Source: WV History Film Project
WEST VIRGINIA, ROLL 12, 4/3/92
BJ EVANS INTERVIEW, TAKE 1, CAMERA
ROLL 95, SOUND ROLL 12
Q: BJ, tell me a little bit about your family.
JJAF 1230
BJ: We're Welsh, everybody on both sides of the
family from way back. My sisters and I have been
very close all through the years. My brother was in
the navy and was on the submarine that went into the
Japanese harbor underneath the nets. When he joined
the service, we didn't hear from him for about eight
months. My mother was very, very distraught about
that; we thought that maybe he'd been killed. He
wasn't. He was seven years older than MJ was, so we
didn't have a great rapport, was just too old, too much
older than we were. But we're two years apart. When
the girls sang on Wheeling Steel -- ...
Q: Cut. ...
BJ EVANS INTERVIEW, TAKE 2, CAMERA ROLL 95, SOUND ROLL 12
Q: You grew up in the '30's. What was life like
here in Wheeling here during the Depression? Did it
impact your family at all?
JJAF 1327
BJ: Oh, indeed it did. We were like most of the other
families, we were very poor. There were five girls
and a boy. My father worked in the mill, and I
remember many times in the summer -- he was a
roller in the hot mill at Yorkville -- and many times
he would come home from work and roll with cramps
on the floor because of the terrible heat he was in.
For anybody who's ever been a mill, it's unreal, the
noise and the sparks flying and the molten, steel
pouring, and so forth. It's rather a frightening thing,
but that's a way of life for the Ohio valley, especially
for West Virginia.
Q: What did the Depression mean for young
girls like you and your sister?
BJ: It was very, very hard. There were a lot of things
that we didn't have that other people did have.
JJAF 1410
Q: Could you start over and say the 'Depression'
was.
BJ: The Depression -- we were very poor. As I say,
there were five girl and a boy in the family. I recall
there would people who would come to the door and
knock. My mother was a great canner, and she never
failed to give something to anybody that came to the
door and that was hungry. But there were a lot of
times I remember just having a piece of bread with
sugar on it before we went to bed. We drank a lot of
tea. We had corn flakes. I think this is very amusing
now the way I waste milk. If we saved our milk we
could have a second bowl of cornflakes. And that
was something you really worked at. A lot of times
we were hungry when we went to bed, but then
everybody was hungry.
Q: Tell me about going down and getting
clothes.
JJAF 1492
BJ: We had a wonderful church that had a missionary
barrel was what they called it. I can laugh about it
now; it wasn't funny to me then. The people knew
our family and knew we had a family of girls would
call and tell our mother and tell her they were taking
some clothes down that one of their daughters had
outgrown and would give us a head start to go up and
try things on. Then when we started to sing in the
Wheeling Steel program, we could take our things to
the missionary barrel and we did a lot. Sometimes
you would see somebody on the street with something
that you had donated. The worst part about that
missionary barrel was the kids you went to school
with, some of their parents had donated their clothes,
and when you would wear them they would say, "Oh,
that used to belong to me." That was tough, really
tough.
Q: And you and sisters used to walk down the
railroad tracks?
JJAF 1571
BJ: Picking up coal. We had burlap bags and we
would walk the railroad tracks where the coal trains
would come through. They would naturally drop off
lumps, anywhere from the size of a tomato and a itty
bitty shale type stuff, --
Q: Cut. ...
BJ EVANS INTERVIEW, TAKE 3, CAMERA ROLL 95
Q: BJ, tell me about you and your sisters and the
coal story?
JJAF 1615
BJ: Everything came in burlap bags then. Everybody
saved burlap bags. We would go down to the railroad
track and we would walk along the railroad track and
pick up lumps of coal. Each one of us would fill our
bag as much as we could carry, probably a third or a
fourth of the way. We would bring it home because
we had no central heat in the house. We had
fireplaces in the living room, in the dining room, and
in all of the bedrooms. The warmest place of course
was the kitchen where the stove was, where the
cooking was done and so forth. I remember my
mother and father banking that fire every night so that
it would be ready to start in the morning. We had
little coal scuttles that they would take our little rocks
out of and throw in the fireplace.
Q: How is it in the midst of this your family
became so musical?
JJAF 1699
BJ: Because we're Welsh; that's the only thing we can
attribute it to. If you get two Welshmen together, one
of them sings harmony. If you get four, two of them
sing harmony; it's just an inborn thing that the Welsh
people are very musical. They are very intuned to
harmony, which is what we sang. We used to sing in
the Welsh church. The first time I ever sang there, I
sang, 'Jesus loves me,' with my sister MJ. I sang the
harmony, and she sang the lead. It's just something
you did all of your life.
