Thursday, August 2, 2012

The Fabled Annie Oakley

By Val Hollermann


GNTC (Great Northern Theatre Company) presents the great Broadway show Annie Get Your Gun based primarily on the life of Phoebe Ann Mosey. She was born in a log cabin in 1860 in Ohio. She fired her first shot at the age of 8 and by age 12 was the chief provider for her extended family by selling wild game to a Cincinnati hotel owner.

The recognition of this dazzling tiny shooter exploded throughout Ohio and the mid-west when she beat Frank Butler, vaudeville's unparalleled marksman and trick shot. They married a year later and were brought to the notice of the genius executive of Buffalo Bill's Wild West Show. She modified her name to Oakley to honor a pal from Ohio.

Touring Europe with the Wild West Show in 1887, Annie twice gave personal demonstrations for Queen Victoria, defeated Grand Duke Michael of Russia in a match organized by the Prince of Wales, and in Berlin shot a stoggie from the lips of Kaiser Wilhelm. After a tragic train accident, Annie retired from the Wild West Show in 1901. She headlined in a Broadway play, THE WESTERN GIRL, in 1902 and '03 and continued to perform at charity events?Annie Oakley never refused a Charity request if the beneficiaries were orphaned girls, deserving younger girls, or actors.

Annie Oakley's achievements as a sharpshooter are legendary. At 30 paces she shot a penny from between her husband's thumb and forefinger with a .22 rifle and with this weapon could hit two-inch flying balls by sighting them in the glossy surface of a bowie knife. Once she hit 943 out of 1000 flying balls in a fast fire demonstration and, at the age of 56, using 3 double-barreled guns, punctured in midair 6 balls sprung from as many traps. Her prowess was immortalised in the lingo of Broadway when, in the pre-computerized days of hard tickets that were picked up at the door and sorted to count the number of audience members, complimentary tickets were identified by the holes punched in them. They were called "Annie Oaklies" since they replicated the holes Annie shot in flying playing cards.

Annie Oakley died in Greenville, Ohio on November 3, 1926. Frank Butler died 18 days later and are buried side-by-side in Brock Graveyard, only one or two miles from her birthplace.




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