A raucous, moving account of an underground show business circuit — from vaudeville to burlesque to carnivals to raunchy nightclubs — told by its wisest doyenne.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AuHGHAGFYRo
“An important historical document.”
— Doris Lunden
“I was fascinated by this book. It tells all and worse than all about a way of life that many people—even the gay ones—have never known. Reading it, I felt my own autobiography was conservative, almost stuffy.”
— Quentin Crisp, author of The Naked Civil Servant
Preface
Come in, boys. Don’t mind the 2-watt bulbs: Your eyes will get used to it. I think it shows the flat off better, don’t you? My friend Crazy Arthur says, “Minette, if your flat was a movie, it would be called ‘Dust Be My Destiny.’” I used to say that I was more decorative than practical, but I can’t really even say that anymore. Let’s go into the front parlor. And I’ll tell you about the queens.
Queens are not a new thing, honey. Impersonators have been around as long as there has been a theater. Until the Restoration in 1660, all female roles on the English stage were played by impersonators. Of course, I don’t go back that far. My pictures of the queens go back to the turn of the century — they adorn my sheet music covers. It was a high point in American popular music, and I love playing those pieces here in this parlor, on that piano you see. Yesterday I washed the keys with milk so my fingers feel gorgeous making music. There on the music rack is Julian Eltinge, greatest of all.
Julian Eltinge was a huge vaudeville, movie and uptown Broadway star from about 1904 to 1930. Her vaudeville salary was second only to Eva Tanguay, and Pickford, America’s Sweetheart, once played a supporting role to la Eltinge. She had everything, honey. A Julian Eltinge magazine, a Julian Eltinge cosmetics line, and the beautiful Eltinge Theater on 42nd Street with the Eltinge penthouse on top. It later became the Laff Movie, but in its day it was glamour.
Miss Eltinge had a high voice — not falsetto — and she conducted herself about the stage in the most genteel manner. Then, in the middle of the show, she would pull off her wig and flex her muscles and challenge any hecklers to a bout of fisticuffs in the alley. The publicity was that Miss Eltinge was straight, because I don’t think the average person knew what “gay” was. A lot of fellows had a chance to fool around, but they didn’t talk, see. And there was no common culture then, no boob tube, so people just knew their own circles.
Julian Eltinge retired around 1930 and made a comeback engagement in 1941 at the
Second only to Miss Eltinge in fame was Karyl Normand, a Kieth’s headliner who co-authored hit songs like “Nobody Lied When They Said I Cried Over You,” in 1922. My sister Tommy Bishop worked with her once, and said that she was a very high-minded lady. They worked together at the Frontenac in Detroit, a posh supperclub: Miss Norman was the big time. They had tables with cloths that went all the way to the floor. Tommy would sometimes save time by taking care of business under the table. And Miss Norman didn’t approve of that. “Tommy, Tommy, you’re a lovely thing, but you can’t do that. This is not the Vieux Carre.”
I’ll get out my photograph album to remind me of the stories. But first of all, have some tea, boys. This is one of my Mystery Teas, because I’m not quite sure what’s in it, except that passionflower is the headliner and there’s a little support from ginger and peppermint. It’s tepid but it’s wet. And have some other tea, too. This is a red-gold tea from Colombia. I call it my Strawberry Blonde. Teatime usually waits until sundown, but when it’s time to look at the album, it’s time for tea.
Most of my early pictures are gone, so I’ll bring you up to dragtime days without much photographic accompaniment.
Backstage Youth
I was born Jacques Minette and my parents were French. “Minette” means many things: “pussycat,” “pussy,” or “suck me.” It isn’t too easy to translate, and it’s not a word used in polite company I’ve heard, but I think it sounds gay. It’s me, especially without the “Jacques.” My mother painted landscapes and still lifes. My father was a commercial artist but he got arthritis in his hand and couldn’t paint anymore. He went through the first world war, with all that dampness. It got to him later. First he had a nervous breakdown that went into shingles that became neuritis that became arthritis and finally a dropsical condition. So my father was sick for years, always going to anyone that claimed a cure. I went to work to help pay the bills.
This is a real woman, not a queen, my aunt. She was the house singer for a two-a-day burlesque. Elegant burlesque, with a supper matinee and a dinner matinee. She was the one that got me started in show business when I was three, partly to keep me out of trouble and out of her makeup kit. So I became a show business kid.
I never minded any of the problems of growing up as a show business kid. Everybody else worried about it and worried about me. People used to say, “Isn’t that terrible, a small child in shows, with no parents to watch out for him?” I say: “Look, you got one mother: I got fifteen.”
My aunt would help me with my acts. I did impressions and songs that were big at the time. I did Mae West with a cigarette holder and a Meri Widow hat, and Belle Baker doing “All of Me” and Ethel Waters doing “Am I Blue.” Ethel Waters introduced it in a talky and I almost wore a hole in the record learning that — we had the heavy tone arms then.
I used to do impressions of Ruth Etting. Sophie Tucker, Eddie Cantor, Kate Smith, and Maurice Chevalier, and I would have done the Boswell Sisters, but I only had one head. One of my favorite numbers was “Brother Can You Spare a Dime.” They dressed me up in an outsized derby like Little K.O. from the Moon Mullins comic strip and put me on the runway with a little tin cup. I made extra money on that number.
Don’t get me wrong — I wasn’t pushed into this show business. I got into it myself. I would much rather work than go to school. To me, school was prison. I had a generation gap with all the kids that were my own age. I thought I was an adult trapped in a child’s body. There were sort of meanie-like teachers and I was different from any of the other kids. I was a princess and they were just common kids. I didn’t know I was a princess then. Fortunately, my first lover protected me and I could run well.
