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Category: Womens History

Bea Wain-Star Singer of the Big Band Era

1940s Vintage Photo of Bea Wain 1940s Big Band Singer in a 1940s dress and 1940s hairstyle.

Bea Wain is considered by many to be one of the best female vocalists of her era. A self-taught singer, with an expressive but understated swing style, she worked hard to leave her mark in the Big Band & Radio world.

Today’s post is all about this incredible and talented woman.


For further reading please check out all the posts I have done on this subject on my dedicated page “Women of the Big Band Era Everyone Should Know“. (Jan 2024 update)


1940s Vintage Photo of Bea Wain NBC's Manhattan Merry-Go-Round 1940s
Bea Wain for NBC’s Manhattan Merry-Go-Round 1940s Source: Getty Images

Bea Wain-Star Singer of the Big Band Era

Born Beatrice Wain April 30th, 1917 in the Bronx, New York, her singing career would begin at the young age of 6 on a radio program titled “NBC Children’s Hour,” where she earned $2 per broadcast (Source). Blessed with a raw talent and the knowledge that she wanted to be a singer, Beatrice would never took a single singing lesson growing up. Dance and piano lessons she agreed to but never singing.

“I never wanted anybody to teach me how to sing,” she said in an interview with Sara Fishko for the New York public radio station WNYC in 2013 (Source).

This raw talent would keep Beatrice busy, singing with various radio shows and even cutting records for popular big band leaders. One particular record with Artie Shaw in September 1937, saw her name accidentally go from ‘Beatrice Wain’ to ‘Beatrice Wayne’. Then later on record labels, her name was shortened (without her permission) to “Bea” by the record company, ostensibly for space considerations.

1940s Vintage Photo of Bea Wain Big Band Singer in a 1940s Dress and a 1940s Hairstyle.

She would get her big break in 1937, when she emerged from the chorus on the radio show “The Kate Smith Hour” to sing an eight-bar solo. The arranger Larry Clinton, who was listening, needed to hear no more. He was forming a band at the time and quickly signed her to be its vocalist.

I did a lot of singing, choral things,” she recalled.  “And he heard me on the Kate Smith show.  He didn’t see me.  Actually, it was very strange, because . . . I had a call and went to the phone and this man said, ‘My name is Larry Clinton.  I’m starting a band and I’m looking for a girl singer and I would like you to make some sides with me.’  Which was really cuckoo [laughs], ’cause I said to myself, ‘He never saw me.  He never really heard me, it was just a few bars.  And he told me to meet him at RCA Victor the next week, he was recording, and he sent me a tune to do, and I did it. And the first time I saw him was when I walked in the studio (Source).”

Larry Clinton and Bea Wain album cover

Following this recording session Bea remained with the band and would make her debut with Larry Clinton officially in the summer of 1938 at the Glen Island Casino, New Rochelle, New York. This would be the turning point for Larry Clintons Orchestra because as they were broadcasted live across the radio wires, theirs and Bea’s popularity would rise.

Glen Island Casino Vintage Image
Source: Glen Island Harbour Club

Bea Stated:  “If we played in an elegant ballroom, it was very nice.  We played a lot of colleges, and that was fun.  As I said, I was very young.  We played at Yale, we played at Princeton, we played [at] the University of North Carolina… you know, we just went on the road, and you went from one to the other.  And they all couldn’t wait until the band arrived, because the band became very popular on account of these radio broadcasts (Source).”    

During her time with The Larry Clinton Orchestra, Bea would go on to record several hit songs:

Her Signature Song: My Reverie and was top of the charts for 8 weeks in 1938. (Video Link)

Deep Purple”, “Heart and Soul” as well as “Cry, Baby, Cry” were also # 1 hits.

It’s time to move on…

After a year and a half with the band, she tired of the road trips and poor pay for recordings** and left to perform on her own. At this time she was also a married woman to radio announcer André Baruch who she had met on the Kate Smith Show (where she was singing in the chorus if you remember my mention above). They had married May 1st, 1938.

