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Libby Holman

Elizabeth Lloyd Holman (née Holzman; May 23, 1904 – June 18, 1971) was an American socialite, actress, singer, and activist.

Libby Holman

Elizabeth Lloyd Holzman

(1904-05-23)May 23, 1904

June 18, 1971(1971-06-18) (aged 67)

  • Socialite
  • actress
  • singer
  • activist

1924–1971

(m. 1931; died 1932)
Ralph Holmes
(m. 1939; died 1945)
(m. 1960)

3

Early life[edit]

Elizabeth Lloyd Holzman was born May 23, 1904, in Cincinnati, Ohio, the daughter of a lawyer and stockbroker Alfred Holzman and his wife Rachel Florence Workum Holzman. Her family was Jewish, but she was not raised religiously.[1][2] Their other children were daughter Marion H. Holzman and son Alfred Paul Holzman.


In 1904, the wealthy family grew destitute after Holman's uncle Ross Holzman embezzled nearly $1 million of their stock brokerage business. Alfred changed the family name from Holzman to Holman[3] around World War I due to anti-German sentiment.[4] Libby graduated from Hughes High School on June 11, 1920, at the age of 16. She graduated from the University of Cincinnati on June 16, 1923, with a Bachelor of Arts degree. Holman later subtracted two years from her age, insisting she was born in 1906, the year she gave the Social Security Administration as the year of her birth.[5]

(1947)

Dreams That Money Can Buy

The Sapphire Ring - (1925)

Selwyn Theatre

- Garrick Theatre (1925)

The Garrick Gaieties

Greenwich Village Follies - (1926)

Shubert Theatre

Merry-Go-Round - (1927)

Klaw Theatre

Rainbow - (1928)

Gallo Theatre

Ned Wayburn's Gambols - (1929)

Knickerbocker Theatre

- Music Box Theatre (1929)

The Little Show

Three's a Crowd - (1930)

Selwyn Theatre

Revenge with Music- (1934)

New Amsterdam Theatre

- Winter Garden Theatre (1938)

You Never Know

Blues, Ballads, and Sin Songs (1954)

The 1933 film was loosely based on the allegations surrounding Reynolds' death,[30][48] as were the films Reckless and Written on the Wind.[2]

Sing, Sinner, Sing

The song "Broken Bracelets" by is about Holman, referencing her suicide, "Moanin' Low," and the violence in her relationship with Reynolds. Almond also featured Holman in a retrospective of his favorite torch singers, calling her "perhaps the first bona fide torch singer."[49]

Marc Almond

Archived 2019-02-16 at the Wayback Machine

Biography of Libby Holman by Kenneth Lisenbee

Hughes High School history

Books of the Times: A Torch-Song Life

at the Internet Broadway Database

Libby Holman

at IMDb

Libby Holman

Louis Schanker and Libby Holman: The Hamptons Connection

Libby Holman suicide