I quit show business when I was six, for one year. But nobody was working in the family, so I went back to work. I nearly got expelled from school. We had this little show at the end of the year. “We can’t use him.” the school said. “He’s professional.” They weren’t so hip — they called me “him.” But they let me anyway, even though I was a professional; when the piano player tried me out it was fine. But when I did “Frankie and Johnny” for the teachers they were shocked. I used to end up “Frankie and Johnny” by saying, “Why don’t you come up and see me sometime? I got etchings. On the ceiling.” A Mae West routine. That’s all I said, but oh it really upset them. For once my mother stood up for me. She said, “If you think that’s filthy, you’ve got a dirty mind.” Yeah.
I didn’t really understand what it meant to say, “Why don’t you come up and see me sometime?” I might have known it was sexual, but I didn’t really know what “sexual” was.
When I was a kid, I used to think of myself as a little girl. When I was particularly feminine, my aunt would say “D.D.G.” That meant, “delicate, dainty girl.” I saw impersonators, but I didn’t know what they were.
I thought they were another type, like a soubrette or an ingénue. I just thought they were these extraordinary women. When my aunt would talk about a fairy, she would always say, “Oh, he’s so artistic.” So I thought fairies were these certain people who were born with genius, and when I saw someone acting swishy I thought he was a genius and a fairy. I always wondered why Franklyn Pangborn wasn’t a star.
Going to school was bearable for me only because of Camillo, my first and most faithful lover. Sex at six has no climax, but plenty of experience. Camillo was valiant and protected me from plenty of gay knocks. Wonderful, sweet Camillo died young, and I blame myself for that.
It happened when we were teenagers, and all these people thought I was a fairy and I had to be careful because people wanted to seduce me. And they would tell me all these tall tales about gay people. “They can’t hold their vegetables,” they used to tell me. “Their bowels are loose, they can’t hold anything in there.” I never became a browning queen — for good reason — but all this scared me at the time. Right after this Camillo said to me that people were talking about us. I got scared and ran away from Camillo. And that was the last I saw of him. He was drinking and got killed in this automobile accident. It’s not so traumatic now, but it was then.
And it turned out Camillo was right. I was one of those people. I was a fairy.
But I’m getting ahead of myself. For most of my childhood I had this double career — showbusiness and school. But I became more and more disenchanted with school and yearned to be a grade school dropout. The school felt the same way about me. The principal decided I was “too nervous,” a code word for gay at that time. I was sent to a psychiatrist and this headshrinker was an amiable young woman. At the end of our meetings together she said to me that I would one day become a female impersonator. I didn’t pay much attention at the time — I was far too elated with her decision that I didn’t have to go to school anymore.
And then I got to be a teenager. And honey, it was a great help to me to be a teenager in show business. If I was a teenager in staid normal Boston culture, I would have committed suicide or gotten murdered. But I could always get away from the so-called “real world.” I had all these campy, campy people around me. I knew only campy old people — and there were other old people who were not so campy. But show people were always campy, because, see, when I was growing up, show people were like drag queens. They used to have signs in rooming houses: NO SHOW PEOPLE. The whole spirit of showbusiness — at least the lesser type show people — was a camaraderie system: the customers were the marks and the show people were your buddies. This system has long been on the wane but the carnival people still hold onto it, very traditional with a carnie code of honor.
Show people were my family and I was always the baby, always the youngest, and then all of a sudden I was the oldest and it seemed to happen overnight.
When I was 14 they passed a law that said you had to be 16 to work public shows, so I quit vaudeville to go into clubs where I was a boy crooner. But I was never very comfortable working as a boy. After the first number, I would always undo the first button, because I felt choked by the collar. For a while I was too uncomfortable and thought about leaving show business to design dresses.
When I came back, it was in a dress. I was 16 and it caused a regular separation among my friends. Among my agents, see, I was working cheap-time because I was working drag, and they could have gotten more money from me in other ways. But I felt so liberated, finally, working in drag. To be me, to be feminine. It felt gorgeous.
Boston and Sailors
Most of these album pictures are from 1949 to 1954. It was fabulous showtime for queens. Lots of sailors during the Korean War, cheap booze, and lots of shows. Everything that was important, you know. A very campy time.
Scully Square in Boston was the center of things, like Times Square years ago, with clubs and theaters. I remember one club that was a redo of one of the burlesque theaters when it burned. It was a whole mass of bars, and they covered the place in a snakelike network, so wherever you were there was a bartender at your disposal. So you’d drink more. See, Boston had no cover — no minimum. And there was a tradition then of big spenders. People would come into a bar and buy everybody a drink. So liquor was cheap in these huge barny places that needed decoration for the last fifteen years. Dingy looking places, but lots of acts and cheap booze. It was a good showtime, and the common people supported nightclubs. It wasn’t the Coconut Grove they went to, but clubs like the Rex and the Showtime.
I opened one night at the Showtime when the Navy had just gotten paid. I wasn’t used to the Showtime and I got scared to death. The Showtime was like they were all Marines, even though they were mostly sailors. I had to follow this real pig of an act, a real woman, a fat woman. “Peggy O’Day” was her name. Everything about Peggy O’Day was real pig-like. She couldn’t sing and she was vulgar, but she wasn’t funny. She was just dirty. As roaring drunk as the Navy was, they hated her. They threw beer bottles at her. And she cursed the Navy right back. So there it was: “bastards,” and beer bottles and “sons of bitches” and worse stuff — Peggy O’Day knew them all. And I had to follow that.
