was an untried concept that had been at least 
                  partially successful. Opera at half-price was attracting first-time 
                  opera goers, not so much competing with the Met as grooming 
                  the Met’s future audiences. Indeed, both the Century and the 
                  Met had full houses on the same evening, early in the season. 
                  But, there were problems. The season was too long, and the quantity 
                  of different operas too great, to fully prepare quality presentations. 
                  Also, the less experienced opera audiences preferred traditional 
                  melodic scores. Some of these shortcomings could directly be 
                  improved by reducing scope and tailoring selected presentations.
                
                With 
                  low budgets and wages, the chorus and orchestra were rife with 
                  inexperienced and less talented musicians, with limited opportunity 
                  to rehearse and learn frequent new scores. The Aborns began 
                  addressing these issues during the summer of 1914, starting 
                  with new directors. They hired concertmaster, Hugo Riesenfeld, 
                  previously concertmaster for both the Met and Manhattan operas54. 
                  Italian born conductor, Agide Jacchia, was brought in from the 
                  Montreal Opera to lead the Orchestra55. (He was conductor 
                  of the Boston Pops from 1917-1926.) Next was Josiah Zuro to 
                  lead the chorus, previously chorus master and sometimes conductor 
                  at Manhattan Opera56. The new artistic director was 
                  Jacques Coini, former stage manager for Hammerstein’s Manhattan 
                  and London operas57. These gentlemen were free to 
                  release and hire performers, and to work their organizations 
                  into improved condition. Orchestra wages were increased to the 
                  next higher union level to both attract better talent and to 
                  allow additional rehearsals. 
                
                Another 
                  weak area was that available English librettos, sometimes several 
                  of them for a given opera, were clumsy and of low appeal, so 
                  that the Aborns had new ones carefully translated. A possible 
                  fault here is that melodramatic opera lyrics may seem trite 
                  and silly in a literal translation into English from a romantic 
                  sounding foreign tongue. A translation had to be thoughtfully 
                  interpreted and phrased to produce a serious and believable 
                  text. Such were the pitfalls of attempting opera in English.
                
                In 
                  a 1914 European foray, Milton Aborn contracted new American 
                  lead performers, having more experience and larger repertoires58. 
                  He attempted, but failed, to acquire Felice Lyne in Paris, who 
                  had been studying and singing there regularly after Hammerstein’s 
                  London opera. One of Aborn’s top catches was Henry Weldon, Hammerstein’s 
                  American basso from the London opera. As the war was closing 
                  opportunities for Americans in Europe, the Aborns began an opera 
                  school at the Century, which could net some prime American talent, 
                  and supplement the lack of available training elsewhere59. 
                  Finally, Century Theatre seating was expanded, and an expensive 
                  new electric stage-lighting system was installed, capable of 
                  dramatic effects.
                
                The 
                  1914 summer hiatus left Orville and Lydia free for other pursuits. 
                  This is about when Orville produced his first recordings. Free 
                  from Hammerstein, he made an Edison Blue Amberol cylinder recording 
                  of The Secret (#28191), one of his popular concert songs 
                  since 1910, along with The Sweetest Story Ever Told (#28169) 
                  and four other pieces. It is not clear that Lydia had many singing 
                  engagements, and she is mentioned in virtually no period reviews. 
                  However, during June she was engaged in a court suit against 
                  a New York banker named Julian W. Robbins. He owned the car 
                  that had caused the October 1912 automobile accident that had 
                  broken her leg and caused internal injuries (his chauffer had 
                  been driving the car). Lydia was suing for $25,000 in compensation 
                  for both pain and suffering, and her loss of income from professional 
                  singing60. The suit was apparently settled out of 
                  court.
                
                Also 
                  in June, Orville appeared in his usual role as the Duke in a 
                  summer opera presentation of Rigoletto in Far Rockaway. 
                  A visiting Italian opera company provided most of the cast, 
                  while the chorus and orchestra were drawn primarily from the 
                  Met61. The summer was otherwise quiet, but Lydia 
                  again made the news during the fall, being called to court for 
                  disorderly conduct. The Harrolds were moving from their Riverside 
                  Drive apartment to another on Central Park West, near the Century 
                  Theatre. Their old landlady, Mrs. Alice Miller, claimed eight 
                  day’s rent due for the interim from when they had agreed to 
                  rent the unit until they actually occupied it and signed the 
                  lease. Lydia claimed that Mrs. Miller called her out from a 
                  bath to collect the contested rent, and attacked her physically 
                  over the dispute, while Mrs. Miller claimed that Lydia was the 
                  attacker62. Both had filed court claims, but the 
                  judge managed to persuade both to drop charges. This made page-one 
                  news back in Indianapolis, with a zesty salacious aspect for 
                  the bathtub fight scene.
                
                The 
                  remade Century Opera began its fall season on September 14th, 
                  1914, leading with ever-popular Romeo and Juliet, having 
                  principal roles filled by Lois Ewell and Orville Harrold. The 
                  performance was well reviewed as delivering on the Century’s 
                  promise of better opera, with some of the highest praise going 
                  to Henry Weldon63. Their reorganized chorus was vastly 
                  improved, the orchestra performed beautifully under conductor 
                  Jacchia, and even lesser roles in the ensemble were very well 
                  received. Focusing on melodious opera, the Century presented 
                  Puccini’s Madam Butterfly a month later, with Helen Stanley 
                  as an excellent Madame Butterfly and Orville as Lieutenant Pinkerton, 
                  credited as on a par with any tenor short of Caruso64. 
                  The show was again highly praised as being well worth the price 
                  and even superior to productions charging more, indicating that 
                  the Century was pleasing critics, who were closely watching 
                  these productions65:
                
                New 
                  York Times, October 14, 1914
                Orville 
                  Harrold deserves warm praise, not so much for his singing of 
                  Pinkerton, as that might have been expected to be good, but 
                  for the fact that he was able to make this generally dreary 
                  figure seem human. Century audiences are coming to realize that 
                  this singer combines with the fine voice with which he is blessed 
                  an uncommon intelligence and taste.
                
                Meanwhile, 
                  the Century had announced in early October that it would present 
                  six to eight weeks of opera in Chicago, beginning near the holidays66. 
                  The European war prevented the Chicago Opera Company from having 
                  its regular foreign cast, after spending heavily on scenery, 
                  costumes, and a theatre lease. The Century Opera Company was 
                  to leave on 21 November for Philadelphia, Chicago, and Boston. 
                  They presented Carmen at a well-attended Alvin Theatre 
                  in Pittsburgh during late November, with Bertha Shalek in the 
                  title role and Orville as Don Jose67. The entire 
                  presentation was praised as well above previous Aborn productions 
                  to visit town, while Orville was cited as a remarkable tenor 
                  who was the notable feature of the evening. 
                
                The 
                  troupe soon opened in Chicago with Aida and then, on 
                  November 25, presented Madam Butterfly, with Lois Ewell 
                  the lead and Orville again as Pinkerton. Critics greatly enjoyed 
                  the singing and stage presence of Miss Ewell, who they found 
                  much improved over her appearance four years earlier with the 
                  Aborns. Orville was declared a brilliant success, amid recollections 
                  that he had made no great impression only a couple of years 
                  previously68. The Century soon thereafter sang Carmen, 
                  with a different cast than in Pittsburgh, as they were circulating 
                  artists through some of the lead roles. During December, they 
                  staged the first full Chicago presentation of William Tell 
                  in a quarter century. Pointing out that finding a capable tenor 
                  was no little problem, critics described Orville to be a “light 
                  of stellar radiance”, showing great powers in a tour de force 
                  of voice and dramatic feeling69. (They noted that 
                  he rested in preparation, as if for an athletic event.) The 
                  only missing ingredient was an audience.
                