1940s vintage photo of BEA WAIN and ANDRE BARUCH. Bea is wearing a 1940s dress and a 1940s hairstyle.
Source: Pinterest
1940s Vintage Article about Bea Wain and André Baruch
Source: Pinterest

After the orchestra, Bea would go on to have a successful radio career singing in programs like CBS’s, “Your Hit Parade” from 1939-44 where her husband Andre was also the announcer. Monday Merry-Go-Round (NBC Blue 1941-1942) and Starlight Serenade (Mutual 1944) (Source).

1940s Vintage Photo: Bea Wain, singer on CBS Radios popular music program, Your Hit Parade. Here, She applies makeup. Image dated October 1, 1940. New York, NY.
Bea Wain, singer on CBS Radios popular music program, Your Hit Parade. Here, She applies makeup. Image dated October 1, 1940. New York, NY. Source: Getty Images
1940s Vintage Ad featuring Bea Wain, big band singer in General Electric ad
Source: Pinterest

During WW2 while her husband served overseas, Bea would do her part by performing at Army Camps and Naval Bases for the troops. Upon his return they would go on to host a radio program called “Mr. and Mrs. Music,” a daily program on WMCA in New York, on which they doubled as disc jockeys and interviewers.

1940s Vintage Photo of Bea Wain, big band singer with her husband, Andre Baruch, at WMCA in 1947.
Source: NY Times

In 1973, the couple moved to Palm Beach, Florida, where they had a similar radio show before relocating to Beverly Hills. During the early 1980s, the pair hosted a syndicated version of “Your Hit Parade”, reconstructing the list of hits of selected weeks in the 1940s and playing the original recordings on-air (Source).

Around the same time, Bea was featured on TV’s “Jukebox Saturday Night”. She was sensational, proving that her voice was still very much intact and that she was still a force to be reckoned with.

Bea passed away this year at the age of 100 on August 19th, 2017 (Andre passed in 1991).

In a 2004 interview with Christopher Popa, Wain reflected: “Actually, I’ve had a wonderful life, a wonderful career. And I’m still singing, and I’m still singing pretty good” (Source).

Thank You for all the music.

Other Awesome Facts about Bea:

1940s Vintage Image of Big Band Singer, Bea Wain in 1943 in a beautiful 1940s Hairstyle with Hair bow.
Source: Wikipedia

*Ms. Wain was voted most popular female band vocalist in Billboard’s 1939 college poll (Ella Fitzgerald was second) (Source).

*She is considered by many to be one of the best female vocalists of her era, possessing a natural feel for swing-music rhythms not often found among white singers of the day. With regard to technique, she excelled in pitch and subtle utilization of dynamics. She also communicated a feminine sensuality and sang with conviction in an unforced manner (Source).

*Wain was also the first artist to record the Harold Arlen-Yip Harburg classic “Over the Rainbow” (on December 7, 1938, with Clinton’s orchestra), but MGM prohibited the release until The Wizard of Oz (1939) had opened and audiences heard Judy Garland perform it (Source).

Other Hits (not a complete list):

Friends, I hope you enjoyed learning about this beautiful and talented star of the Big Band Era. I had heard of Bea in passing, but did not realize what a true talent she was until now. Bea will be on rotation on my playlist going forth and she will always be mentioned when discussing the women of the big band era.

Question Time: Have you heard of Bea Wain? If yes then please share your favorite song in the comments below, I would love to know what it is!

FURTHER READING:

**Bea made $50 a week (about $870 in today’s dollars) working every night all summer with the Clinton band at Glen Island and only $30 for a three-hour session recording four songs. That meant that while songs like “My Reverie” and “Deep Purple” reaped a fortune for others, she made all of about $7.50 (or about $130 today) for each song (Source).

Vintage Photo Tuesday: WW2 Canadian Women on the Home Front (Part 2)

Saturday is Remembrance Day, so this week I would like to dedicate ‘Vintage Photo Tuesday‘ to the Canadian Women on the WW2 Home Front. This post is also part of a previous one I did last year, that you can view HERE.

Out of a Canadian wartime population of more than 11 million, 261,000 women worked in Canadian war industries, 400,000 in the civilian workforce, 760,000 on farms and countless others in the home and in the volunteer sector.

