Background
Kearton was born in Congella, a settlement near Durban in the KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa.
Kearton was born in Congella, a settlement near Durban in the KwaZulu-Natal province of South Africa.
She went on to study at the Royal Academy of Music in London and subsequently studied under Charles Santley, Pietro Neri-Baraldi, and Henry Wood.
Her 1956 autobiography On Safari recounts their travels together in Africa, Australia and New Zealand. She received her first instruction in singing at her convent school in Durban and made her first public appearance at the South African Eisteddfod in Durban when she was 14. A soprano, she made her London debut on 24 May 1907, at the Empire Day Concert in Queen"s Hall.
England was to become her home, although she returned to South Africa several times to perform, including a concert tour in 1909.
She appeared numerous times in the Henry Wood Promenade Concerts between 1909 and 1915. During the course of her career she appeared in many other concerts and recitals in England and Scotland, including a solo recital at London"s Wigmore Hall in November 1918, where she sang 17th-century songs by William Lawes and Thomas Morley and modern settings of Tennyson"s poems.
She made a last recital tour to South Africa in 1921 before retiring from the concert stage. The couple had a pet chimpanzee named Mary who lived with them for six years as "one of the Kearton family".
The Keartons were said to have taught Mary to write her name and play three musical instruments.
According to the Brisbane Courier-Mail, the chimpanzee would sit and sew with Ada for an hour at a time and accompanied the couple on many of their travels. On 8 October of that year she appeared as a "castaway" on the British Broadcasting Corporation Radio programme Desert Island Discs. Cherry Kearton died in 1940.
Ada died in London in 1966 at the age of 88.