Marisha Data performing as Aggie Klepaczka on a Dana Records 78rpm phonograph record

Marisha Data (d. October 12, 1972) was a Polish-American comedian, singer, and composer. She was a successful performer for both English and Polish audiences. Her career encompassed numerous genres, ranging from serious opera to polka to vaudeville. Her comic performances were often in the character of Aggie Klepaczka.

Biography

She was an early performer on television, performing to pleasant reviews on WBKB in Chicago.[1] In 1948 she was performing Il Trovatore while touring with the Chicago Opera Artists Association, in the role of Azucena. Here her voice was reviewed as “big, warm, dramatic”.[2] The next year she was with the “Grand Opera Company of New York” performing in the opera Taras Bulba. The opera itself received a scathing review, but Data was again praised as someone who could “make a poor aria sound like a fairly good one”.[3]

Signed to Capitol, in 1950 she was releasing material in English on their regular pop series, and in Polish for the ethnic series.[4][5] She then signed to Dana Records in 1952, and in quick secession a recording session took place in Chicago and several sides, performed In Polish, were released.[6][7] Capitol Records released material by Data as part of their 1957 “Capitol of the World” campaign.[8]

In addition to her singing, she was a radio announcer, most commonly associated with WHFC, Chicago. One of her U.S. War Bond drives netted in excess of 1 million dollars. She was also a character actor, specializing in comic personalities.[9] In the character of "Aggie Klepaczka" she performed comic skits in both Polish and English, over a period that lasted from the early 1950s until the 1960s.[10][11]

Marisha Data died on October 12, 1972.[9]

Legacy

In 1974 she became, posthumously, the first woman to be inducted into the Polka Music Hall of Fame.[12]

Data remained popular among Polish and polka audiences long after her death. Richie Drongoski in 1992 included her name in his song with lyrical content similar to Rock and Roll Heaven but switched to Polka.[13] Similarly, Lenny Gomulka, in Polish via litania form, canonizes Data among polka luminaries in his song ‘’Where Were You Back Then Polka’’.[14]

References

  1. Wagner, Cy (October 7, 1944). "Reviews:Balaban & Katz". Billboard. p. 10.
  2. Davis, Richard S. (November 24, 1948). "Kind Remarks on 'Trovatore'". The Milwaukee Journal. p. 5. Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  3. Cassidy, Claudia (January 24, 1949). "On the Aisle". Chicago Tribune. p. part 2, page 1. Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  4. "Capitol Buyer's Guide (advertisement)". Billboard. December 9, 1950. p. 16.
  5. "Record Reviews:International". Billboard. February 25, 1950.
  6. "Advance Record Releases: International". Billboard. August 15, 1952. p. 43.
  7. "Dana to Supervise Data Recording". Billboard. May 24, 1952.
  8. "Cap Fires 2d Half Of Fall Broadside". Billboard. September 2, 1957. p. 19.
  9. 1 2 "Marisha Data – Deceased Category – Inducted 1974". International Polka Association. Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  10. Marisha Data (1952). Aggie Klepaczka Przy Telefonie: Dieta [Aggie Klepaczka at the Phone: The Diet] (phonograph record [10-inch 78rpm single]) (in Polish). Dana Records. 796-B.
  11. Cameron, Jessica Ford (October 25, 2003). "Marisha Data - The Twist". 365 Days Project. WFMU. Retrieved September 9, 2015.
  12. "25 Bands Blow at Milwaukee Polka Gala". Billboard. August 17, 1974. p. 27.
  13. Clements, Ian (July 6, 1996). "'Jersey Polka Richie' gets toes tapping". The Daily Gazette. Schenectady, New York. p. B3.
  14. Gunkel, Ann Hetzel (Autumn 2004). "Immigrant Voices: Polka Lyrics as Ethnic Literature". Polish American Studies. Polish American Historical Association. LXI (2): 42. ISSN 0032-2806.
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