Nadia Cattouse

Summary

Nadia Evadne Cattouse (born 2 November 1924) is a Belizean-born British actress, singer and songwriter.

Nadia Cattouse
Born
Nadia Evadne Cattouse

(1924-11-02) 2 November 1924 (age 99)
Belize City, British Honduras
NationalityBelizean, British
Alma materLondon School of Economics
Occupation(s)Actress, singer

She is best known for her acting roles in many British television programmes including Play for Today, Crown Court, Dixon of Dock Green and Johnny Jarvis. As a singer in the 1960s, she performed at Les Cousins folk and blues club in Greek Street, London, and appeared on television programmes including the BBC’s Sing Along and Hootenanny. On the folk scene, she was a contemporary of Julie Felix and Fairport Convention, and was called by Melody Maker "one of the giants of the folk-song revival in Britain".[1] With Robin Hall and Jimmie Macgregor she made Songs of Grief & Glory (1967).[2] Her album Earth Mother (1970) was partly recorded at the 1969 Edinburgh Festival. Among other compilations, Cattouse features on Cult Cargo: Belize City Boil Up (2005), singing "Long Time Boy",[3] and on the 1972 album Club Folk 2 (Peg Records PS3), singing "B. C. People"[4] and "All Around My Grandmother's Floor".[5]

Biography edit

Early years and career edit

Nadia Evadne Cattouse was born in Belize City in 1924. Her father, Albert Cattouse, was a civil servant who went on to become Deputy Prime Minister of British Honduras.

In 1943, during the Second World War, Nadia Cattouse came to Britain as a volunteer and was trained in Edinburgh, Scotland, as a signals operator. She also became a part-time physical training instructor with the ATS.[6] She subsequently attended teacher training college in Glasgow and on qualifying she went back to British Honduras, where she was headmistress of a Mission school and lectured on infant education at Teachers' Training College and summer courses.[7]

She returned to Britain in 1951 and studied social sciences at the London School of Economics, doing some acting and singing to pay her way through college. She began her television career in 1954.[8] She appeared on two prize-winning television productions, Freedom Road: Songs of Negro Protest (1964)[9] and There I Go,[7] and appeared on stage as Felicity in Jean Genet′s The Blacks.[7] Her notable songs as a folk singer included "Long Time Boy"[10] and "Red and Green Christmas".[7]

Personal life edit

She married composer/arranger David Lindup and their son Mike Lindup is the keyboard player of the jazz-funk new wave band Level 42.

Award edit

  • September 2009, Meritorious Service Award from the Government of Belize, "in recognition of her advancement of social, cultural, and political awareness among Belizeans and other Caribbean people in the UK".[11]

Selected discography edit

Albums edit

  • Nadia Cattouse (Reality, 1966)
  • Earth Mother (RCA International, 1969)

Singles edit

  • "The Boy Without a Heart" / "Long Time, Boy" (1961)
  • "Run Joe" / "Bahaman Lullaby" (1961)
  • "Port Mahon" / "A Little More Oil" (1965)
  • "Beautiful Barbados" / "Turn Around" (Reality / RE 503)
  • "It's Hard to See" / "Desert Sand" (LIV/SP/93)

Compilations edit

  • Edinburgh Folk Festival Vol. 1 (1963)
  • Edinburgh Folk Festival Vol. 2 (1964)
  • Freedom Road: Songs of Negro Protest (Fontana, 1964)
  • Songs from ABC Television's "Hallelujah" (Fontana, 1966)
  • 49 Greek Street (RCA / RCA SF8118, 1970; RCA / JASKCD193, 2007)
  • Club Folk Volume 1 (Peg, 1972)
  • Club Folk Volume 2 (Peg, 1972)
  • Cult Cargo: Belize City Boil Up (Numero, 2005)

References edit

  1. ^ "Cattouse, Nadia", Digital Dig.
  2. ^ "Nadia Cattouse: Kelston Round Hill (1967)" from Songs of Grief & Glory on YouTube
  3. ^ Review by Joe Tangari of Cult Cargo: Belize City Boil Up, Pitchfork, 26 October 2005.
  4. ^ "Nadia Cattouse – B. C. People" on YouTube
  5. ^ Nadia Cattouse: "All Around my Grandmother's Floor" from Earth Mother on YouTube
  6. ^ "Caribbean aircrew in the RAF during WW2".
  7. ^ a b c d West Indians in Great Britain 1973/74. Hoddesdon, Hertfordshire, UK: West Indian Digest, April 1973.
  8. ^ Stephen Bourne, Black in the British Frame: The Black Experience in British Film and Television (Continuum, 2001), pp. 112–18.
  9. ^ "Freedom Road: Songs of Negro Protest (1964)", BFI.
  10. ^ "Nadia Cattouse – Long Time Boy" on YouTube
  11. ^ Kamcdonald, "Belize government Meritorious Service Award goes to…", The University of Glasgow's International Story blog, 21 April 2014.

External links edit

  • Nadia Cattouse at IMDb
  • "Nadia Cattouse" at RYM Artists.
  • Filmography at BFI
  • Discography at rateyourmusic.com
  • Discography at 45cat.com