                Attendance 
                  was low, despite excellent reviews recommending that the Century 
                  Opera was too good to miss. Then, Century’s primary backer, 
                  Otto H. Kahn, resigned from its Board of Directors in late December70. 
                  He expressed great pleasure in how the Century had managed improvements 
                  and presented meritorious performances, and that he expected 
                  to provide continued financial support. But, he felt that the 
                  organization needed broader direction, as he had become nearly 
                  sole guide of the enterprise. The Century ceased Chicago operations 
                  around New Year, having exhausted both its capital and guarantee 
                  fund71. While the Century Opera would struggle several 
                  additional months to survive, they would not succeed. For all 
                  that had been accomplished at the Century, a third opera company 
                  collapsed from under Orville, leaving him once again treading 
                  air.
                
                Century 
                  directors and officers began working to shore up the company 
                  with $50,000 in contributions to a guarantee fund that would 
                  keep the business financially backed for three years, and with 
                  Otto Kahn pledging to match contributions. A second blow came 
                  when the Aborn brothers announced in early January 1915, that 
                  they were breaking with the company to organize their own new 
                  opera company72. They intended to merge lessons from 
                  the Century with their previous circulating opera scheme to 
                  yield a self-supporting business, for which they hoped to recruit 
                  many of the talented Century cast and management. Their conclusion 
                  was that, as Hammerstein had found, New York alone could not 
                  support the cost of a second permanent opera company, even of 
                  second tier quality. Their plan was to present about a fifteen 
                  week season in New York (perhaps Brooklyn), followed by one 
                  to four week engagements in such major cities as they had served 
                  with their previous enterprise. They were essentially competing 
                  with Century directors to snatch away the central core assembled 
                  there, planning also to retain an opera school that seemingly 
                  filled a need. 
                
                Hammerstein’s 
                  long-gone contract might now have looked attractive. Orville 
                  was likely invited to join the Aborn’s, but having found opera 
                  a field of quicksand, he chose a road to dependable employment. 
                  Ignoring his old defense that continued opera was necessary 
                  to protect his credentials, Orville returned to vaudeville, 
                  appearing January 11, 1915 before a rapturously appreciative 
                  audience at the Palace Theatre73, the premier vaudeville 
                  venue. In doing so, Orville was also ignoring the findings of 
                  his old coach, Oscar Saenger, that vaudeville had damaged his 
                  voice. Orville had already ridden vaudeville to a notable career, 
                  so would not necessarily view it as a dead end. Indeed, future 
                  star operatic soprano, Rosa Ponselle, was in a vaudeville singing 
                  sister act at about that time (the Ponsello sisters from Meriden, 
                  Connecticut). Vaudeville offered opportunities that had a large 
                  reliable patronage. 
                
                Opening 
                  at the Palace on the same day as Orville was another Hoosier, 
                  Valeska Suratt, sensational Broadway musical and dance star 
                  known as the Empress of Fashion for her elaborate gowns. 
                  From his Harry Paris format, Orville began with Pagliacci’s 
                  romantic “La Donna a Mobile”, sung offstage, then surprised 
                  the audience by appearing as the clown, singing Canio’s sob 
                  song, and finally presented his standard concert ballads74. 
                  This was all popular enough to run for a two weeks. New York 
                  critics welcomed Orville’s return to vaudeville, noting his 
                  range and versatility, his level or artistry, and that beyond 
                  singing songs, he acted them. The New York Morning Telegraph 
                  expressed pleasure, thanking Gus Edwards for “giving us Orville 
                  Harrold”, and Gus Edwards was interviewed regarding Harrold’s 
                  discovery back around 190875. The Palace Theatre 
                  had been built by Martin Beck, owner of the Orpheum Circuit 
                  of vaudeville theatres, and was run by the chain of Keith Albee 
                  Theatres (Benjamin. F. Keith and Edward F. Albee). These organizations 
                  operated vaudeville’s “Big Time” theatre chains, both having 
                  offices in the Palace Theatre. (Beck owned about 40% of Keith 
                  stock. In early 1928, Joe Kennedy (yes, those Kennedy’s) merged 
                  Keith’s and Beck’s organizations into Keith Albee Orpheum, which 
                  he combined with his movie interests and then sold to Radio 
                  Corporation of America (RCA) mid-year to create RKO, Radio Keith 
                  Orpheum, theatres and studios.) Doing more than just a few shows, 
                  Orville was being managed by Gus Edwards for “limited vaudeville 
                  engagements” in the New York area, Edwards stating that Orville 
                  would be staring in a comic opera being written for him76. 
                  His departure from opera had brought Orville his own New York 
                  show, this engagement likely having been arranged by Gus Edwards. 
                  
                
                Now 
                  over two years since leaving London, Orville and Lydia lived 
                  comfortably in a tenth floor apartment on Central Park West, 
                  where their maid walked Lydia’s dogs77. Grand opera 
                  was demanding an unsettled lifestyle that they understandably 
                  were unwilling to pursue, and which could be seen, on the other 
                  hand, in the single-minded passion of Felice Lyne. She had returned 
                  from Paris during late 1912 to singing engagements in London, 
                  then on to America for concerts in Allentown and Kansas, before 
                  embarking on a 1913 world opera tour with an Irish promoter 
                  named Thomas Quinlan78. After literally circling 
                  the globe, she arrived back in March, 1914 to sing full opera 
                  for the first time in America with the Boston Opera Company, 
                  and signed a contract with them for early 1915. She was then 
                  back in London and Paris for the summer of 1914, where Milton 
                  Aborn had found her while scouting for the Century opera. She 
                  remained in Paris until October, when growing WWI hostilities 
                  prompted her to join a group of Americans who chartered a boat 
                  to take them down the Seine to Havre79.
                
                Miss 
                  Lyne then came to America, where she joined Loudon Charlton 
                  for a 1914 fall tour of the United States, bringing her to her 
                  1915 Boston engagement. She returned to Honolulu over the summer, 
                  where she had visited with the Quinlan tour, then joined the 
                  Boston Opera in the fall for an extended tour organized by Max 
                  Rabinoff, the promoter Hammerstein had warned away from opera 
                  during Orville’s visit80. This wound throughout the 
                  United States, with occasional stops in Canada, to a conclusion 
                  in late spring of 1916. After summering with her parents in 
                  Allentown, Felice and her mother sailed for England, across 
                  a North Atlantic fraught with German submarines. She continued 
                  to sing in England and France, and throughout the Continent 
                  after the war. Her life in Paris was quieter during the 1920’s, 
                  but she never married, and after political upheaval in 1932 
                  she returned home to Allentown, sick and dying while only in 
                  her mid-40’s81.
                
                In 
                  contrast, Orville organized a more stable career during the 
                  spring of 1915, while Lydia began receiving several of her own 
                  opera notices in newspapers. Her photo appeared in the arts 
                  section of the New York Morning Telegraph On April 18, along 
                  with those of Melanie Kurt, Blanche Arral, and Arturo Toscanini 
                  (who had just conducted his last season at the Met), the group 
                  captioned as “Notables in the Music World82.” She 
                  was pictured the same day in the New York Times, along with 
                  Toscanini, with no unifying description or article, but with 
                  the caption, “Lydia Locke – Aborn Opera Company, Brooklyn83.” 
                  The photos were all publicity shots provided to newspapers by 
                  promoters of upcoming events. In Lydia’s case the event was 
                  her long dreamed of American opera debut84, appearing 
                  with the Aborn’s April 21st Brooklyn presentation 
                  of Faust, with Richard Bonelli as Valentin and Lydia 
                  as Marguerite. Lydia had been studying since the previous fall 
                  with a New York singing coach named Frederick Haywood85. 
                  This was a three-week production of the Aborn Grand Opera Company 
                  and Brooklyn Academy of Music86, the latter of which 
                  had existed since the Civil War and remains today an active 
                  arts school. Lydia’s performance received generally favorable 
                  reviews, although they also noted that she lacked some range 
                  and power, and that her tall stature was unmatched with the 
                  girlish character87.  
                