The band tortured out this unrecognizable version of “International Rag” in the key of Z. But I belted it anyway and those boys were kind to me. Nevertheless, there were several free-for-alls between songs and I made that my last night at the Showtime.
In the clubs I mostly sang regular songs, but I also wrote lots of gay parody songs that I’d sing when I could get away with it. I’ll sing you one called “Dodle Doo Doo.” “Doodle Doo Doo” was a popular number in the twenties.
Here I am with the Navy at the College Inn. I still love seafood, seafood’s still my favorite. There were a lot of inexperienced ones, and they’d say, “Oh, I’ve never done this before.” But they did it so well. And they some of them would be more honest: “Oh, we do it with each other on the ship, but when we get to port we look for real queens.” Nowadays, they’re ashamed to wear their uniforms and I don’t blame them.
These sailors in the picture were lovely boys too. I went with one and Dixie Gordon went with the other and the one on the end passed out. I had them take me to a nice restaurant. Nothing too much — I didn’t want to break these boys — they were good for about $20. They’re probably old farts by now, but they were handsome young sheiks at the time.
Dixie Gordon once brought two sailors home at once, to her boudoir. She left these two sailors to prepare in her bathroom, and when she came back they were going at each other. Dixie came running down the hall to me. “Oh, Minette, what am I going to do? They’re doing it to each other.” “Don’t complain,” I told her. “You already got the money.” “But I was sort of in the mood,” she said, “and they were such nice boys.”
Dixie Gordon comes from Cincinnati and ran away from home to work as a stripper when she was fifteen.
The manager raped her, found out it wasn’t real, and didn’t care. And her father finally found out and came and pulled her off the stage. She did five years in the penitentiary for armed robbery during the last Depression. Miss Gordon said the first year in the cellblock was terrible, but after that she began to get privileges. She was the mistress of one of the top guards, and the other prisoners would wait on her, like a princess in prison. When they had a show, she would borrow the wardrobe of the warden’s wife — they were the same size — and she’d look capital. In drag there was no one like Dixie Gordon. When she got out she lived in drag. So, honey, if you think I’ve got campy tales...
There was always a little heat from working at the College Inn because drag was against the law and the Navy banned the sailors from coming in toward the end, afraid they might get subverted. The sailors came anyway, without their uniforms.
And, as for the law against impersonating a woman, it was fun seeing how we could push it. Boston was a semi-drag city. We could wear women’s blouses and makeup, but we had to wear trousers. I wore “patio pajamas,” now known as “culottes.” I wore French high-heeled shoes and said, “These are men’s shoes from the time of Louis XIV.” And if they looked in the encyclopedia there was something to back me up. I had a woman’s blouse from the last Depression and I told them it was a man’s shirt from the time of George Washington. Rene Lewis used to take the paper serviettes from restaurants and she made tits out of them. She had a special way with paper tits so that if the cops walked by she could crush them just like that.
When queens started coming into the clubs it wasn’t as rough. Honey, gay life wasn’t like Christopher Street. The queens then were like ladies, and if they didn’t act like ladies they got called “faggots.” See, that’s why I object to being called a faggot. To me, the faggots were the lowest common denominator, the real scuffy ones, the tearoom types.
One of the best places was the Silver Dollar. Now the Silver Dollar was a little bit of everything. They had fairies, and prostitutes, and straight people, and lots of sailors. It was called the longest bar in the world and it ran all the way from Washington Street back to Playland. On the stage they had a real woman that looked like a female impersonator, sort of a Margaret Dumont type of woman, with a campy name like Velma. She played the organ gorgeous, and it used to get real loud. We used to say, “You know, everyone thinks they’re having such a good time at the Silver Dollar because the music’s so loud they can never get lonely.” That was the theory.
This is Murry Pickford and her Royal Canadian Doves. They were really white pigeons, but she insisted you call them doves. “Doves,” she said. Murry was a deaf and dumb queen and when they closed Boston down to all the queens, Murry went to the officials and said: “Drag is the only way I can make a living, you know. I’m deaf and dumb.” So they gave her a special card from the liquor board that said she could work in drag, and Murry was the only queen in all of Beantown that could work in drag. She was born deaf and dumb so she talked funny and couldn’t hear anything. But she could read lips like crazy. She used to read them in the mirror when we were in the dressing room, only it would come out backwards and she thought everyone was dishing her. If you said she was terrific, it would come out you were dishing her. I worked with her when I was a little kid and then much later on. She had a lot of mileage by this time and she was hard to work with, although she kept on working until she died a couple years ago.
Her act was that she used to dance to “Beautiful Lady” or anything else that the band would play in the same tempo. She could feel the tempo in her body. But the band would play all kinds of crazy things, as long as it was in the same tempo, and Murry wouldn’t know, so she’d come out to dance to “Beautiful Lady’’ and the band would be playing “I’ll Be Glad When You’re Dead, You Rascal You,” in waltz time.
Closing Beantown
I was working a club in Springfield, Massachusetts, with some of my sisters and we’d drive all the way back to Boston after the show. We got back at three one morning: the hotel lobby was filled with trunks and fairies in traveling wardrobes. I said “What’s happening?” and they showed me the front page of the paper. The Archbishop had written this editorial calling us the lowest crawling creatures of the earth, and he said something to do with worms. “Archie the Terrible” we called him. He later became Cardinal Cushing, and he got ill but he didn’t die. We put the bitch’s curse on him. He just suffered for many years, and that broken old man who sounded like a Bowery bum that officiated at Kennedy’s funeral: that was what was left of him.
