Vancouver Sun

Vaudeville performer’s photos returned to family

- JOHN MACKIE jmackie@ vancouvers­un. com

Lucy Tremblay died in 1983. So imagine her daughter- in- law’s surprise when she opened last Monday’s Vancouver Sun to see Lucy in a vaudeville photo from the 1910s or ’ 20s.

“When I saw it I almost fell out of my chair,” said Catherine Tremblay, 84.

As it turns out, Lucy Tremblay was the original owner of the print, which was part of a cache of vaudeville photos that recently turned up at MacLeod’s Books.

One of the photograph­s was signed “To Lucy Cage,” a common misspellin­g of Lucy’s maiden name, Lucy Caze.

“I started working on the family trees in 1960,” Tremblay explains. “I ( found that) the spellings of names are different in families, because a lot of ( people) way back then were illiterate. Everything was in handwritin­g, so a ‘ z’ could be taken for a ‘ g’ in someone’s handwritin­g.”

It’s a rare name — only four Cazes died in British Columbia between 1872 and 1991, and they were all related to Lucy ( her parents, sister and brother).

Tremblay isn’t quite sure how Lucy Caze’s old photos turned up at MacLeod’s. She has sold some stuff to Don Stewart of MacLeod’s in the past, but nothing that had any link to the family.

“I wouldn’t have sold anything that had Lucy in it,” she said.

When Stewart learned the photos were family mementoes, he decided to return the photos to Tremblay.

So Wednesday afternoon, Sun photograph­er Arlen Redekop and I brought the package of old photos to Tremblay.

She returned the favour by allowing us to look through a family archive of everything Lucy.

There was a lot of stuff. Lucy Caze last graced a stage in 1922, but she held on to her old photos and press clippings for six decades until she died at 85.

Lucienne Marie Albertine Caze was born in St. Boniface, Man., in 1898, and moved to Vancouver in 1919 with her family.

Family lore has it her father, Charles Louis Napoleon Caze, was from a wealthy family in Paris, France, and came to Canada to avoid conscripti­on into the French army. Lucy’s mother, Marie Gerard, was from Ileala- Crosse, Sask., and was Metis ( of French and native ancestry).

Like many families in the early 1900s, the Caze family endured some tragedy. A daughter died of typhoid in St. Boniface; a son was gassed in the First World War, and died from it in 1924.

The surviving siblings took to the vaudeville stage.

“Adrienne was a singer, and was noted for being able to reach high C. Lucy was a dancer. That’s where my husband’s father met her, watching her onstage.

“Lucy’s older sister, Marie- Anne, ended up playing piano jazz in Chicago in speakeasie­s, where Al Capone and his gang hung out.”

An old clipping said that Lucy began her stage career in Winnipeg at the Columbia Theatre, “The Home of Refined Musical Comedy and PhotoPlays.”

She joined the Columbia Musical Comedy Company in March 1915, and also appeared in rival troupes like the Military Maids, the Elite Company and Bow Bells.

In Vancouver she appeared at the Columbia Theatre at 62 West Hastings St., and the Avenue Theatre at 711 Main. She retired from live performanc­e after she married Alexander Tremblay in 1922, but she did have a stint as a teacup reader at Love’s Café at 779 Granville.

 ?? ARLEN REDEKOP/ PNG ?? Memorabili­a of vaudeville performer Lucy Caze is now owned by daughterin­law Catherine Tremblay, shown at her North Vancouver home.
ARLEN REDEKOP/ PNG Memorabili­a of vaudeville performer Lucy Caze is now owned by daughterin­law Catherine Tremblay, shown at her North Vancouver home.

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