Q: Your parents?
BJ: My parents were very musical; my mother played
the piano; my father sang. Everybody in the family
sang. It was never quiet; it was always music in our
house.
Q: Tell me how you heard about the Wheeling
Steel radio show?
JJAF 1780
BJ: Everybody knew about the Wheeling Steel show
because it was local people entertaining local people
and also the people in the service. When we had our
audition to try out, not as the Evan Sisters or the Steel
Sisters, but we had another friend and we had a
sustaining program. This must have been when I was
about 14 on WKWK. No, I was 15, that's right.
When we come over and we sang a crazy little song
called, 'Don't the moon look pretty on a country road,'
which was very good, but such a silly song, that we
always laughed. After we got through singing it, we
went backstage and laughed at what dumb words they
were. Then, I was a cheerleader at high school and
Mr. Grimes, Pop, that we all affectionately called Pop
called Roy Wilson, who was a friend of my family's
and asked mother if we would like to try out to be a
member of the Steel Sisters. Mother said yes. She
had no thought about if we were going to get paid or
anything at the time. Fortunately, we did. We came
over, and we auditioned. One of the Steel Sisters had
to drop out of the quartet, and they didn't like it all
because there were two fresh, young things coming in
to join their quartet which had always been a trio.
However, we finally got along just fine, and we made
beautiful music together.
Q: How much of a difference did the paycheck
that the Evans girls brought home every week
make?
JJAF 1948
BJ: We made $35 each a week, which was a lot of
money. We were never allowed to cash our checks.
Everything went to mother, and she took care of all of
the finances and she ruled with a iron hand.
Wheeling Steel was very kind and gracious in buying
clothes for the members of the cast, which was very,
very nice and generous because you just couldn't
afford to buy really high quality things, even then
when we first started. They'd buy us coordinating
colors and so forth, and we loved that. We were
never allowed to take them out of the Capital,
however. They stayed in our dressing room.
JJAF 2007
That's another thing that's very strange, compared to
TV now. We did our own hair; we did our own make
up; we made sure our clothes were pressed neatly and
so forth. Didn't dare come out on stage with a
stocking that had a runner in it, so most everything
you wore was long because where would you get the
stockings during the war.
Q: WW II broke out and your brother went to
the war and you were on the show. Tell me about
being on the show while your brother was in the
service.
BJ: I can tell you first. We were in the theatre when
all of a sudden they had announced that we were
going to sing, the Steel Sisters were going to sing for
the program, and all of a sudden everything got real
quiet and a loud voice --
Q: Keep that thought ...
WEST VIRGINIA, ROLL 13
BJ EVANS INTERVIEW, TAKE 4, ROLL 96,
SOUND ROLL 13
Q: BJ, tell me about the war breaking out?
JJAG 0024
BJ: December the 7th we were in the theatre starting
our broadcast, and they just announced we were
going to sing, the Steel Sisters were going to sing. I
remember that the theater was jammed with people
without any anticipation of any war or anything like
that. We always had a full house because the tickets
were free was one on of the reasons and you got to see
the movie. All of a sudden everything on the stage
sort of stopped and everybody was looking at each
other and over the loudspeaker into the theater came a
voice that said: "Ladies and gentlemen, the President
of the United States." It was like being suspended in
time. The announcement came across and everybody
was so confused; we didn't know what to do. Finally,
people started to get up and leave the theater. First,
just a few, and then gradually everybody got up. Of
course, I don't know what happened with the rest of
program; we were so distraught, knowing that I had a
brother that would be in the war. He left on
Christmas Day to go to Great Lakes Naval Training
Station, and we didn't see him for two years, the only
boy in the family.
Q: But you sang to him?
JJAG 0151
BJ: Yes, we sang and he heard us in Pearl Harbor. In
fact, they had one wonderful day over when all the
people from the surrounding area in the Ohio valley,
all the sailors were taken into one place, and they
broadcast through the Armed Services Network, and
they got to hear us.
Q: Do you remember what you were
singing?
BJ: 'Never a day goes by when I don't think of you'.
Everything was oriented to the war -- like 'Don't sit
under the apple tree,' and 'You better give me lots of
lovin' honey while your honey is still around,' 'Miss
you,' 'Roses of Pickudee?' My heavens, in four years
we sang so many songs. Then of course we had our
dance jobs on Saturday night at the Pine Room at
Oglebay Park, and we'd go on our bond trips. One of
the highlights of the whole thing was going to Great
Lakes Naval Training Station and walking through
an auditorium with 7,000 sailors throwing their hats
up in the hair and screaming. It was wonderful. A lot
of them we knew because they were from the Valley.