Women’s enthusiasm for helping out on the home front was anticipated by Alice Sorby of Winnipeg who recalled in 1940, “In September 1939 when the thunder of war first crashed about our ears, the immediate reaction was an almost hysterical desire to do something….” (Source).

1940’s Vintage Photos of WW2 Canadian Women on the Home Front

Here are those brave women in action….

Female loggers (‘lumberjills’) in the Queen Charlotte Islands, BC. April 1943.

1940s vintage photo of Female loggers (‘lumberjills') in the Queen Charlotte Islands, BC. April 1943 doing their part for WW2 Homefront effort in Canada.
Source: Library and Archives Canada PA-116147

Actress Mary Pickford posing with a group of employees during her visit to the General Engineering Company (Canada) munitions factory, June 5, 1943.

FURTHER READING: The Bomb Girls Of Scarborough, Ontario Canada-As Seen Thru Vintage Photographs from the 1940s

1940s Vintage Photo of Actress Mary Pickford posing with a group of employees during her visit to the General Engineering Company (Canada) munitions factory, June 5, 1943.
Source: Archives of Canada

Young woman working in the cabin of bomber being manufactured at the Fairchild plant in Montreal on May 19, 1941.

1940s Vintage Photo of a Young woman working in the cabin of bomber being manufactured at the Fairchild plant in Montreal on May 19, 1941.
Source: CBC.ca

Three women in coveralls off to work in Edmonton in 1943.

1940s Vintage Photo Canadian Women arriving for work in Edmonton 1943 doing their part for WW2 Homefront effort in Canada.
Source: Legion Magazine

A welder works on a Bren gun at John Inglis Company Ltd., 1942.

FURTHER READING: The Canadian “Rosie the Riveter”-Veronica Foster -The Bren Gun Girl

1940s vintage photo of a welder works on a Bren gun at John Inglis Company Ltd 1942 doing her part for the WW2 Homefront effort in Canada.
Source: Legion Magazine

Women volunteers from Canadian Red Cross assemble packages for prisoners of war in 1942.

1940s vintage photo of Canadian Women volunteers from Canadian Red Cross assemble packages for prisoners of war in 1942.
Source: Wikipedia

Starting in 1942, Vancouver’s Burrard Drydock hired more than 1,000 women. Here we see the union’s shop stewards eating in the shipyard canteen, ca. 1942 (Source).

1940s Vintage Photo of Canadian Women taking a break from their shift from working at the Shipyard for the WW2 Canadian Home Front effort. 1942 Photo.
Source: Open Text BC

1940s photo of workers producing primers.

1940s canadian women on the homefront producing primers in a factory for the WW2 Canadian Home Front Effort.
Source: War Museum

“Start your Victory Garden today!” 1940s vintage propaganda sign from the ‘Health League of Canada’.

"Start your Victory Garden today!" 1940s vintage propaganda sign from the 'Health League of Canada'.
Source: Gulf of Georgia Cannery

1942 photo of knitters working on the BC Telephone Co. War Effort Programme in Victoria. It was a group of ladies coming together to sit, talk, and knit scarves and socks for the men fighting overseas (Source).

1940s Vintage Photo in 1942 of knitters working on the BC Telephone Co. War Effort Programme in Victoria. It was a group of ladies coming together to sit, talk, and knit scarves and socks for the Canadian men fighting overseas
Source: Gulf of Georgia Cannery

“Come on Housewives SOCK HIM again!”. 1940s Canadian Fraser Valley Propaganda Poster for saving scrap from your home for the war effort.

"Come on Housewives SOCK HIM again!". 1940s Canadian Fraser Valley Propaganda Poster for saving scrap from your home for the war effort.
Source: Mothers of the Home Front

While looking for photos to share, I came across a fantastic 10 min Canadian Documentary entitled ‘The Home Front‘ by Stanley Hawes (seen below).

This short documentary is part of the Canada Carries On series of morale-boosting wartime propaganda films. In Home Front, the various WWII-era social contributions of women are highlighted. From medicine to industrial labour to hospitality, education and domesticity, the service these women provided to their country is lauded. (Video Link)

Friends…If you are interested to read other posts I have created around the Canadian WW2 Home Front, the link is below.

FURTHER READNG: World War 2 Women’s Contributions & Homefront Posts

Liz