When they closed Beantown, they closed it. It wasn’t just the impersonators, it was the strippers, too. The strippers weren’t allowed to take their clothes off, so they’d have to come out with nothing on except the bra and pasties and a g-string. And they had to wear fringe. They did what was called “an exotic” but they were showing practically everything through the whole act, which is the worst. When they closed up the town you couldn’t do anything you couldn’t do on television. You couldn’t even do a hula on a nightclub stage.
But I said to myself: I’m not leaving without any bookings. Oh, didn’t I have the nerve. So I inherited everybody’s johns, and I was on my way to making a fortune before the tip-off. There was a police station around the corner, but this waitress friend of mine that worked across the street overheard a conversation. The cops had my room number, but they had Dixie Gordon’s name. The hotel told them Dixie Gordon had checked out, and that threw them off for a while.
I stopped sitting in the lobby like I had been, sitting in the lobby in drag after one o’clock in the evening. The night clerk was a pal of mine, an ex-hooker. When she would see someone that looked like a prospective customer, she’d say, very genteel, “Minette, Minette, would you show this man to his room?” And then she’d give him room 69. I got the message. Room 69 was actually a graduated dog act.
After 1 a.m. the night clerk would lower the lighting, so it was nice soft lighting, and I’d sit down in the lobby. They’d have these real ones sitting there, too, $5 girls. I was $10 and up. And so men would try to get me down. “Oh, we can get a real women for $5.” I said, “Of course you can get a real woman for $5. I’m a rare thing. I’m a queen. In Beantown. After Archie, I’m damn rare. To compare me with a real woman is like comparing a diamond to a rhinestone.”
On the Road
After we got run out of Boston after Archie the Terrible we ended up in the town of Fonda, halfway between Albany and Utica in a real log cabin. We arrived in the middle of a blizzard, so Renee Roberts decided to become Stormy Weather and that’s who she was while we were in Fonda. The only thing going near Fonda was the Beechnut Chewing Gum Factory. So the emcee, Renee, says, “The motto is: Stick it where you stuck it last night. Beechnut Chewing Gum.” They wouldn’t let her say one without the other.
Vicky Jordan stripped, Renee was actually a ballet dancer but she stripped. I sang and Louella sang and danced but didn’t strip. Louella was a lovely person but she died young. She was taking hormones and something went wrong. We had three big production numbers, quick changes and all. I don’t know how we did it. The opening number was “Here We Are, the Beauties of the Town.” It was from a Mae West movie, “Belle of the Nineties.” And here we are doing the “Goodnight Sweetheart” finale. We would sashay around with the night vessel and the douche bag, like we were getting ready to go to bed. It was like a pretty girl finale, but campy.
It was a slow place, Fonda. We only played weekends so we weren’t getting paid much, but we got room and board, and it was good board. Honey, we ate well. And there a was nothing else to do in the country, so I got a little plump. It looked nice; plumpness looks good in an impersonator. But this boss was so conservative. We got along like a Quaker and a parrot. He kept saying they had gotten complaints, so I finally said, “if I clean up my act any more, they’ll book me in a Sunday school.”
Finally it got so that the queens couldn’t barrelhouse, and then we all had to sit at one table. One night these state troopers came in and I said, “Louella, here we go.”
I worked a lot of tank towns during the McCarthy era, always on the road, in New York and Pennsylvania, Harrisburg, Darby, York, Allentown, Meadville, Spring City. To these people we were Broadway stars, famous actresses. Here’s a couple of my admirers.
This boy was in high school in a real tank town, and his mother would come to see the queens. He was too young to come into the club, but he met me and was just crazy about me so started a fan club for me in the high school. This was a real tank town, Bridgeport, Pennsylvania. He sold postcards for me like crazy, and I encouraged him because he was selling all these postcards, but it was a little close for comfort.
And this is a lezzie that wrote me love letters for years until I met him and found out he wasn’t a man. I had thought it was a fella. She worked carnival and got my address from a friend and wrote all these love letters. And I couldn’t tell from the pictures that it was a real woman and so I’d write back. There was nothing else to do in the country.
It wasn’t just Boston that was drag queen crazy, see. It was the small town clubs, too. They loved fairies, and they could book us cheap, and we brought business.
At the C-Note in Johnstown, Rhode Island, the reason they brought us in was because they couldn’t get a bottle of beer on credit. So they hired us and that was sensational in 1951. “Too much for television,” was the phrase that was going around. The audiences at the C-Note had never seen much of female impersonators, and they’d say, “Oh my god, they look so real. And they’re talented, too!” So the C-Note did huge business. To save a business they’d bring in the fairies.
The only thing that could follow the fairies were the Beef Trusts. And they took up too much room. I guess they fascinated the crowd at the C-Note because they were something strange, something weird. The big fat girls. They’d kick and all and all that flesh would be shaking. When you’re fat and all, you have to do something besides just look pretty. You better have an act.
When I was working at the C-Note, I picked up the patter of our emcee Day Sheri. It was a panic. It was old when Day Sheri used it and I used it myself, years later at the Crazy Horse. A perfect routine because I could stop anywhere if the laughter started to wane, and break into a song. Here’s Day Sheri’s patter:
Hello, I just got in town yesterday and what a day it was. There I was standing on the corner, minding my own business. Business was lousy. When up pulls a man in a long shiny limousine a half a block long. He says to me, “Little girl, how would you like to go for a drive with me?” “Paleeeeze! What kind of girl do you think I am?”