They had a special party for us after with the boys
from the Valley.
Q: Was there the sense that the show was part of
the war effort.
JJAG 0275
BJ: I'm trying to think of something specific that I
could tell you about that. We did have at one time a
beautiful young blonde woman who came over from
England. I can't remember what her name was, but
she was a movie actress over there. We had a
program called, 'Bundles for Britain.' That's when
everybody was asked to take clothing and so forth and
a specific depot that it was supposed go to, and
Wheeling Steel program did a good job. A lot of
people sent things in and said, 'We heard the Steel
program and that's one of the reasons we're sending
this in.'
Q: Tell me about the Mothers Day broadcast in
'42, wasn't it?
JJAG 0343
BJ: Yes, it was May the 10th, 1942. Pop Grimes
wanted to know if my mother would be on the
program. Initially it started out to be just us on with
her. But then somebody suggested that why not --
let's hear how five of them sing together? They had
already been on once. When we sang on Mothers
Day Jenny was 9, and MJ was 19. They had a special
person write the lyrics: 'We are five little sisters from
9 to 19 and in between. We have a brother who is a
sailor and he is far away in a submarine.' It was
really a terrific, kicky thing. The audience stood up
and applauded; we had a standing ovation. But here
we were -- from a little, tiny thing -- none of us was
very big -- but there we were just grinning from ear to
ear. My mother was so proud because she was seen
on the radio. As she used to say. "Did you see my
girls on the radio?" She was very proud; they gave
her flowers; they gave flower to all of us. It was a
very happy day for us, and my brother did hear
that.
Q: It was a different time then, wasn't it? The
WW II time in Wheeling? Did you have a sense you
were more together, more of a community?
JJAG 0465
BJ: Yes, we did have that. There used to be a line
always in Wheeling, and you'd wonder what it was
for. It was always to get cigarettes. They'd get a
shipment of cigarettes in, and people would pour out
of the Wheeling Steel Building and line halfway
down the street so that they would be in line. They
could only buy one pack at a time, and there'd be
some horrible, horrible kind that you never heard of
before like Fatima? and things that you'd hardly put
in your mouth today if you did smoke. But there
were shortages. One of the things that was impressive
to me that you had to have stamps for everything.
Hardly anyone drove a car; you couldn't get any
gasoline tickets. We had tickets for sugar and tickets
for butter and tickets for meat. Sometimes, for
instance, nobody liked lamb chops around here for
some reason. I don't know why. Some of the
butchers would sell you lamb chops if you would
spend your tickets to buy bacon, for instance. Not
very many people could afford lamb chops.
Q: What was the reaction of the people around
Wheeling to the show?
JJAG 0579
BJ: The influx of the soldiers coming home and the
sailors and the mariners, you would always see them
down at Walgreen's talking to the girls and so forth.
And the dances that we had on Saturday night at
Oglebay were for the servicemen and their dates. I
don't know where they learned to dance so well. I
never thought that people around here could dance as
well, but they all come home jitterbugging, especially
the sailors. It was something to see. The girls all
dressed up because their beaux were home, and the
boys all dressed in their uniforms. It was very, very --
it was a romantic time really.
Q: Did you have a sense because you were on
this national radio show that you were someplace
important?
JJAG 0652
BJ: Not really important. We just felt we were
contributing to something we wouldn't have had
control over otherwise. We were asked to sing in a
lot of places, a lot of rallies. We sang at all of the
company picnics. I have a funny stories about one of
the company picnics. It was cloudy. We were at the
Yorkville Plant and we were out at Wheeling Park,
and they had just announced we were going to sing.
We got up to sing, and the band of course was under
the portico, or whatever it was. We started to sing. I
think the song was 'When you're smiling.' When we
came to the part of 'When you're crying, you bring on
the rain.' The sky opened, and we just got absolutely
soaked. But nobody left. They started to sing with
us. We looked terrible, our hair all hanging down,
and we were laughing half way through it. When we
got all through, they clapped and wanted more, but
we were so soaked we said, "No, thank you. We're
gonna leave now."
Q: Was your father a dedicated employee of the
mill? How did you think of, your family think of
Wheeling Steel, the big corporation?