                In 
                  May of 1915, the Century Opera filed for bankruptcy, with considerable 
                  sums owed to backers, vendors, and individuals. Of note, they 
                  owed approximately six thousand dollars each to Lois Ewell and 
                  Orville for contracted appearances not yet performed, clearly 
                  showing that headliners in even second tier opera were commanding 
                  salaries that would be well into today’s six figures. 
                
                Since 
                  Lydia’s Brooklyn debut, newspapers had suggested that she might 
                  become a war nurse, joining Mary Garden’s (Hammerstein’s discovery 
                  then singing in Chicago) hospital reportedly opening in Paris 
                  for war wounded. The initiative produced more publicity than 
                  nursing. Not yet having branded herself as a notable singer, 
                  a May 4, 1915 column heading in the New York Times read, “Opera 
                  Tenor’s Wife Accuses Chauffeur – Mrs. Orville Harrold will appear 
                  in court today against Moses Small.” Lydia had again been summoned 
                  on charges of disorderly conduct88. Suffering from 
                  bronchitis, her doctor had prescribed some “powders”, to be 
                  delivered by currier, Moses Small. When he requested a 25¢ charge, 
                  Lydia, lacking a quarter, refused to pay and demanded the package. 
                  While she claimed that he then pulled her into the hall and 
                  struck her, he charged that she stepped forward wielding a high-heeled 
                  satin slipper and lacerated his face. Orville was gone at the 
                  time, singing in Chicago. The case was dismissed as an unverifiable 
                  “he said, she said” morass, but again suggests that Orville 
                  was living with a tempestuous temperament in Lydia. There was 
                  also, again, a risqué aspect to this drama, since Lydia had 
                  managed to get locked outside her door wearing only a brief 
                  gossamer negligee, while having attracted the attention of a 
                  large social event at Rabbi Levy’s across the hall89. 
                  Lydia was seeming prone to occasional news-making emotional 
                  flare-ups.
                
                Having 
                  now sung in American opera, Lydia was in Joplin, Missouri during 
                  mid-May, visiting family and performing a concert, after which 
                  she gave another “hard work” speech to local girls90. 
                  It is not apparent that Orville was there, and by June he was 
                  appearing at the New Brighton Theatre, a popular vaudeville 
                  venue at Brighton Beach91, adjacent to Coney Island. 
                  On July 4, he sang the “Star Spangled Banner” for a benefit 
                  game between the Giant and Yankees at the Polo Grounds92. 
                  Orville was spending the summer of 1915 staying before the public, 
                  rehearsing his new production, and enjoying the Jersey shore.
                
                Orville 
                  and Lydia sang in concert before a full house during their second 
                  annual August appearance at Ocean Grove, New Jersey93, 
                  near where they summered at Bradley Beach. Ocean Grove was among 
                  the most successful of summer church camps that had blossomed 
                  after the Civil War. In this case, the camp had a large auditorium 
                  seating 6000, that had hosted numerous notables and performers, 
                  including Caruso. (This auditorium still survives, in relatively 
                  original condition.) In early September Orville and Lydia sang 
                  vaudeville together at the Palace Theatre, her first vaudeville 
                  appearance, in a concert that included Fannie Brice94. 
                  The couple was well received and garnered numerous good reviews, 
                  as Orville headed into his main event.
                
                New 
                  York’s largest theatre, the Hippodrome, had been built a decade 
                  earlier by the creators of Coney Island’s Luna Park, to present 
                  sight and sound spectaculars for audiences up to 5000, with 
                  casts of over 1000 and including live animals. There were circus 
                  rings, aquatic scenes, and a hydraulically raised “vanishing 
                  pool” in which actors exited the stage underwater. The massive 
                  building was a challenge to make profitable, and it had been 
                  operated since 1909 by the Shubert brothers, with mixed results. 
                  New management, having large money and large new ideas, arrived 
                  in 1915 with Charles Dillingham, who had been producing Broadway 
                  musicals by Victor Herbert and Irving Berlin at the Globe Theatre. 
                  Dillingham’s new Hippodrome was scrubbed clean, soon to present 
                  massive musical reviews comprising cast, chorus, scenes, a myriad 
                  of acts, and John Philip Sousa’s band as the house orchestra. 
                  Each show was to run for about an eight-month season, from fall 
                  through the next spring.
                
                Dillingham’s 
                  opening 1915-1916 season presented Hip! Hip! Hooray!, 
                  a “rah rah America” musical review in three acts, with Orville 
                  Harrold its Hero and Belle Storey the Heroine. The three acts 
                  shifted from New York, to Panama, where America had just completed 
                  twenty years on the canal, to a winter wonderland in Switzerland. 
                  The show was written and directed by Robert H. Burnside, who 
                  had written and staged The Belle of London Town, the 
                  1907 Shubert play that had folded on Orville and sent him traveling 
                  in vaudeville. Burnside had become Hippodrome stage director 
                  in 1908, where he was a successful (and durable) director, playwright, 
                  composer, and lyricist. John Raymond Hubble, the Hippodrome’s 
                  music director, wrote much of the show’s music. 
                
                While 
                  a central unifying character, Orville was among a cast of over 
                  1200 singers, dancers, entertainers, and comedians. The show 
                  was generally a rousing good time that lived up to its name, 
                  a large colorful spectacle with dashes of circus and vaudeville, 
                  likely benefiting from rising pro-American enthusiasm following 
                  the Lusitania sinking. Sousa introduced his Hippodrome 
                  March. Amid rumors that the vanishing pool had been removed, 
                  it actually arose in the third act as a large genuine ice rink, 
                  hosting a skating ballet entitled Flirting at St. Moritz, 
                  with falling snow and ending in a ski jump scene. Leading the 
                  skaters was a seventeen-year-old German girl named simply Charlotte, 
                  the first woman skater to include an axel jump in her performance, 
                  who instantly popularized ice skating and soon appeared in the 
                  first skating movie.
                
                Hip! 
                  Hip! Hooray! opened on September 
                  30, 1915, with New York’s mayor in a special box, and played 
                  for 425 performances until June 3, 1916. The state governor 
                  attended on election day, the show continued breaking attendance 
                  records, and unlike vaudeville, attracted upper-crust society 
                  patrons. This likely constituted the highest paying period of 
                  Orville’s career. He reportedly received a four-digit weekly 
                  salary95, which may have netted little more than 
                  one hundred dollars per performance, as the show can be seen 
                  to have run two performances per day. Orville also participated 
                  in Saturday night holiday concerts at the Hippodrome during 
                  December of 1915, with Sousa’s band and operatic singers such 
                  as Met baritone, David Bispham, and sopranos Emmy Distinn and 
                  Maggie Teyte. (Remembered primarily as a 1940’s interpreter 
                  of French art songs, Miss Teyte was known in English and American 
                  opera during the WWI era.) 
                
                The 
                  Hip Hip Hooray! cast gave a benefit concert during March 
                  of 1916. The Hippodrome team of Charles Dillingham and Robert 
                  Burnside had been producing an Irving Berlin musical and dance 
                  show at the Globe Theatre, starring a popular Paris dancer named 
                  Gaby Deslys, and her partner, Harry Pilcer. (Miss Deslys died 
                  prematurely in Paris during the early 1920’s, just before Josephine 
                  Baker entered the same scene.) As their show closed, during 
                  mid-March, the two casts combined for a performance to benefit 
                  the French Red Cross. But, Orville may have left the Hippodrome 
                  over the next few months. He was a powerful and energetic performer, 
                  so that hours of addressing such a large theatre without electric 
                  amplification took a toll on his voice. He became known as “the 
                  tenor with the throat of steel96” and damaged the 
                  instrument that had made his career. Despite the lucrative income, 
                  Orville seems to have been gone from Hip Hip Hooray! 
                  by the end of May, 1916, although it is unclear on whose terms. 
                  Other opportunities were developing, and he may have endeavored 
                  to preserve his operatic vocal capability.
                
