Corrigan finally settled with his mother, brother Harry, and sister Evelyn in Los Angeles.
He and his sister Evelyn were raised in a small four-room apartment.
(Hans Jahnke and his sister Evelyn held the rest.)
Then your sister Evelyn entered the picture.
As a child, she and her sister Evelyn lived with various neighbors and their grandmother while their mother held down two jobs.
He had no children and did not remarry; his sister Evelyn subsequently kept house for him.
His sister Evelyn was married to William Stuart Symington; they were the parents of James Wadsworth Symington, his nephew.
In 1935 he began playing in local Cleveland area nightclubs, and also formed a classical music trio for local social functions with his father and his sister Evelyn.
She was deeply affected by the death of her sister Evelyn in 1921, and after briefly staying with her other married sister Mary moved about 1925 to the Catholic Girls' Hostel in Wellington.
His sister Evelyn enters the scene and addresses the camera directly, commenting that she is writing an essay about America's two biggest innovations: nuclear weapons and rock 'n roll.