JJAG 0774
BJ: Yes, he was. Wheeling Steel was in the whole
Ohio Valley; Wheeling Steel was the major
industries, from Steubenville, Ohio all the way down
to Benwood, on both sides of the river. It was
Wheeling Steel. Fact, one song we had we ended
with 'Put your shoulder to the wheel like they do at
Wheeling Steel and the whole world smiles with you.'
They would re-write a lot of things like that that
would apply to the Ohio Valley and the war
effort.
Q: You didn't think of it then -- this is
corny?
JJAG 0827
BJ: No, music is never corny. We used to have a
saying in our house -- I don't know whether this is
Omar Kiam or the ? or what, but we'd say: 'And the
night shall be filled with music and the cares that
infest the day shall fold their tents like the Arabs and
silently slip away.' That was our family philosophy.
Don't worry when you go to bed tonight because that's
already over with, and you can't do anything about it,
just look forward to tomorrow. And we did that.
Q: So music kept your family through ?
BJ: Absolutely, no question about it. No
question.
Q: Do you ever wish you could go back to
1942?
BJ: No.
Q: Why not?
JJAG 0900
BJ: Because I'm happily married; I have a wonderful
family, a wonderful husband. Three beautiful
grandchildren, and I'm too old.
Q: In any sense was that a highlight of your
life?
BJ: Absolutely. Yes, it was. It was such a part of our
lives because it just absorbed everything we did. It
was dedicated to that, what was going to happen that
evening or what was going to happen that day. A lot
of times in school they could call and say would you
come to the office. I would go to the office and they
would say you have a picture session at three o'clock.
You better get home and change your clothes, and so
forth and put on your Wheeling Steel outfits. That's
one thing the girls in school resented. We weren't
supposed to take our clothes out of the Capital
Theater, but if there was going to be a shoot or we
were going to appear some place -- ...
WEST VIRGINIA SOUND ROLL 14
BJ EVANS INTERVIEW, TAKE 5, ROLL 97,
SOUND 14
Q: BJ, tell me about that certain feeling you think
about when you think back on those years in your
show?
JJAG 1010
BJ: I think back especially on the poverty we were in;
it was just abject poverty before we went into it. We
were just plunged into a brand new, whole life that
people just don't expect ever have happen to them in a
small town like Wheeling. We were not notorious, I
don't mean that at all. There was a lot of adulation
association with being one of the members of the cast
of Wheeling Steel. There was never, very few times
was it ever a bad attitude when people would talk to
you about. It was always more 'well, you're really
lucky,' or 'where did you get your talent?' 'How do
you like doing what you do?' And you really don't
know what to say; it's just something that's inborn,
that happens to you and it's never happened to you
before. There's sort of a happiness and an uplifting
type of thing to it. As far as people making us feel
special, really special like they do know with people
who are in this type of business, that never happened
to us.
Q: Did you ever have a sense that you would be
listened to nationally?
JJAG 1134
BJ: Yes, always. That's why we tried very hard to
make sure that what we did was done well. We made
very, very few mistakes. We used to sing in the
chorus also. We hardly ever made any mistakes.
One time we did -- the vocalist came in before he was
supposed to, and luckily the orchestra leader picked it
right up. Luckily we were all watching the way we're
supposed to, and he just held his hand out for us not
to come in until he pointed to us with a baton, which
we did. It was not obvious to the audience, I'm sure
or to the radio audience. Backstage we got it; we
knew we were going to get it, although it wasn't the
fault of all of us. They didn't like mistakes.
Q: Did your family have a radio? Did you listen
to a radio?
JJAG 1207
BJ: We had a little tiny radio. Yes, we used to listen
to Major Bowl's Amateur Hour and Let's Pretend and
Amos and Andy. I'll tell you something about Kate
Smith. Kate Smith was the only person in the United
States who was allowed to sing 'God Bless America'
anytime she wanted to, which I felt was a real tribute
to her talent. I'll have to tell you too about Paul Ivan.
He was a very, very personable who wore gray suede
shoes. In my youth I said, "Why do you wear gray
suede shoes?" He was very rotund and he just held
his stomach and laughed. He said, "This is the only
kind I can afford," -- which of course was ridiculous.
But he was a very, very personable man. Anybody
that we got to come here to be on the program -- I
don't know what they paid those people -- whether it
was just something that they were doing for the war
effort or not -- but anybody that came here was
always very impressed with the talent that was in the
Valley. I used to wonder to myself, "Why are they so
surprised?" because there would be talent shows.
There would be minstrels; there would be school
affairs, and so forth that were really professional.
They always seemed so surprised. "Oh my goodness,
how did they learn to do this in such a small town like
that?" It was a learned reflex.