                During 
                  Hip Hip Hooray! Lydia Locke sang at a series of benefits 
                  and smaller engagements in early 1916. She was among entertainers 
                  at a benefit in February for Belgian war refugees held at the 
                  New York Automobile Club97, and a week later in a 
                  concert at the Hotel Astor Theatre Club. Lydia gave a brief 
                  series of high society benefit concerts in Philadelphia during 
                  late February. Publicity for these described a tall, slender, 
                  stately, bejeweled woman of attractive manner, who had delighted 
                  the Romanoffs at the Petrograd Imperial Opera98. 
                  Both Lydia and Orville appeared at the Hotel Biltmore, along 
                  with Lillian Russell and others, at an April Shakespearian celebration 
                  held by the Professional Women’s League99 for a series 
                  of Shakespeare tercentenary events.  
                
                Lydia and Orville then gave several concerts in May of 1916, preceded by 
                  some unusual publicity. The concerts featured both solos and 
                  duets, with a number of Irish songs, and both accompaniment 
                  and solos by New York pianist, Emil Polak, who had studied with 
                  Dvorak. The first was on Sunday May 7 at the Strand Theatre 
                  in Providence, Rhode Island, with a second on May 14 at the 
                  Park Theatre in Bridgeport, Connecticut, apparently sponsored 
                  by the Wisner Piano Company100. Advertising for both 
                  reiterated that Lydia had sung opera in Russia101. 
                  The Bridgeport Sunday Post ran an item in April stating that 
                  she had sung a season with the Russian Imperial Opera, and was 
                  then detained at the border when departing at the outbreak of 
                  the war. She was finally released after demonstrating that she 
                  was an opera diva102. An unidentified article of 
                  the same period from Effie Kiger’s scrapbook describes Orville 
                  visiting a friend’s winter home in northern Mexico for some 
                  hunting and fishing. This being the period when General Pershing 
                  was pursuing Poncho Villa, Orville was detained while leaving 
                  the country and held in a Mexican jail as a suspicious person, 
                  until being released after the music-loving commandante heard 
                  Orville singing opera in his cell. 
                
                While 
                  fascinating stories, it is difficult to believe that Orville 
                  and Lydia had both sung their way out of captivity, in nearly 
                  identical incidents on separate continents. In Lydia’s case, 
                  circumstances place the event in 1914, when she was already 
                  married to Orville. He was then singing and traveling with the 
                  Century Opera, but Lydia made several court appearances during 
                  this period, the couple summered in New Jersey, and Lydia reportedly 
                  began studying with Frederick Haywood during the fall. Overall, 
                  it is not clear just when her Russian season fits into the timeline 
                  of Lydia’s life. If a fabrication, the claim would seem audacious, 
                  but not totally out of character, while Orville’s similar publicity 
                  contained blatant blarney. Promoting the May concerts, Orville 
                  was described as Irish born but American raised, and then American 
                  born of Irish origin103, neither of which is remotely 
                  true, but both of which might have helped sell Irish concert 
                  music.
                
                The 
                  May concerts were perhaps the last time that Orville and Lydia 
                  appeared together, either on or off the stage. Their public 
                  high point was the July 1916 release by Columbia Records of 
                  “Orville Harrold, the operatic tenor, in exquisite duets with 
                  Lydia Locke, which make an event of this announcement of the 
                  New Records for July104”. It appears that Orville 
                  had begun recording with Columbia at about the same time (1914) 
                  that he made cylinder recordings with Edison. Awake Dearest 
                  One and Sunshine of Your Smile, the two quite pleasing 
                  recordings with Lydia, were intricately intertwined duets of 
                  interesting character. However, Lydia’s volatile temperament, 
                  which possibly surfaced during their honeymoon and had since 
                  earned her several court appearances for disorderly conduct, 
                  was perhaps wearing thin on Orville. By the time that the advertisement 
                  for Columbia’s new record catalogue appeared in local newspapers 
                  around the country, Orville had escaped from New York, and from 
                  Lydia, by reentered opera in Chicago. 
                
                Orville 
                  had been bypassing summer opera as an option for remaining in 
                  the top tier opera network. Being a winter sport, top opera 
                  performers, orchestras, and sets scattered to various summer 
                  venues, some outdoors. The Met performed for many summers in 
                  Atlanta. Orville was off to a Chicago summer venue that had 
                  been spawned by a trolley line. Back when he was meeting Madame 
                  Schumann-Heink in 1904, Chicago’s A. C. Frost Company, speculators 
                  in land, railroads, and mining, were investors in developing 
                  a Waukegan electric trolley line into the Chicago & Milwaukee 
                  Electric Railroad. The electric interurban line ran from Evanston 
                  up through the affluent north shore towns to Milwaukee. As an 
                  inducement for summer travelers, the Frost company built Ravinia 
                  Park in 1904, named for the many lakeshore ravines, as a recreational 
                  and amusement destination in the comfortable Highland Park district. 
                  Included were an electric fountain, a casino and dancehall building, 
                  and a wooden band shell offering evening concerts. The New York 
                  Philharmonic Orchestra played summers there, early on, but both 
                  the railroad and park sputtered into receivership in 1910. The 
                  railroad ultimately emerged as part of Samuel Insull’s growing 
                  empire of Chicago utilities and railroads. 
                
                Well-to-do 
                  north shore residents felt that the popular diversions and music 
                  had been of sufficient quality that they incorporated The Ravinia 
                  Company, led by philanthropist Louis Eckstein, who served as 
                  impresario and personally subsidized the organization for twenty 
                  years. Reopening in 1911, Ravinia Park developed as a summer 
                  venue for classical music, adding opera in 1912. Chicago already 
                  supported excellent winter opera, and its north shore communities 
                  abounded with the fertilizer of grand opera, money. By the end 
                  of WWI Ravinia had entered its golden age as an American capital 
                  for top quality summer opera, while it continues today to host 
                  the oldest summer music festival in North America. Operas were 
                  typically abbreviated, to end before the last trolley departed, 
                  and were often at least partially in English. 
                
                Orville 
                  added a high tenor dimension to Ravinia, although his voice 
                  suffered somewhat from Hip Hip Hooray! and his high notes 
                  sparkled less brightly. With Lucia, on July 1, 1916, 
                  Ravinia introduced Orville among top tier opera performers, 
                  at a venue that could connect his past to his future. There 
                  were Cordelia Latham, Morton Adkins, and basso Louis D’Angelo 
                  from his old Century Opera, the latter of whom was eventually 
                  at the Met, and conductor Ernst Knoch, who had been imported 
                  to guest conduct at the Century during its improved second season. 
                  They were likely the means by which Orville obtained a Ravinia 
                  position. There were such Met performers as baritone Millo Picco, 
                  Henri Scott, and Octave Dua who could reconnect Orville to top 
                  New York opera. More importantly, primary Ravinia conductor, 
                  Richard Hageman, was a Met conductor from 1914 to 1932. (Hageman 
                  was a child prodigy pianist from the Netherlands, who later 
                  had a fascinating Hollywood career.) Orville’s repertoire fit 
                  the 1916 Ravinia season, as he appeared as Edgardo in Lucia, 
                  the Duke in Rigoletto, Lionel in Martha, and Hoffman 
                  in Tales of Hoffman. (He had sung Martha at the 
                  Century, and is believed to have had performed Hoffman in London.) 
                  Orville also sang Thaddeus in The Bohemian Girl, and 
                  Des Grieux in the opera comique Manon, perhaps his first 
                  appearance in these roles105. Ravinia kept Orville 
                  around Chicago into September of 1916. 
                
