Alma Sanders


Alma M. Sanders was an American songwriter and composer of popular music, including several Broadway musicals, with her composer husband, Monte Carlo.

Early life

Alma M. Sanders was born in Chicago, Illinois. She studied music there, and sang in concerts and as a church soloist.

Music

On Broadway, Alma Sanders' compositions and songs were heard in the shows The Voice of McConnell, Tangerine, Elsie, The Chiffon Girl, Princess April, Oh! Oh! Nurse, Mystery Moon, and Louisiana Lady. She also co-wrote the score of a film, Ireland Today.
Compositions by Sanders included "Two Lips are Roses", "Honeymoon Home", "Sweet Lady", "Every Tear is a Smile ", "Goodbye Broadway, Hello France!", "Sleepytime Rag: Pickaninny Lullaby", "Some Pepp", "Along the Road to Singapore", "That Dear Old Mother of Mine", "Dance of the Teenie-Weenies", "Ev'ry Sammy needs his smokin' over there", "Hong Kong", "The Wild Irish Rose That God Gave Me", "That Tumble-down Shack in Athlone", "Keep a Steady Heart, "Every Tear is a Smile in an Irishman's Heart", "Sweet Lavender and Lace", " Ten Baby Fingers", "In Old Madeira", "Little Town in the Ould County Down", "Fragrance of Spring", "Too Many Kisses Mean Too Many Tears", "My Heaven", and "The House-Boat on the Styx".
Sanders became a member of ASCAP in 1923. Many of her works were recorded, by various ensembles and performers, before 1926. In 1920, Carlo and Sanders signed an exclusive contract with music publisher Jerome H. Remick. "It was inevitable that sooner or later someone would demand the exclusive rights to their very interesting songs," commented a music publication on that occasion. Her last project was a musical adaptation of a children's book, Heaven is a Circus by John Bernard Kelly, for the Catholic Writers Guild.

Personal life

Alma Sanders married Ernest Benjamin. They had two children, Edward C. Benjamin and Arlene Benjamin, before they divorced in 1921. Her daughter died in the 1936 fire at Lum's Chinese Restaurant in New York. Sanders' second husband was Danish composer Hans von Holstein, better known as "Monte Carlo". She died in 1956, aged 74 years, in New York.
Her "Some Pepp" was included on the CD Cake Walks, Two Steps and Rags by Women Composers by Nora Hulse.