So as we were motoring out to the woods, the car broke down. We both got out and he pushed and I pushed. I pushed and he pushed. He pushed and I pushed. Do you know, while we were both pushing, somebody stole the car!
Well, I found my way back to the highway, and flagged down a passing trolley. “Mr. Conductor,” I said, “Mr. Conductor, please tell me do I pay now when I enter or later when I get off?”
“You pay when you enter,” says he.
“Ooooooh,” says I. “It’s the same in my business.”
When I got back to town, I decided to check into a hotel and there was a big electric sign flashing on and off: Tarantula Arms. That sounds different, so I checked in and the bell boy grabbed my bags. Ooooooh! I was left flat-chested.
He shows me into a small room with no windows and no furniture. “I don’t care for this room at all,” I says. To which he replies, “Why you damn fool, this is the elevator.”
When we got to my floor, the door opened and I alighted. The bridal suite door was ajar and I just sneaked a look. They had twin beds. Over her bed there was a plaque reading, “I Need Thee Every Hour.” Over his bed there was another plaque reading, “God Give Me Strength.”
I followed the bellhop down the hall and he showed me into a nice little chamber overlooking a waste-paper basket. After all the events of the day, I was rather fatigued, so I decided to turn in. I was just oozing off to sleep, when there came a loud knock at the door. “Who is it?” says I. “It’s the house detective,” he replies. “Have you got a man in there?” “Goodness gracious no,” says I. So he pushes in a sailor. What a progressive place that was.
After the sailor left again, I was just ooooooozing off to sleep, when a loud bell rang and I heard the sounds of running feet outside. I opened the door to the corridor and stopped a woman passing arid said, “Madam.” “Don’t call me Madame, I’m just one of the girls.” “Very well, Girlie,” says I, “but please tell me why is that bell ringing and why is everyone running through the halls?” “It’s 4 a.m..” she said. “That’s when everybody goes back to their own room.”
Well, at last I did get to sleep, and the next day when I awoke I decided to do what every young girl should do, and take a bath. As I was filling the tub, I noticed it was leaking out the bottom. I picked up the telephone and said, “Mr. Manager, Mr. Manager, I wish to report I got a leak in the bathtub.” “Gotta leak in the bathtub?” says he. “That’s all right, lady, the customer is always right.”
That man in front is Wacko, the best boss I ever had. No strings. No strings at all. He was just crazy about me. He said, “Minette, you da queen o’ the queens.” And I’d say back to him, “Wacko, if I’m the queen of the queens, you’re the king of the queens.” So everytime we’d meet someone, he’d always say, “Baby, tell ’em who the king of the queens is, baby.” And I’d say, “Why, that’s you, Wacko. Tell them who the queen of the queens is.” And he’d always say, “Why, that’s you, baby.” He never got tired of that routine.
He’d take me to this elegant Italian restaurant for breakfast — well, it is true I got up in the afternoon — and the waiter would be all dressed up in a tuxedo and he had a real linen serviette over the arm and the table was in this special little room, and they had 110 different sauces on the bill of fare. I usually ordered a mushroom omelet.
Wacko was an ex-runner during Prohibition. This was Providence, right on the water and all, so it worked out gorgeous. He was well known among the underworld, and very well loved. And I could see why.
He told me to bring my own show in and Wacko said, “You don’t work no seven nights for me, baby. No seven nights.” He was a terrific boss and we worked harder for him than anyone.
I brought in Jerry Whiting, a whiz crack piano player. And she could talk. People would come and she would get an idea and say something and make it all rhyme. Just like that. Even at the height of impersonators, there was no one quite like Jerry Whiting. She was extreme and campy. Of course she was a benny head, too, so she’s probably not with us.
We were working Wacko’s the Fourth of July weekend, 1951, when we got run out of Providence. I was lucky — I was working in the city limits in a jazz room, and there is a law that the state police can’t come into the city limits in Providence. But they went in anyway, and took all the female impersonators and put them in manacles and kept moving them from one different jail to another, and Wacko had these two different lawyers trying to get us out. The state police brought all these queens in chains to the Park Hotel and said they were looking for pot. We couldn’t get any — I would have loved to have had some, but we couldn’t get any in 1951. And the state police stole my jewel case, all gorgeous costume jewelry with a few real things, too. On top of this, a queen stole my Scarlet O’Hara dress and went east with the geese. All this gay gay costume jewelry gone. That broke my heart.
My Sister Tommy
I’ve had some troubles, but I haven’t been lynched, like 12 impersonators were in Texas, and I haven’t been through as many scrapes as my sister Tommy Bishop.
Miss Bishop grew up in New Orleans and her grandmother ran a bordello, so Tommy learned Southern hospitality at an early age. Tommy was very outgoing, a real Elsa Maxwell at a party, and she was like this gypsy adventuress that was always traveling everywhere, all over the world, and always generous. Mostly she worked B-drinks in Dixie. A B-drink was where you got johns to buy you a drink, only B-drinks were phony booze so the bar would make money. You just collected the muddlers — the drink sticks — and at the end of the evening you turned them in and split the money with the bartender. Tommy was big in Phenix City, Alabama. It was a wide open city, like the whole world is today.
One time in Phenix City, the boss told her they needed a special kind of act, so Miss Bishop thought, “Oh, I’ll do a snake act.” Snake acts were very popular at that time. Only she’d never done one before. She bought a snake — it was probably a water moccasin instead of a boa constrictor — they were more available in Phenix City. So Miss Bishop begins her snake dance and she brings the snake up to give it a gay kiss on the mouth. Only the snake bites her. Tommy threw the snake right in a customer’s lap.