                Lydia performed on a double bill in her hometown St. Louis Coliseum106 
                  during October of 1916, but little else made public notice. 
                  The Aborn’s had planned to present opera at the Park Theatre 
                  in late 1916 and/or early 1917, but it is not clear that anything 
                  operatic occurred, for them or for Lydia. Instead, as soon as 
                  the Ravinia season ended, Orville was back out of New York and 
                  through his contract with B. F. Keith was on the road with a 
                  vaudeville tour of Orpheum Theatres in the United States and 
                  Canada. (This is the Orpheum Theatre vaudeville syndicate that 
                  became part of RKO: Radio Keith Orpheum.) Starting mid-September 
                  in New Orleans, Orville had a series of one-week engagements 
                  that went well and drew numerous curtain calls. These wound 
                  through Iowa and the plains states through the fall, and to 
                  Winnipeg during December and up to the holidays. He was back 
                  traveling with the new year through Oakland and the west, which 
                  left little down time and kept Orville working through the spring 
                  of 1917. 
                
                Whatever 
                  the exact route of his tour, Orville was likely back in Indiana 
                  during June, for Patti’s graduation from Muncie Central High 
                  School. Related to her singing and New York sojourn, her picture 
                  was alone on a separate yearbook page, apart from other students, 
                  with the caption “Wild bird whose warble is liquid sweet.” It 
                  perhaps matched an independent temperament. While her 1913 period 
                  of living in New York with Orville and Lydia had not worked 
                  out, Patti had wanted to return to New York ever thereafter, 
                  and only remained in high school beyond the second year because 
                  her father, who never graduated, insisted that she stay106.5.
                
                Orville 
                  was spending little time in New York, gradually leaving Lydia 
                  and reentering opera by stages, and had wrapped up his situation 
                  by summer. He opened again at Ravinia in Lucia on July 
                  1, 1917, back among performers from the Met and elsewhere. Among 
                  new faces was Met conductor, Genarro Papi, who joined Met partner, 
                  Richard Hageman. Papi had been assistant to Toscanini, becoming 
                  head Met conductor at the beginning of the 1916 season. Orville 
                  again sang from his repertoire, this year adding Faust, 
                  La Traviata, and Romeo & Juliet, all of which 
                  he had performed in London. Casts included Florence Macbeth, 
                  an American who had sung occasionally at the Century Opera and 
                  previously as principal coloratura soprano at the Chicago Opera. 
                  During August, Orville was visited at Ravinia by his children, 
                  of which Patti was eighteen, and Paul, the youngest, was fourteen. 
                  They had likely visited the previous summer, but this occasion 
                  was captured in photographs, in which the children appear to 
                  be accompanied by a woman who is probably the sister of their 
                  mother’s (Effie) second husband, Dermont Neighbors. Meanwhile, 
                  Orville was mingling with the right opera crowd, but mingling 
                  was not opening the gate to the winter opera season. Orville 
                  had had little standing in American opera when his voice had 
                  been at its best. The frustrating irony, of his own making, 
                  was that his voice had fallen off its peak just as he was sidling 
                  into the top opera crowd. By one report, Orville was overweight, 
                  drinking more than usual, suffering voice damage, and generally 
                  wallowing at a low point107. 
                
                By 
                  another report, Lydia had met a music-loving millionaire on 
                  a train108, and Lydia could be beguiling. But Lydia 
                  was not alone in finding new direction in a chance encounter. 
                  It became public on July 7, 1917, just after he had left for 
                  Ravinia, that Orville was suing Lydia for divorce, and that 
                  papers were delivered to the attorney for co-respondent and 
                  tire industrialist, Arthur H. Marks109. Lydia began 
                  a counter-suit, with named co-respondents, but then settled 
                  into the task of ending their second marriage. Beating an old 
                  drum, the Fort Wayne (Indiana) Daily News published 
                  a bitter piece entitled RETRIBUTION, noting that Orville’s 
                  second marriage was ending unhappily, and wishing him nothing 
                  better for the future110. Orville’s divorce from 
                  Lydia was finalized just prior to the end of the Ravinia summer 
                  season, on August 20, 1917, noting that they had been living 
                  apart for some time. Both had remarried by year-end.
                
                Aside 
                  from perhaps shooting at Orville, Lydia had a demonstrated volatile 
                  streak. Their careers were running thin, likely raising tensions, 
                  and Lydia was not seemingly one to suffer silently or suppress 
                  frustrations. Part of Orville’s weariness may well have been 
                  from domestic emotional battery. Although there is little direct 
                  information of such, subsequent events suggest that Orville 
                  had been on quite a roller coaster. 
                
                Lydia married Arthur Hudson Marks on December 22, 1917, holding a reception 
                  at the Ritz-Carlton. Marks had amassed a considerable fortune 
                  as vice president and general manager of the Goodrich Rubber 
                  Company. With WWI, he had volunteered for the war effort, taking 
                  the Naval Reserve rank of Lieutenant Commander to manage wartime 
                  shipbuilding. Marks had just divorced, and had a son away at 
                  school. Having nurtured connections in the opera community, 
                  the bride was given away by Andrea de Segurola, basso at the 
                  Metropolitan Opera and descendant of an aristocratic Spanish 
                  family, while a countess Furulli was matron of honor111. 
                  The couple occupied a new twenty six-room country estate on 
                  1000 acres in Yorktown Heights, named Locke Ledge, which was 
                  noted in period publications for its architecture and landscaping. 
                  Marks reentered industry at war’s end by purchasing the foundering 
                  Skinner Organ Company of Boston, maker of large church and civic 
                  organs, so that a chapel having a massive pipe organ was among 
                  the features at Locke Ledge. (Skinner merged with Aeolian Organ 
                  Company in 1932, Aeolian-Skinner continuing until 1978.) Locke 
                  Ledge allegedly hosted Caruso, four American presidents, and 
                  other notables112 (not verified). Although Lydia’s 
                  operatic career was waning, there was consolation in her new 
                  circumstances. 
                
                Outward 
                  tranquility lasted some years at Locke Ledge. In 1922 the Marks 
                  adopted a one-year-old boy named Paul Carewe Haynor, whose float 
                  had won first prize in an Asbury Park, NJ baby parade, and whose 
                  father had died during the war113. Then, divorce 
                  came in September of 1923. Mister Marks reportedly pressured 
                  Lydia into divorce by threatening to expose Prince Albert’s 
                  Reno death of 1909, for Marks had hired detectives to research 
                  Lydia’s past114. Such details presumably would have 
                  upset her social status, being as her first husband had been 
                  billed lately as the deceased Lord Reginald Talbot, making Lydia 
                  the former Lady Talbot, somewhat inconsistent with early events 
                  in St. Louis and Reno. Under the divorce terms, Lydia received 
                  $300,000 outright (multiply by 30 for today’s dollars), Locke 
                  Ledge (valued at a million dollars), property in the city worth 
                  $30,000, a summer estate at Peach’s Point, Marblehead, Massachusetts, 
                  and the adopted son. Marks also committed to pay an additional 
                  $100,000 after five years, if during that time Lydis did not 
                  pester him or cause either his or her names to appear unfavorably 
                  in newspapers. As in Orville’s case, there are few direct details 
                  of what triggered such protective reactions, but one surmises 
                  that life with Lydia was trying. Regarding their train ride 
                  introduction, Mr. Marks lamented that he should sue the rail 
                  line for allowing such a thing to happen.
                
                Now 
                  comfortable toying with large sums, Lydia forfeited the $100,000 
                  bonus in little more than a year. Having been gone most of that 
                  time, she reappeared in New York during the fall of 1924 with 
                  an infant son, claimed to be a Marks heir by blood115. 
                  In a November court hearing, Mr. Marks’ detectives divulged 
                  that the infant had actually been borrowed from a Kansas City 
                  orphanage, as a false prelude to adoption, and provided with 
                  a falsified birth certificate in St. Louis, through a manipulation 
                  of Lydia’s older sister there and her doctor116. 
                  Judge Edward J. Gavegan ordered the infant returned to Kansas 
                  City, Lydia never really provided an explanation for the deceit, 
                  and Arthur Marks (now more concerned than ever) offered a $50,000 
                  appeasement for Lydia’s good behavior during the remainder of 
                  the five years. The baby borrowing incident was sufficiently 
                  curious that the syndicated press circulated reports of it, 
                  which still referred to Lydia as Lady Talbot, widow of Lord 
                  Reginald Talbot.
                
