Originally from Manchester, Carlisle recorded hundreds of solo records, and also recorded with many of the big dance bands of the time, including the famous Ambrose Orchestra. She sang solo with Ambrose's Orchestra and also performed duets with Sam Browne, being hailed as one of its best singers Her performance of "Home, James, and Don't Spare the Horses" with the orchestra may have helped to popularise the term. Her other most well-known song may be "A Nightingale Sang in Berkeley Square"; she also performed with the Jack Hylton Orchestra.
She made a number of appearances in film shorts and on television in the 1930s; two Pathé films are available on YouTube, a 1931 short with her singing "Alone and Afraid" and "My Canary Has Circles Under His Eyes", and an entire reel of "Radio Parade" (1933). Carlisle recorded very little after the beginning of the Second World War, and retired from the entertainment industry in about 1950. Carlisle's business interests after retirement from show business included ballroom dancing venues in south London, a company manufacturing bar accessories in Putney, London, a pub in Mayfair, central London and a hotel/pub in Wokingham in Berkshire. Carlisle lived from 1937 until her death in September 1977 in her house in Mayfair in central London.
Elsie Carlisle & Jay Wilbur Orchestra - Nursie, nursie
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