Everything happened to that queen. Once she was working bar maid in Miami, and she was waiting for a bus in full face and semi-drag. This guy drove up in a white roadster and says, “Hello, little girl, where are you going?” “Might be going with you, who knows?” she says. So Miss Bishop went with him, and he takes her out to a cypress forest as night was falling. He wants a blow job, so she’s going down on him and feels this cold steel at the back of her neck. See, he had a different kind of gun. She realized that when he came he was going to blow her brains out. “Oh Daddy, I have to take a wee-wee.” He keeps on holding to her by the belt, so she undid the belt and gave a lunge. He was left holding the belt, and he’s shooting away while she’s hiding behind a cypress tree all night until he finally left at dawn. Miss Bishop emerged from that swamp, all covered in Spanish moss, walked to the highway, and got a ride from some farmer. Honey, she must have been a sight on the side of the road. The next week, she found out he had escaped from a penitentiary and he had murdered four women in Georgia. It was front page material.
Another time, Miss Bishop was out over Central Park West hanging on a flag pole, without clothes, and her john was cutting the cord. She climbed down the rope to the floor below and they let her in. This was before topless and bottomless. You couldn’t work without nets in burlesque and here is Miss Bishop hanging out over Central Park West without anything.
Tommy just says, “Oh, I’m so outgoing.”
Well, you can get a little too outgoing. But everyone loved Miss Bishop, from the gypsies downstairs to the lumberjacks.
She worked in a lumber camp way outside of Seattle, and they had her trapped up there. Well, there was no real women up there so she looked like Gloria Swanson to them, or maybe Ann Sheridan. Mary, they were all getting into Miss Bishop, and she’s cooking, because she cooks gay. And when she got tired of that she escaped. It was spring camp and she went down the rapids on a log or something. When she got to Seattle she took a boat up to Alaska because that’s where the Seabees were landing. She’s very resourceful, Miss Bishop, so she took up with the police chief in Fairbanks and he set Tommy and another queen up in a little house. It was a little hut with a red light on a sled. That’s how they do it in Alaska.
And my sister Tommy has grace and manners, too, and that’s what makes her a beautiful queen. Miss Bishop is not the dainty type but everything she handles like a Mae Marsh. I remember when I first met Tommy at this meal with the Jewish Madonna, Jackie Phil man, and some other queens. Jackie had all these sound effects when she was eating. Terrible sound effects. Rumblings coming up from down below. Well, I looked up at Miss Bishop and there was this immediate camaraderie. We had manners. I still see my sister Tommy all the time when she’s not around the world.
That’s a real blackmail photograph of Nicky Gordon, Mickey Cortez, Rayleen, Bobby Clark and myself. We were in a show together in Spring City, Pennsylvania, that started as a two-week stint and we stayed six months. There was a little heat of course — this was the country. Bobby Clark went and blew someone in the parking lot and it got around. So Rayleen said. “Oh, none of us are homosexuals, you know. This is just our profession.” So Rayleen made her husband into a cousin. She changed cousins several times that job.
Rayleen did quite an unusual strip. She pranced around in a goose-step-like fashion and then at the end she threw bumps like a Gatling gun. More bumps per minute — boom boom boom boom boom boom — just like that. It was not the most sensual of strips — she came off stage with her bony, hipless body wet with sweat — but it was certainly the most energetic.
Rayleen became paranoid and sometimes she was not exactly the berries to work with. Finally, Raeleen gave up her show business career for shoplifting, and show business said, “Thank you, honey.”
Bobby Clark was the one I roomed with. They had her on the wagon because she would get trade-happy when she was drunk. Bobby Clark was “The Double-Voiced Sensation.” She’d do duets with herself in a male voice and a female voice. I think she’s still working in the Powder Puff Revue.
I ran into Micky Cortez years later, when they were still having drag Thanksgiving balls in Harlem. And she had this little button nose. She’d had it bobbed. “I’m out of show business,” Mickey said. “That beautiful new nose and now you don’t want to work drag?” I said. “That’s crazy!” She said, “It’s funny, isn’t it, Minette? But I’m doing something else that’s making better money. You know how it is, Minette.”
“I know how it is, honey,” I said. “I don’t want to be on the road, either. And it’s a snake pit working in the Club 82, with all those bennie-heads.”
This is Yvette Dare, the only act of its kind in the world. Honey, that was a $3500 act, which would be $10,000 today. I toured with Yvette — the whole act was Yvette Dare and the Daring Dolls — all through Dixie. They were so dumb in Dixie they thought a female impersonator was a woman doing impersonations and they couldn’t figure out what I was doing impersonations of.
Yvette wasn’t an impersonator, but this was a fabulous act. The parrots would strip her, and she worked places where no stripper could work. Those two parrots are Lippy and Einstein. They look like twins to me, macaw parrots with a yard-wide wing spread. Yvette wore a sarong of white crepe tied together, all knots, and then Lippy or Einstein would fly down from the gallery and strip her. Lippy got his name because he used to talk during the act. Yvette was half Indian and she couldn’t drink or her mouth would start going. Lippy didn’t like that. So, in the middle of the act, Lippy would start saying, “Fuck you, Yvette. Fuck you, Yvette.” Oh, you couldn’t do that in those days. So that’s how Lippy got his name, and Yvette brought in Einstein. He kept his mouth shut. That’s why he was called Einstein.
