Braham was born in 1850 in West Street in the
rookery of
Seven Dials in London, to artist Nathaniel Henry Braham and Susan Dorothy Frost, his father was
Jewish, his mother
Anglican and this interfaith marriage caused a split in the family when they married at
St Martin-in-the-Fields on 11 November 1848. Braham had two younger brothers, Charles who became an acrobat using the name Carl Robarts, and Edwin, who had mild learning difficulties and was cared for by the family but later suffered vascular dementia and died aged 58. Braham became a minstrel through his uncle Frederick Burgess who managed, together with
George Washington (Pony) Moore, The
Moore and Burgess Minstrels at the
St James's Hall in Piccadilly. He then went on to tour with minstrel companies including Wilsom and Montague appearing before
Queen Victoria at
Balmoral in October 1868. Braham then started a career as a solo act in music hall as a comic vocalist using his expressive face in a myriad of facial expressions, conveying different characters. He named his act "Masks and Faces". Braham sailed to Australia in 1871 in the clipper ship
St Vincent with fellow minstrel
Thomas Pedder "Tommy" Hudson who was to become famous as a manager of "Hudson's Surprise Party" which later toured India and Australia. After having success in the early music halls in Sydney, in June 1872 Braham met Lizzie Watson, born Eliza Stephenson (c. 1840 – 17 February 1913), an Irish serio-comic and Burlesque actress ten years his senior. Watson was the headline star of
Harry Rickards and
Enderby Jackson's music hall touring company. Watson parted company acrimoniously from Rickards to start up her own company with Braham. They married on 6 February 1873 in Brisbane, and sailed from there to Sydney in April. After further success as a partnership, in music halls in Sydney, Brisbane, Melbourne, various surrounding towns which had benefited from the
Gold Rush, such as
Bathurst,
West Maitland and
Hill End and then in New Zealand, Braham and Watson sailed with the
Billy Emerson minstrel company in June 1874 aboard the steam ship
Tartar bound for San Francisco. The ship however ran aground on a coral reef. After landing safely at Honolulu where it was scheduled to make a stop, the Emerson company, Braham and Watson did not re-board but stayed a couple of weeks during which they were unexpectedly commanded to perform before the last King of Hawaii
David Kalakaua. The company then sailed on to San Francisco where Braham and Watson performed at the
Bella Union Saloon in the
Barbary Coast district for an unprecedented 47 weeks. When their contract finished Braham and Watson went to New York where they impressed the famous impresario and "father of vaudeville" Tony Pastor who invited them to tour with him. In 1876 Braham devised a solo act based on the art of
Commedia dell'arte calling it "Silly Bill and Father" in which a model of an old man was made with Braham holding the model while acting the part of his son on the model's back. Braham and Watson returned to the UK in February 1878 as the highest paid entertainers of their profession, and toured all of the main music halls throughout the country, including
The Crystal Palace in London. In 1881 Braham and Watson's marriage collapsed when it was discovered Watson who had entered "widow" on their marriage certificate was still married to her husband Henry Hemingway. ==Theatre career==