WREN gives voice as ventriloquist in a 1940s show
[caption id="attachment_31226" align="aligncenter" width="595"] Ventriloquist Sheila Margaret Kidd holding dummy, Spike Ryan. Photo supplied.[/caption] CFB Esquimalt, Naval and Military Museum — An offbeat Royal Canadian Navy-related historical artifact – a Second World War ventriloquist’s dummy – is being highlighted at the Canadian Forces Base (CFB) Esquimalt Naval and Military Museum. The dummy, Spike Ryan (or simply ‘Spike’), was the working ‘partner’ of ventriloquist Sheila Margaret Kidd. When she joined the Women’s Royal Canadian Naval Service (WRCNS) to contribute to the national war effort on July 4, 1943, she also brought Spike and her skills as a ventriloquist. Just 20 years old when she signed up for wartime service, Wren Kidd was already a professional ventriloquist who had three years’ experience performing in clubs and theatres before becoming a ‘Wren’ (a term often used for women in the WRCNS). As a Wren, she was chosen to perform in the at-the-time very popular Meet the Navy shows with her not-so-silent partner, a redheaded dummy named Spike Ryan. Wren Kidd had developed her ventriloquist abilities during her teen years, when she suffered from painful throat ulcers. “I discovered I could talk without moving my lips,” she explained in an August 1943 newspaper write-up. “Wren Kidd took the skill she gained from her ailment and, using ingenuity and initiative, parleyed this into a huge part of her career. These character traits probably served her well during her time as a Wren and we’re proud to be highlighting her,” said Tatiana Robinson, CFB Esquimalt Naval and Military Museum Curator. Her performances with Meet the Navy attracted good reviews, although, at the time, a female ventriloquist was considered an oddity. “For the first time in one’s life, one heard a girl ventriloquist, and a very skillful one, in the person of Sheila Kidd,” commented one reviewer. Meet the Navy was not an easy gig. Mornings and afternoons were spent in rehearsals, and there were sometimes multiple performances in a single day as the show made its way to cities and towns across...














