Mignonette Kokin
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Mignonette Kokin (born Margaret A Cutting; August 5, 1880 – May 16, 1957) was an American dancer, singer, and comedic actress in
vaudeville Vaudeville (; ) is a theatrical genre of variety entertainment born in France at the end of the 19th century. A vaudeville was originally a comedy without psychological or moral intentions, based on a comical situation: a dramatic composition ...
.


Early life

Margaret A. "Mignonette" Cutting was born in
Chester, Pennsylvania Chester is a city in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, United States. Located within the Philadelphia Metropolitan Area, it is the only city in Delaware County and had a population of 32,605 as of the 2020 census. Incorporated in 1682, Chester is ...
, the daughter of Ella (or Ellen) L. Moseley Kokin and Charles W. Cutting. Her mother was an actress on the vaudeville stage; her stepfather, Prince Kokin, was a juggler from Tokyo. She recalled a childhood spent in London and Paris.


Career

Mignonette Kokin danced and did comedic impersonations on the vaudeville circuit in the United States, danced in Paris, and toured Great Britain and Ireland. She was described in 1903 as "a chic little dancer" and "a buxom little beauty whose refinement and gorgeous gowns almost hypnotize the fair sex." Kokin often worked alongside the monkey act run by her husband, Charles F. Galetti. In 1907, she detailed her encounter with a simian costar in a New York theatre in 1907, a story published with exaggerated illustrations, under the headline "Hugged by a Big Baboon": "All of the nightmares in the world rolled into one," Kokin wrote, "cannot compare with those awful moments I passed in the arms of this repulsive brute, strong enough and ferocious enough to crush my slender body like an eggshell." In 1908 she toured Australia, again sharing bills with the baboon act. She and Galetti's monkeys were back in California in 1911, Kentucky in 1913, and in Utah in 1915. From 1922 to 1924, Kokin was again touring in the United States with her new "high speed dancing" act with Maria Galetti, "Two in a Revue". After she retired from the stage, she and her stepfather ran a dancing school in Philadelphia.


Personal life

Mignonette Kokin and Charles F. Galetti eloped in 1903, over her mother's objections. They had a son, Ferdinand, who was born and died in infancy later that year. She was widowed when Charles died in 1931. She had a stroke in 1951, while living in Philadelphia. She died in 1957, aged 76, in Chicago and is interred at
Chester Rural Cemetery Chester Rural Cemetery is a historic rural cemetery founded in March 1863 in Chester, Pennsylvania. Some of the first burials were Civil War soldiers, both Union and Confederate, who died at the government hospital located at the nearby building w ...
in Chester, Pennsylvania.


References


External links


A photograph of Mignonette Kokin
in the Jerome Robbins Dance Division, New York Public Library. * {{DEFAULTSORT: 1880 births 1957 deaths 20th-century American dancers Burials at Chester Rural Cemetery Dancers from Pennsylvania People from Chester, Pennsylvania American vaudeville performers