Carol Channing

Carol Channing at the Los Angeles Premiere of 'Gotta Dance'. Lin

Channing in 2009, photo by s_bukley/Bigstock.com

Birth Name: Carol Elaine Channing

Date of Birth: January 31, 1921

Place of Birth: Seattle, Washington, U.S.

Date of Death: January 15, 2019

Place of Death: Rancho Mirage, California, U.S.

Ethnicity:
*75% German
*25% African-American

Carol Channing was an American actress, singer, dancer, and comedian.

She was the daughter of Carol Adelaide (Glaser) and George Channing (born George Christian Stucker), who was a prominent newspaper editor.

Carol’s paternal grandfather was of German descent, while Carol’s paternal grandmother was African-American. Carol’s mother’s family is German. Carol was not told about her African-American ancestry until her teenage years. It appears that Carol first publicly stated that she is of part black ancestry in 2002, when her autobiography, Just Lucky I Guess: A Memoir of Sorts, was published. In the book, Carol also wrote that her father sang gospel music to entertain her.

Carol had a son, cartoonist Channing Carson, with her former husband, Canadian football player Alex Carson. She was also married to manager and publicist Charles Lowe, until his death, and then to Harry Kullijian, also until his death. They founded the Dr. Carol Channing and Harry Kullijian Foundation, to promote arts education in schools.

Carol is sometimes said to have had Jewish ancestry on her mother’s side. It is not clear if this is accurate. At least much of her mother’s ancestry was not Jewish. An interview with Carol in 2007 made a note that “her mother’s heritage is unclear, so the singer hopes perhaps she is at least half Jewish.”

Carol was raised in the Christian Science faith.

Carol’s paternal grandfather was named George C. Stucker (the son of Henry Stucker). George was born in Georgia, to German parents.

Carol’s paternal grandmother was named Clara Page. Clara was born in Georgia, and was African-American.

Carol’s maternal grandfather was named Otto Glaser. Otto was German.

Carol’s maternal grandmother was Paulina/Pauline Ottmann/Ottman (the daughter of Henry Ottman/Ottmann and Adelheid/Adelaide Wilzbacher). Paulina was born in Illinois, to German parents. Her father was born in Stuttgart, Baden-Württemberg and her mother was born in Bavaria. Adelheid evidently was the daughter of Adam Wilzbacher and Marguerite.

Sources: Genealogies of Carol Channing – https://www.geni.com
https://www.wikitree.com

Carol Channing on the 1930 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

Carol’s father on the 1900 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

Carol’s maternal grandmother, Paulina/Pauline (Ottmann) Glaser, on the 1900 U.S. Census – https://familysearch.org

10 Responses

  1. Manila says:

    She died today. RIP :(

  2. madman says:

    *75% German
    *25% African American

  3. Capricious says:

    Looks like a Sicilian clown.

  4. cwm85 says:

    She’s like 75 percent European. She’s basically white.

  5. passingtime85 says:

    Correction.

    In the documentary Carol Channing:Larger Than Life, Carol stated that her mother Adelaide Glaser was born Jewish. No idea how true it is though.

    • follers says:

      Does she actually state so in the documentary, herself?

      I don’t see a lot of evidence that her mother’s family was Jewish. For one thing, most or all of her mother’s siblings married people of non-Jewish German background.

    • follers says:

      From 2007:
      “With her love of Yiddish and all things Jewish, Channing sometimes wonders if she might be Jewish herself. Her mother’s heritage is unclear, so the singer hopes perhaps she is at least half Jewish. “It might explain my theatrical timing,” she says.”
      http://www.jweekly.com/article/full/32051/hello-carol/

      • passingtime85 says:

        Someone uploaded, about 5 days ago, a copy of the documentary to YouTube. At about the 33 minute mark she tells how her mother revealed she’s was part black, and that she shouldn’t be surprised if she had a black baby. She said that she actually wasn’t sure if that was true, because she her mother told that to her right before she left for college, and it wasn’t something she was aware of beforehand.

        Carol’s husband Harry, sitting at her side during the interview, then also mentioned that her mother was Jewish. Carol responded, “I didn’t know that either.” From there they covered her first marriage into a Jewish family, and how her grandfather-in-law taught her Yiddish. Other than that, not much was said.

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