                Lydia remarried immediately after the baby caper to her secretary, Mr. Harry 
                  Dornblaser, who was about ten years younger, and was adept at 
                  investing her financial assets. Harry returned suddenly to America 
                  during their Paris honeymoon, and the couple never again lived 
                  together. Lydia, meanwhile, read a chance notice in Paris that 
                  Arthur Marks had remarried. While their divorce prevented neither 
                  party from future relationships, the bride turned out to be 
                  a Margaret Hoover, Lydia’s best friend and advisor during the 
                  difficult Marks divorce. Lydia quickly returned to New York, 
                  and the new Marks couple soon received an anonymous letter, 
                  in handwriting that both believed they recognized, graphically 
                  accusing the new Mrs. Marks of the most vile deeds. The latest 
                  Mrs. Marks retorted with a $250,000 libel suit, during which 
                  the Marks detectives showed that one of Lydia’s sisters, Mrs. 
                  Mary Frances Adams of Joplin, Missouri, had given a letter and 
                  a tip to a Pullman porter to mail her letter from Bellefontaine, 
                  Ohio, the same town postmarked on the Marks poison-pen letter117. 
                  A Federal Grand Jury indicted Lydia in September of 1925, for 
                  using the mail to slander Mrs. Marks, although the case never 
                  completed trial. Harry Dornblaser divorced Lydia shortly thereafter, 
                  and in October of 1926 his body was found in an abandon log 
                  cabin in fashionable Shaker Heights, near Cleveland, having 
                  committed suicide with a revolver118.
                
                This 
                  all slowed the pace of Mr. Marks protracted difficulties, and 
                  Lydia married Carlo Marinovic in 1927, a shipping magnate from 
                  one of the Balkan states, who was reportedly a count in his 
                  homeland before becoming a naturalized American. They were divorced 
                  in 1932, after she found him in bed with one of her best friends119. 
                  She continued filing suits against the Marks-Hoover couple, 
                  the last being in 1939 over Mark’s grave. Lydia claimed to be 
                  the rightful inheritor of his considerable estate, despite intervening 
                  spouses for both, on the basis that her divorce from Marks was 
                  invalid because it had been coerced under threat of duress120. 
                  Lydia accumulated two additional husbands over the decades, 
                  and occupied Locke Ledge for fifty years. She operated the estate 
                  as an inn during mid-century, accompanied by her last husband, 
                  Irwin Rose. Known as a local Yorktown Heights character, she 
                  was noted for being chauffeured about, clad in full-length fur 
                  and little else, one such excursion being to attend town meeting. 
                  She sold Locke Ledge in 1965, which burned the following year, 
                  an event still lamented by local preservationists. (Much of 
                  the acreage became a local park.) Lydia died in 1966. 
                
                During 
                  her 1923 Marks divorce, Lydia caught the attention of American 
                  Weekly, a syndicated Sunday newspaper supplement that appreciated 
                  her entertainment value and kept a running file of her ongoing 
                  life. (Given their detailed information, they may have been 
                  fed information by Arthur Marks.) The magazine published jocular 
                  full-page spreads on various fascinating subjects, generally 
                  fact based and in something of a believe-it-or-not style. Besides 
                  the Marks divorce profile, American Weekly published 
                  four other Lydia updates, the last being for her 1939 posthumous 
                  suit for the Marks inheritance. A related piece of theirs regarded 
                  the perils of being, or being married to, an operatic tenor. 
                  Tenors were preyed upon, especially by operatic sopranos, but 
                  by all manner of coeds and women generally, such that it was 
                  difficult for tenors to keep their lives, and marriages, in 
                  order121. Various examples were presented, Orville 
                  offering little to disprove their case. Somewhat similarly, 
                  the autobiography of Frances Alda, Met soprano and wife of Met 
                  director Giulio Gatti-Casazza, was entitled Men, Women, and 
                  Tenors, (“My biggest mistake was marrying Gatti-Casazza, 
                  my second biggest mistake was divorcing him.”). The arts abound 
                  with passionate and mercurial personalities.
                
                One 
                  might guess that Orville was emotionally fatigued, if not depleted, 
                  as he parted with Lydia in mid-1917. Added to his ailing voice 
                  and career, he was certainly in need of a lift. 
                
                Elsewhere, 
                  it is not clear that the Aborns ever managed their reentry into 
                  opera, but Sargent Aborn later gained control of Witmark & 
                  Sons Music Company, which owned rights and material for a large 
                  library of songs, musicals, and plays. This was merged with 
                  the Tam collection of similar material to create the largest 
                  existing library of printed and manuscript music. Sargent’s 
                  son, Louis, succeeded him as president of the firm in the mid-twentieth 
                  century, as the company expanded its list of rights to popular 
                  American musical stage plays, making them available to schools, 
                  community theatres, and professional production companies. This 
                  system of artist’s rights and distribution derives from the 
                  copyright laws and ASCAP protections pioneered by Victor Herbert 
                  just prior to his creation of Orville’s Naughty Marietta. 
                  Louis Aborn died in 2005, and Tam-Witmark Company still operates 
                  under the next Aborn generation.
                
                The 
                  mid-teen years (1913-1917) had proven tumultuous for Orville. 
                  Admittedly, he had worked hard for his breakthrough, but the 
                  rapid rise that followed and the tremendous height achieved 
                  in London left considerable room for letdown. Hip Hip Hooray! 
                  perhaps restored some feeling of New York acceptance, but 
                  at a cost. Topping it all, his second marriage had been a lightning 
                  strike of ill luck that was as dramatic as his striking gold 
                  with Hammerstein. Marriage and opera seemed to be fickle worlds, 
                  the latter certainly helping to undermine the former. 
                
                The 
                  Harry Paris tours displayed much of the basic Orville. He genuinely 
                  enjoyed touring, singing, and audiences, and this arrangement 
                  had also made it possible to stay near his parents and family. 
                  It was noted during the tours that Orville was a plain Indiana 
                  soul lacking the attitude and affectations of big name entertainers. 
                  Even in the debacle of his second marriage, he enjoyed a period 
                  of singing and appearing on-stage with his wife, which seemed 
                  to have been the companionship he was seeking. Personal experiences 
                  of his trek to success had been solitary ones, as were his subsequent 
                  triumphs. Although family and stability waited patiently in 
                  Muncie, Orville was alone during his times of both anxiety and 
                  exhilaration. Effie and the family could accept his life, but 
                  could not share it or know and understand it from the inside. 
                  (likewise of Orville knowing his family’s life in Muncie) On 
                  one hand, Orville had been manipulated in his second marriage 
                  by an adroit deceiver. On the other, he had succumbed to one 
                  of his most unflattering episodes. It is certainly understandable 
                  that he sought a companion sharing his life’s passions, but 
                  it is unfortunate that his decision was so crushing to the wife 
                  who had given him the freedom and support to succeed.
                
                Orville’s 
                  first wife, Effie, subsequently had considerable Muncie support 
                  from her own family, the Kiger’s. She moved in with one sister, 
                  Emma, but also had another local sister and a brother. (The 
                  brother, Tom, supported a family in simple and happy surroundings, 
                  while virtually never having a real job.) Following the divorce, 
                  Effie became involved with Dermont Neighbors, who ran a Muncie 
                  typewriter store, and their mutual photo album dates back to 
                  mid-1912, about a half-year before the divorce. Understandably, 
                  Orville was unpopular with the Kiger’s after the divorce, although 
                  Emma, who knew him best and saw him interact with his children, 
                  continued to find him a pleasant likable person. Especially 
                  after his devastating second marriage, Orville was considerably 
                  more sympathetic to Effie’s sorrows, and family lore holds that 
                  he tried repeatedly during home visits to regain at least some 
                  relationship with her, but never could. 
                