I remember when I first met Billy Richards out of Pittsburg in 1953. I had motored across that state with LaVerne Martin, a carnie snake dancer, in a blizzard, over the mountains. I held a flashlight out the window to spotlight the beginning of the precipice. We didn’t go over the edge, so we started playing our club dates. And there was Billy Richards, “the most adorable girl in show business.”
Billy had been working in the wardrobe department of Valentino Studios as a teenager, and about 1930 she did toe dancing at Bebe’s Cellar, a Hollywood drag club. Nils Astor, one of the top movie sheiks of the day, saw her at Beebe’s and became smitten. Mr. Astor discreetly sent in his chauffer to pick her up and bring her to him. That began domestic bliss for Billy in a mansion. Until one day, when Nils was on location, Billy invited some other impersonators over for a birthday party. Gussie Gordon hit the antique candelabras and dripped wax all over the baby grand in the drawing room. Miss Richards got the heave ho.
Most of the queens at Bebe’s Cellar were extras in movies. There was a regulation that no real woman was to work so many feet above the sound stage. All those lovely girls hanging from chandeliers in Busby Berkely productions: all drag queens. So Miss Richards hit her stride in “Golddiggers of 1933.”
It was twenty years later when I met Billy Richards and she still had a marvelous countenance. She toured the small towns and after the show closed in Spring City, Pennsylvania, Billy Richards took a rest. She went to live in a country farmhouse with a local queen named Una Hale, who had started out as a spiritualist and now worked as Whoreintal dancer. There was no electric in that farmhouse, and “the most adorable girl in show business” sat in that house day after day, sewing patches and fake antique Pennsylvania Dutch calico birds and drinking. There was nothing else to do. She became quite an alcoholic.
Here, I am going to give you some of the patches Billy made. She gave them to me many years ago, before she died in a nursing home. Now they are part of Minette’s Free Store. These patches would make a gay pillow for your settee, a little memory of “the most adorable girl in show business.”
Cooching Up a Storm
One of my road tours was with a carnival in 1954. We did split-weeks in Kentucky and Tennessee, half the week in one town and the weekend in the next town. But I had fun. Because I couldn’t really take it seriously — it was such a low-level show business and no matter what I did it was glamorous, it was fabulous, and they had me talking. They loved me because I could talk real carnie. Like the barker was the talker, and a townie was a “mark” and a big “Hey, Rube” was a fight. But I learned that just from being a queen in Greenwich Village. Around the late ’40s, just before the McCarthy era, all the queens were talking carnie in Greenwich Village.
So they had me talking in the carnival — that means I was the barker and I worked as a real woman. You never worked as an impersonator in the carnival, you always worked as a real woman. If they were in a girlie show, the impersonators didn’t strip down — but they did a cooch dance. The cooch was a kind of belly dance that Little Egypt made popular at the World’s Fair of 1893. The closest thing to being an impersonator was a hermaphrodite in the side show. Usually if you did a hermaphrodite or half and half you got 25 cents extra which was called the blowoff money. See, it was two bits extra to see the hermaphrodite — that’s why they went in anyway — and the queen would get the blowoff for herself.
When I was in the carnival, all the queens were mad for Peggy Yule. She was magic and they always talked about her. She left home in 1875 when she was 15 and ran away with the carnival. She traveled in a covered wagon. Peggy lived in drag and became a real woman as much as she could, not so easy then. She probably used the depilatory wax. And she had long hair, so long she could sit on it, dyed red. Oh, it was gorgeous from what the queens said, and she worked right up to the end. She lived to be 106, and she could hardly walk at the end. But she had a boa constrictor this big around, and she would pull herself up on the boa constrictor and she could cooch up a storm. She could hardly move her feet but she could cooch up a storm, and she was 96 or 98 then. The last few years she couldn’t pull up and cooch anymore, so she worked on a chaise lounge and did fortunes.
Peggy always had a place in the show because she was very well loved. Peggy was always willing to stake people and she was very faithful, so there were people she knew in her old age that were ride boys when she met them and now owned the show. When she finally retired they couldn’t get Peggy into the house — I suppose the central heating would get to her — so she lived out back in a truck. She was a legend among the queens, Peggy Yule.
Carnivals and clubs were two different seasons — in the summer you’d work carnival and in the winter you’d work clubs. But a lot of the carnival queens did not like working clubs — it was the difference between outdoor daytime entertainment and working evenings. The real regular old carnies, if they’d done it a long time, were so used to the routine with certain people. They kept going on to different towns but you’d still be in the same trailer and still be with the same people, and you’d always have to carry water, unless you could get someone to carry it for you.
Here’s Robbi Del Mar, sort of a subdued Carmen Miranda, half-Spanish, half-Hungarian. See the almond eyes. They used to bill her as “the boy with the longest hair in Providence.” This was in 1951, see, they didn’t have the hippies yet. She was very bright and went to college and she had her whole family working the carnival with her. See her poster here, “Front Page People" — that’s Robbi and her family. Her sister married a Naval officer, and they were naturally well-bred, but from what I heard it was not her father’s side of the family that made her well-bred.
And here’s Talla Rae. She’s dead now, I think. She was a circus queen and had never worked clubs before. And she put her lipstick on by applying it to a spool and putting it on her mouth with a spool instead of using a lip brush.
New York and Films
When I left Fonda on one of those road trips I didn’t have any boy’s wardrobe left, so I went to New York and became Rose Revere, Real Woman. I lived in drag for about two months.
