1-1 of 1 Results  for:

  • 1866–1876: Reconstruction x
  • 1929–1940: The Great Depression and the New Deal x
  • Theater and Live Entertainment x
  • Nightclub Entertainer x
  • Miscellaneous Occupations and Realms of Renown x
  • Rhythm and Blues Musician/Singer x
  • African American Studies x
  • Musicianship and Singing x
Clear all

Article

Baker, LaVern  

Barry Marshall

singer, was born in Chicago as Delores Williams. Nothing is known about her parents. Raised by her aunt, Merline Baker, also known as the blues singer Memphis Minnie, Baker started singing almost as soon as she could walk, both in her Baptist church and in the street. She grew up in poverty and sang for change on the downtown Chicago streets from the age of three. She started singing professionally as a teenager at the Club Delisa, decked out in down-home clothes and billed as “Little Miss Sharecropper.” The “Sharecropper” sobriquet was a takeoff on the popular blues shouter “Little Miss Cornshucks,” and although it garnered her attention at the time, she was embarrassed by it later in her life. She also appeared at different venues as Bea Baker.

At the age of seventeen, Baker moved to Detroit. By 1947 she was appearing regularly at ...