                Orville 
                  was forty years old in mid-1917, and it had been eight years 
                  since Hammerstein had discovered him in vaudeville at the Victoria 
                  Theatre. Orville had really experienced only about two or three 
                  full seasons of grand opera, much of the most important of it 
                  abroad, and now his voice was damaged. However, his voice and 
                  talent remained intact, and they had proven to be exceptional. 
                  Among his talents were keen learning ability, unusually clear 
                  linguistics on stage, and an understanding intellect for rendering 
                  his characters as sincere and believable. To an extent, he imbued 
                  his characters with some of the adventure of his own life and 
                  travels. He had considerable musical and stage experience beyond 
                  opera, for which he was perhaps more capable than many opera 
                  performers of creating an easygoing theatrical stage presence. 
                  Underneath it all, Orville seemed fundamentally a warm and playful 
                  person and an entertainer at heart, on and off the stage, who 
                  offered all he could to his audience and enjoyed their appreciation.
                
                
                1. Seeks To Enjoin Tenor, New York Times, January 28, 
                  1914
                2. Harrold Sings From Box, New York Times, January 9, 
                  1913
                3. Harrold Sings In Stage Box, un-attributed news clipping 
                  in Patti Harrold’s scrapbook, clearly from January 9. 1913
                4. The February, 1913 Kansas tour is detailed in various 
                  un-attributed news clippings in Patti Harrold’s scrapbook.
                5. The Harrold Concert, by Otto M. Tiede, un-attributed 
                  Kansas City news clipping in Patti Harrold’s scrapbook, plus 
                  other Kansas City news clippings
                5.5. Pagliacci and Mother McCree, Bob Barnet, The Muncie 
                  Star, February 2, 1975, describing the life of Orville Harrold
                6. Orville Harrold Wins Audience, The Indianapolis Star, 
                  February 14, 1913. Also, Orville Harrold Was Given Great Reception 
                  Last Night, Esther Griffin White, un-attributed Richmond (IN) 
                  Daily Palladium & Sun Telegram, from Patti Harrold’s scrapbook
                7. Orville Harrold Divorced, New York Times, February 
                  18, 1913
                8. Harrold Weds Again, New York Times, February 21, 
                  1913
                9. Letter from William T. Martin, with wedding announcement 
                  for Orville and Lydia Locke, taken from Musical America, March 
                  01, 1913, page 21
                9.5. Orville Harrold, Four Days Divorced, Weds Singer 
                  After Opera Romance, New York Herald, February 21, 1913, from 
                  scrapbook of Patti Harrold
                10. Wouldn’t Mar Honeymoon, New York Times, June 7, 
                  1914
                11. Diva Inured In Wrecked Auto, New York Journal, November 
                  1, 1912, and St. Louis Post Dispatch, February 21, 1913, both 
                  provided by Nancy A. Locke
                12. Orville Harrold, Four Days Divorced, Weds Singer 
                  After Opera Romance, New York Herald, February 21 1913, from 
                  scrapbook of Patti Harrold
                13. How He “Outgrew” His Wife, Salt Lake Tribune Sunday 
                  Morning, March 16, 1913
                14. Success For Harrold, The Hutchinson News, February 
                  16, 1913
                15. Harrold And Ganz Captivate Portland People, Portland 
                  Daily Express, April 10, 1913, news clipping from Patti Harrold’s 
                  scrapbook 
                16. Wagner Festival Is Near At Hand, The Indianapolis 
                  Star, May 18, 1913, pg. 14
                17. Indiana Tenor Here For Concert; His Bride, Indianapolis 
                  Sunday Star, June 1, 1913, pg. 7
                18. Harrold Gains Fame as American Singer, un-attributed 
                  news clipping from the scrapbook of Effie Kiger Harrold
                19. Scenes And Stars Coming To Terre Haute, Terre Haute 
                  Sunday Star, September 21, 1913, data provided by Nancy A. Locke
                20. From personal correspondence with Orville Harrold’s 
                  granddaughter
                21. From personal correspondence with William T. Martin
                22 Testimony of George Omer, Reno Evening Gazette, November 
                  9, 1909, pg. 2
                23. Brother Says No To Cremation, Reno Evening Gazette, 
                  November 15, 1909, pg. 8
                24. Partner Testifies, Nevada State Journal, November 
                  10, 1909, pg. 3
                25. Al Talbot Shot By Wife, Nevada State Journal, Friday 
                  October 29, 1909, pgs. 1 & 2
                26. From personal correspondence with William T. Martin
                27. Singer Shoots Husband, New York Times, October 29, 
                  1909
                28. Orville Harrold, Four Days Divorced, Weds Singer 
                  After Opera Romance, New York Herald, February 21, 1913, from 
                  scrapbook of Patti Harrold
                29. Grants Bail To Mrs. Talbot, Nevada State Journal, 
                  Thursday December 2, 1909, pg. 2
                30. Singer Shoots Husband, New York Times, October 29, 
                  1909
                31. Al Talbot Shot Down By Wife, Nevada State Journal, 
                  Friday October 29, 1909, pg. 2
                32. 
                  Like A “Vamp” In The Movies, Syndicated by American Weekly Inc. 
                  1923, from San Antonio Light, November 8, 1925
                33. Orville Harrold, four Days Divorced, Weds Singer 
                  After Opera Romance, New York Herald, February 21, 1913, data 
                  provided by Nancy A. Locke
                34. Orville Harrold And Wife Appear Here In Concert, 
                  The Indianapolis Star, September 14, 1923, pg. 15
                35. Fine Program Is Announced For Harrold Recital, Muncie 
                  Sunday Star, September 16, 1913, data provided by Nancy A. Locke
                36. newspaper clippings from various towns an dates, 
                  from September 16 through October 6, 1913, data provided by 
                  Nancy A. Locke. Additional numerous clippings from Effie Harrold’s 
                  and Patti Harrold’s scrapbooks.
                37. Harrold And Wife Are Heard In Duet Work, September 
                  24, 1913, un-attributed Muncie news clipping in Patti Harrold’s 
                  scrapbook
                38. Harrold’s Voice Pleases Hearers, un-attributed news 
                  clipping in Patti Harrold’s scrapbook
                39. Richmond Palladium, no date, September, 1913, data 
                  provided by Nancy A. Locke
                40. Singer Gives Advice On Work Before Girls, Terre 
                  Haute Star, October 6. 1913, data provided by Nancy A. Locke
                41. Tenor Will Sing – Will Aid Fair, Oakland Tribune, 
                  September 3, 1913, pg. 14
                42. Two Operas A Week At Hammerstein’s, New York Times, 
                  November 14, 1913
                43. Hammerstein Gives Up His Opera Plans, New York Times, 
                  January 6, 1914
                44. Artists To Sing At Genesee Dinner, New York Times, 
                  January 14, 1914
                45. Aborn Brothers For Century Opera, New York Times, 
                  May 11, 1913
                46. ibid.
                47. The Century Opera Plans, New York Times, July 6, 
                  1913
                48. ibid.
                49. Seeks To Enjoin Tenor, New York Times, January 28, 
                  1914
                50. Hammerstein Loses Again, New York Times, February 
                  11, 1914
                51. Century Gets Miss Ewell, New York Times, June 23, 
                  1913
                52. ibid.
                53. “Martha” Sung At Century, New York Times, March 
                  25, 1914
                54. Riesenfeld Joins Century Opera, New York Times, 
                  June 13, 1914
                55. Century Keeps Its Better Opera Vow, New York Times, 
                  September 15, 1914
                56. Aborns engage Josiah Zuro, New York Times, June 
                  1, 1914
                57. Century Opera Opening, New York Times, September 