Q: Then the war ended.
JJAG 1349
BJ: Yes, and Wheeling went crazy. We had streetcars
and everybody was riding on top of the streetcars;
they were hanging off the side of it. They would pull
the trolleys off and push it the other way. It was
terrible; the police couldn't do anything about it;
everybody was just like they were drugged. It had
been going on so long, and people had been without.
A lot of the girls that you knew maybe had gotten
married before their boyfriends went off, even though
they were very very young. Most of the marriages
lasted quite nicely; a few didn't because they were
gone too long. It was so strange to me to know girls
who were married. They were just maybe a year or
two older than I was. I had no thought of getting
married at that age. In fact, in one interview I said in
a magazine that I never, ever wanted to get married;
and I thought marriage was a bore.
Q: Before the war ended, the show ended? How
did you feel?
JJAG 1441
BJ: We didn't know it was going to end. We got two
weeks' notice when Mr. Grimes died. When he
became ill he had phlebitis in his legs. It was terrible;
it was such a -- it was like a pall? over everybody
because it was the end of an era for all of us who had
been on. I'm sure a lot of the soldiers and sailors who
had been in the cast were coming home or thinking
they would have a job when they got back, but that
was not to be the case. The song we sang was 'We'll
meet again, don't know where, don't know when.'
Everybody on the stage was in tears; it was just awful,
even the audience was crying.
Q: Did life change in Wheeling when ? ?
BJ: Yes, it did.
Q: How?
JJAG 1524
BJ: One of the ways it changed in Wheeling was that
people, women who were working at Wheeling Steel
and different places around the city, lost their jobs
because the men came home from the service, and
they took their rightful place. I was working at the
Wheeling Steel Building on the 9th Floor Hall, which
was the sales floor. I was the receptionist there, and I
got myself in a little bit of hot water. One day when I
picked up the phone, I always answer, "Ninth floor
hall, may I help you?" But it was hot, and it was not
air conditioned. This time was a miserable day. I
picked up the phone and I said, 'Ninth Floor Hall,
who in the Hall do you want?' It was somebody from
the 13th floor, which is -- they were the people --
Q: Did you stay working long?
BJ: Yes, I did for awhile. I finally went to work for
the telephone company.
Q: Did recalling the experience of being on the
show make you think of having a career ? ?
JJAG 1620
BJ: Yes, it did. Even after the show went off we were
asked to sing just every place. People would call, but
in the last year my sister Margaret -- This is a little
cute story. I was talking about her make up. You
know, that we had to do our own. We were -- she
said to me before we got up on the stage. She said:
"Go down and fix your lipstick; it's smeared." She
was the boss because she was three years older. So I
went down to fix up and when I got in her purse and I
opened a little rouge box. I couldn't find her lipstick
so I thought I'd put rouge on it. There was a wedding
ring in there, and I came up to the stage. I said: "Wait
till I tell Mother." She said, "What do you mean?"
She got all flustered about it. I said, "Where did you
get the wedding ring?" She said, "That's none of your
business." Then I knew that she was married.
JJAG 1703
She had just come back from Lake Charles,
Louisiana where Jack was going to go over -- he was
a bombardier in the Air Force. They got married.
But if they would have found out, we'd have been
fired right off. The girls were not allowed to be
married. In fact, the girls in the chorus were never
allowed to ride in -- like if we were going out to
dinner or if we were going to entertain the girls at our
house for something -- we'd have to go in three cars.
Because you can imagine that if there were an
accident, that that would just knock the show off right
there.
Q: Why have you stayed in the Ohio
Valley?
BJ: Because I was born and raised here. My life has
been very fulfilling. I was always very active in civil
affairs. I always liked to talk, as you can see.
Q: What about this place that's kept you
here?
JJAG 1780
BJ: Family ties I guess mainly. My family was all
here. I like the people. This as I say is a very friendly
city. I think it was because I was well known.
Q: But certainly opportunity was greater out
there?
BJ: Yes, yes. But after MJ got married, we were no
longer a trio. Then my brother came home, and the
four of us were going to sing and let me be the lead,
but we didn't get to do that. He got married. ? J was
married. I went to work, and I got married. I was the
first, one of my most fulfilling jobs was I was the first
executive director of the senior services for the Upper
Ohio Valley. I was also the first secretary and
treasurer of the mental health clinic that I helped to
start here. I was very active in Girl Scouts, very
active in hospital volunteering work, but I knew the
people I was working with. That's the reason I stayed
there.
JJAG 1895
PRESENCE FOR BJ EVANS INTERVIEW. ???