Career Hjalmar Peterson was born in
Munkfors, Värmland. After emigrating to the United States in 1906 and living in
Willmar, Minnesota, for many years, he eventually settled in
Minneapolis. At first Peterson worked as a bricklayer in the new country, but before long he embarked on a career as a professional entertainer. In that role he returned to Sweden in 1909 and during a six-month tour gathered the songs, stories and jokes he would later use on stage in America. Back in America Peterson adopted the persona of Olle i Skratthult and began performing on the Scandinavian-language
vaudeville circuit. Olle was a
bondkomiker (peasant comic), and he dressed the part with a blacked-out tooth and straw-colored wig. By 1916 he had a touring group, and the following year he married the company's leading lady, Olga Lindgren. Olle i Skratthult was a full-time entertainer for most of his adult life and for many years was the most famous performer in Scandinavian
vaudeville. During the 1920s he toured the country with a large band and was enthusiastically greeted by both ethnic and mainstream audiences. His touring company also had several actors. An evening's entertainment often began with a short play and ended with a public dance. Olle was generally not in the featured work but appeared between acts in
olios, during which he told far-fetched stories and sang diverting songs. A full-length theatrical evening was rare unless it was
F. A. Dahlgren's musical drama
Värmlänningarna (The people of
Värmland).
A phenomenon "Last night I decided to try to gain entrance to
Tuckerman Hall, and since I did not arrive until 8 o'clock, I would not have been able to get in if it had not been for my press pass. I lost two buttons on my overcoat in the melee, but that did not matter, as long as I finally got a seat — that is I had to be satisfied with standing room in the rear. And, I did something I had never done before, and never expect to do again — unless I go to an "Olle-show" — that is I stood on my two tired feet over two hours — and enjoyed myself. There is a lot of complaining to be heard from theatrical people, to the effect that revenue is falling off and that the radio and the phonographs keep the public at home. Well, the Swedish public at least did not stay at home that night. The hall was packed an hour before the time when it was scheduled to start, and hundreds clamored for admittance in vain. A man, who can attract crowds like that in these days, must be a phenomenon. Of course he does not do all the performing himself; he is ably assisted by his lovely wife, Olga, and by some very clever dancers, and a bunch of virtuosos, who make up the Olle i Skratthult orchestra. It is a splendid aggregation of musicians, to say the least, and I need not add that my tired feet forgot their tired feeling as soon as the first strains from the instruments were heard, and I danced with glee until the
"Home, sweet home" gave the signal that the show was at an end." :: — Burt Maxwell in the
Worcester Telegram (MA), reprinted in the Dayton Review (IA)
Later years Peterson only performed in
Swedish, and as the use of that language declined in
America so too did his popularity. As the tours became smaller there were fewer musicians and actors to accompany him. At the very end there was only Olle. Hjalmar and Olga were divorced in 1933. He remarried, and his second marriage produced two children. Peterson stopped touring and began appearing on the radio. During the 1940s he lived in
Marquette, Michigan, where he was the proprietor of a tavern and dance hall. His entertainment career ended with the death of his wife Mora in 1949. Three years later Peterson underwent a religious conversion and joined the
Salvation Army. He became a
gospel singer and once again drew large crowds, this time with a program of old favorite hymns. He died in
Minneapolis on June 24, 1960. ==Popular recording artist==