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Card, Greeting


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Nom de l'objet : Card, Greeting
Titre : A Note to Dora Sayers or Barbara Larson from Valeria Valaire.
Numéro d'accession : BR2012.2.36
Date de début de production : 1973
Date de fin de production : 1975
Description : A Christmas note card with an image of holly on the cover. Handwritten in blue ink (top, proper left corner): "Valeria Valaire". Handwritten in black ink inside the card: "Dear friend - Xmas has to be in Jan - or Feb - for me this year. The hospital was my address during the holiday season. This last time in - was for operations on my eyes. I write this not seeing what I put on paper, so forgive all errors, please - Hope you can cyfer [sic] it. I've spent most of this year in the hospital." Handwritten in black ink on the back of the note card: "Other 3 times with a very bad heart. Almost said good-bye a couple of times but we are now slowly recovering strength. Some day I'll send a letter. Keep well. Know I'm thinking about you. P.S. My love to you, Valeria". The handwriting is very shaky and dips to one side.
Fonctions : Reference 2012.2.29, which lists Valeria Valaire (1889 - 1975) in Toronto at the Royal Alexandra Theatre. Dora Sayers Caro (1915-2004) was born in Clarkson in 1915, to Beverly and Annie Sayers (n‚e Harris). Dora lived close to Benares in a number of homes, including Skidoo, The Pines, and later The Log Bungalow. During World War I, Dora lived at Benares with her mother and brother while her father was overseas as an officer.Dora first started acting at age 10, appearing in school plays, and later in local stage productions in Mississauga and Oakville. To gain experience, she found work at the University of Toronto's Hart House Theatre, working with children's theatre productions.

In 1936, at the age of 21, Dora moved to New York and found work with the touring company of What Every Woman Knows. Dora's first big break came a year after arriving in New York, in 1937's Stage Door. She later appeared in the long-running Broadway production of My Fair Lady. The pinnacle came in 1941, when Dora was chosen to be the understudy for the legendary Katherine Hepburn in The Philadelphia Story.

The Tony award winning playwright, Moss Hart, took one of his shows to the American-occupied Pacific islands during World War II, to entertain the troops. Dora joined his cast for The Man Who Came To Dinner. Dora also helped form the United Services Organization in 1941. The USO provided health and recreational facilities for soldiers and administered church services, but was best known for the travelling vaudeville reviews that entertained Allied troops in Europe and the Pacific during WWII.

Dora married actor Ralph Forbes (pronounced RAYF) in 1946. Forbes appeared in over 70 movies from 1921 to 1944. He and Dora met in 1942 during the stage production of No‰l Coward's Private Lives. Ralph died 5 years after he and Dora married in 1951. Dora later married Jim Caro in 1954 and retired from the stage. Jim and Dora were avid equestrians. They also enjoyed breeding and showing thoroughbred dogs. Dora and Jim lived in France and the Bahamas before settling in the United States. She lived in McLean, Virginia - near Washington D.C. - until her death in 2004.
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Ville de l'établissement : Mississauga
Province de l'établissement : Ontario

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