                  6, 1914
                58. Wagner Conductor For Century Opera, New York Times, 
                  July 30, 1914
                59. New York To Have Opera School, New York Times, August 
                  23, 1914
                60. Wouldn’t Mar Honeymoon, New York Times, June 7, 
                  1914
                61. 
                  Operas For Far Rockaway Church, New York Times, June 28, 1914
                62. Mrs. Orville Harrold Plays Leading Role in Bathtub 
                  Drama, The Indianapolis Star, September 25, 1914, pg. 1
                63. Century Keeps Its Better Opera Vow, New York Times, 
                  September 15, 1914
                64. Butterfly At Century Opera, un-attributed news clipping 
                  in Patti Harrold’s scrapbook, under the initials H.E.K., this 
                  appears to be a review in the October 14, New York Tribune by 
                  Henry Krehbiel
                65. Century Pleases in MME. Butterfly, New York Times, 
                  October 14, 1914
                66. Chicago Century Opera, New York Times, October 1, 
                  1914
                67. Alvin-“Carmen”, un-attributed news clipping from 
                  Pittsburgh Dispatch, in Patti Harrold’s scrapbook
                68. Century Singers In Fine Performance Of Puccini’s 
                  “Butterfly”, Edward C. Moore, Chicago Journal, November 25, 
                  1914, from Patti Harrold’s scrapbook
                69. Orville Harrold Scores In Sumptuous Revival Of Rossini’s 
                  ‘William Tell”, unattributed Chicago news clipping in Patti 
                  Harrold’s scrapbook
                70. Otto H. Kahn Quits Century Opera Co., New York Times, 
                  December 21, 1914
                71. Aborns To Break With Century Opera, New York Times, 
                  January 11, 1915
                72. ibid.
                73. Harrold In Vaudeville, New York Times, January 12, 
                  1915
                74. 
                  Amusements Of The Week, The Argonaut, pg. 58, un-attributed 
                  New York news article from Patti Harrold’s scrapbook, and Harrold 
                  And Suratt Win Success, January 12, 1915, un-attributed New 
                  York news article from Patti Harrold’s scrapbook,
                75. 
                  Our Own Orville Harrold, by Leonard A. Sower reporting on the 
                  New York Morning Telegraph’s comments, un-attributed Muncie 
                  news article from Patti Harrold’s scrapbook, and How Orville 
                  Harrold Was “Discovered”, Gus Edwards description of finding 
                  Orville Harrold, un-attributed New York news article from Patti 
                  Harrold’s scrapbook
                76. ibid.
                77. Admits Hitting Chauffeur, New York Times, May 5, 
                  1915
                78. Felice Lyne Sings Gilda, New York Times, March 21, 
                  1914
                79. Miss Felice Lyne Returns, New York Times, October 
                  19, 1914
                80. Felice Lyne, Charles A. Hooey, www.musicweb-international.com/hooey/lyne-bio.htm
                81. ibid.
                82. Notables In The Music World, New York Morning Telegraph, 
                  April 18, 1915, data provided by Nancy A. Locke
                83. Lydia Locke Aborn Opera Company, New York Times, 
                  April 18, 1915
                84. MME. Locke Makes Debut In “Faust”, New York Herald, 
                  April 20, 1915, and others, data provided by Nancy A. Locke
                85. Lydia Locke Charms Brooklyn As “Marguerite”, Musical 
                  America, May 1, 1915, data provided by Nancy A. Locke
                86. 
                  Richard Bonelli.- Appearances, Charles A. Hooey, www.musicweb-international.com/hooey/bonelli-roles.htm
                87. ibid. plus Brooklyn Citizen, Brooklyn Daily Eagle, 
                  April 21, 1915. Musical Currier, April 28, 1915, data provided 
                  by Nancy A. Locke
                88. Opera Tenor’s Wife Accuses Chauffeur, New York Times, 
                  May 4, 1915
                89. Locked Out In Nightie, The Washington Post, May 
                  5, 1915, pg. 4
                90. Joplin Crowds Marvel At Voice Of Lydia Locke, Joplin 
                  Herald, May 17, 1915, data provided by Nancy A. Locke
                91. Orville Harrold, Great American Tenor, To Sing At 
                  Big Charity Benefit, identical articles appeared in both the 
                  New York American and the Evening Journal, which jointly sponsored 
                  the event, ca. June 30, 1915, from Patti Harrold’s scrapbook
                92. ibid.
                93. unidentified clip, data provided by Nancy A. Locke
                94. At The Palace, New York Times, September 7, 1914
                95. Orville Harrold Tenor, advertising brochure for 
                  Orville Harrold, Walter Anderson Agency, New York, ca. 1918
                96. Orville Harrold Obit, New York Herald Tribune, October, 
                  24, 1933
                97. Aid For Belgian Refugees, New York Times, February 
                  16, 1916
                98. Lydia Locke Star At St. Rita Concert, Philadelphia 
                  Press, February 15, 1916, Philadelphia Evening Bulletin and 
                  Philadelphia Enquirer, February 17, 1916, data provided by Nancy 
                  A. Locke
                99. Stage Shakespeare All Over The City, New York Times, 
                  April 25, 1916
                100. Unidentified newspaper, from the scrapbook of Effie 
                  Kiger Harrold
                101. Operatic Concert With Lydia Locke, Philadelphia 
                  Enquirer, February 17, 1916, data provided by Nancy A. Locke
                102. 
                  Bridgeport Sunday Post, April 7, 1916, data provided by Nancy 
                  A. Locke
                103. Irish birth was claimed in a Prividence (RI) Tribune 
                  news clipping, April 30, 1916, from Patti Harrold’s scrapbook, 
                  while Irish heritage was claimed in an unattributed Bridgeport, 
                  Connecticut news clipping from Effie Kiger’s scrapbook
                104. Columbia July Records, New Castle (Indiana) News, 
                  June 21, 1916, pg. 5. This advertisement appeared in numerous 
                  American newspapers.
                105. 
                  High Points In the Career of Orville Harrold, Charles A. Hooey, 
                  www.musicweb-international.com/hooey/harrold-chron.htm
                106. Unidentified news clipping, October 3, 1916, data 
                  provided by Nancy A. Locke
                106.5 Pretty Patti Harrold of Irene Fame (Boston Sunday 
                  Globe, January 1, 1922) pg 34
                107. The Comeback of Don Jose, article in The World 
                  Magazine, March 21, 1920, pg. 12
                108. Wants To Be The Widow, The American Weekly, published 
                  in the San Antonio Light, September 17, 1939
                109. Harrold Seeks Divorce, New York Times, July 8, 
                  1917
                110. Retribution, The Fort Wayne Daily News, July 14, 
                  1917
                111. Bride Of Lieut, Commander Marks, New York Times, 
                  December 23, 1917
                112. article, LoHud.com, The Journal News, Lower Hudson 
                  area, NY, May 4, 2010
                113. May Be Heir To Millions, Oakland Tribune Daily 
                  Magazine, October 11, 1922
                114. Wants To Be The Widow
                115. The Former Lady Talbot Confesses Baby Plot, The 
                  Washington Post, Tuesday, November 11, 1924
                116. Wants To Be The Widow
                117. ibid.
                118. Divorced Husband Of Opera Singer Is Believed Suicide, 
                  The Charleston Daily Mail, October 17, 1926, pg. 1
                119. Lydia Locke’s Slippery Steps Of Matrimony, The 
                  American Weekly, published in the San Antonio Light, May 29, 
                  1938
                120. Wants To Be The Widow
                121. Emotional Worries Over Tenor Husband, The American 
                  Weekly, published in the San Antonio Light, February 8, 1925
 
                 
                [Preface] 
                  [Orville's 
                  Worlds] [Family] [Young 
                  Orville ] [To New York] [To 
                  London, and back] [The Second Marriage, 
                  1913 – 1917] [The Third Marriage, 
                  Rehabilitation] [The Met Years, 
                  Two careers 1920-1924] [Photogallery]