Jack Lotto was a music hall performer of the late Victorian and Edwardian eras whose speciality was a trick-cycling acting
Background
Lotto was born as John Egginton or Eginton in 1857 in Kinver in Staffordshire, the son of Elizabeth and Joseph Eggington, a Bundler of Iron. In 1877 in Sheffield he married Clara Parkin (1861-1904), the daughter of John Parkin and Martha Sutcliffe.
Career
With entertainer Joe Elvin he co-founded the show business charity the Grand Order of Water Rats in 1889. Their children were Alfred (born 1878), Walter (born 1879), Ernest (born 1881), Annie (born 1883), John (1884), Clara (born 1886), Albert (born 1887), Arthur (born 1890), Joseph (1891), Daisy (1892), Charlotte (known as Lottie) (1893), John (1893), Edward (known as Val Lotto) (1895), May (born 1896), Victoria (born 1896), Bertie (1897) and Winnie (1898-1899). In 1889 Lotto and entertainer Joe Elvin owned a trotting pony called The Magpie.
Taking the name from their wet, bedraggled pony, the Grand Order of Water Rats was formed to collate their efforts, as well as to serve as a social club for performers.
In September 1899 "Lotto, Lilo and Otto" appeared at the Shoreditch Empire in London, at the Charing Cross Music Hall in Lambeth in May 1894, and at the Tivoli Music Hall on The Strand in March 1895. "Lotto, Lilo and Otto" also appeared in the silent film Clever and Comic Cycle Acting in 1900, directed by James Williamson and filmed at Hove in Sussex.