I didn’t know New York as well as Boston, of course, but it was very conservative. The only cabaret left on the Bowery was Sammy’s Bowery Follies, and prices for queens were low and going down. It was the summer of 1949 the prices went right down. My sisters used to hustle in Washington Square and business got bad, so they went to 42nd Street — that’s where the Johns were. Then the Puerto Rican queens came in — when a queen would ask for $5, one of the Puerto Rican queens would raise a hand behind her, and someone else would make a lower offer behind her. In a fortnight, business was shot to hell. They should have had a gay hookers’ union.
Here’s Chris Scarlet and my sister Bobby Dale at Sammy’s Bowery Follies, along with some johns. The headliner at Sammy’s was Dora Pollitier, who cut down at the end of her life to weekends and kept working at Sammy’s until she was 96. She’d always close her act dancing a cake walk to the last chorus of “Waitin’ For the Robert E. Lee.”
And that’s Chris Scarlett on the right with some john. When I first met Chris, she was the male partner of The Dancing Wallaces. They were teenagers and they won the national jitterbugging contest. The families made them get married because they were teenagers and this was Lowell, Mass. So the Dancing Wallaces jitterbugged all over the country and then they came back and did what was left of vaudeville.
His wife started getting dates with all these johns, so Chris said, “Well, if she can do it, I can do it.” So the juvenile make-up became a little more pronounced, the cheeks a little rosier, and she started getting johns and she and her wife split up. They had a little child. Little Robin. Of course, Little Robin is a grown up man now. Little Robin.
Here’s Chris Scarlett in one transformation, doing the fan dance.
The queen clubs in New York in the late forties and early fifties were Phil’s 111, and the Moroccan Village, and the 181. But Phil never paid his help so the 111 closed and the 181 closed in 1950 and became the Club 82, until it closed in 1972, and now it’s reopened as a salsa dance parlor. The Club 181 was a sort of Jewel Box Revue with not as much sparkle but a lot of talent. A lot of benny heads, too.
One of the big names at the 82 was Titanic. Titanic was a beautiful queen and she could come out on stage with this gravelly voice and just dish and the audience would love her. Real corny material. She’d pick out someone in the audience and say, “Oh, I wish I had your picture, I have a perfect frame for it. A toilet seat.” But Titanic could always pull that material off, because Titanic was something special. She used to do Carol Channing’s numbers from “Gentlemen Prefer Blonds” — my favorite musical since “Anything Goes” — and had her hair cut like Channing. Carol Channing would come down to the club all the time, and she loved the queens. She was just like one of the queens: six feet tall, a camp. And she’s still going strong, honey.
And before the legend that drag queens oppress women came along, the lezzies and the queens used to mix at Tony Pastor’s. See, it wasn’t the lezzies that were angry about the queens — it was a group called the Faggot Effeminists, one of the lesser lights of gay liberation. One of them said to me, “Minette, do you know that drag queens oppress women?” And I said. “Honey, I was always under the impression that you can’t oppress someone unless you have power over them. When you get in drag, you oppress women. When I get in drag, I glorify them.”
The lezzies used to mix with the drag queens. The fairies and the lezzies didn’t mix, but the queens did because we all used to hustle at Tony Pastor’s on West 3rd Street. The johns would come in looking for something kinky or to try to convert a lezzie. If a lezzie was looking to make it with a man, she wouldn’t be a lezzie, right? Well, that was what was so rare about those johns. So after a few drinks, the lezzies would turn them over to us and the john would end up with a queen. The queens looked so much prettier anyway, cause we tried. We used to put on a face that was like juvenile makeup onstage. We used Magic Touch, this powder and pancake combined so you could put it on like face powder but it had more body. We did look good, we were young then, we were pretty. Sometimes you’d get a john. I’ll sing you a song I used to do. It was a parody of a song called “The Lady in Red.” I called it “The Lezzie in Red.”
This is my old beau Rob Roy. He’s got a campy tale — he became the Baron von Lichtenstein. And he was a sheik, even though this picture looks like a rogue’s gallery shot. Lichtenstein is this tiny country, and right after World War II Rob Roy was in Lichtenstein in the black market. He met someone in Lichtenstein — a prince or a duke or something like that — and he made Rob Roy the Baron von Lichtenstein He didn’t call himself the Baron von Lichtenstein very much. It would have been a little ridiculous, this poor guy in Philadelphia starving most of the time — the “Baron von Lichtenstein.” He was a hotel clerk when I met him in 1954, and he played piano in a gay bar. Him and I were pals more than lovers. I really did love him and he did love me, but there were just too many other things going on. I wonder what happened to him.
I’ve done a lot of things since I came back to New York besides being a chanteuse. I’d take work as a stitch bitch in off-times, and in 1957 I was discovered by the celluloid medium. It wasn’t MGM, it was Avery Willard and his Avegraph Films. They were silent movies, mostly eight millimeter, with lots of queens in these campy tales. On one of my last films, Avegraph introduced Avetone, the poor man’s Vitaphone. Once in a blue moon the Avetone would get together with the picture in synch, but usually the dancer would come out and the singer would start, or I would start talking and a low man’s voice would come out. After a while, Avery started filming the leather boys, so he could no longer get me to work for him.
One of the best parts of my Avegraph film career was meeting my friends from the Ridiculous Theatrical Company on the set of the last film. My Ridiculous friends and I were supposed to be a Ten Cents a Dance place, and the Avegraph cinematographer brought back some Moroccan hashish. Honey, nobody wanted for nothing that night.
I was dancing with Lola Pashalinski — she was twice her size today — in a red zoot suit and Charles Ludlam was wearing earrings that this sailor was trying to eat off. Lola is fabulous — a diesel dyke at heart but she can play a soubrette or sing opera without lessons, and Charles is brilliant. I owe a lot to my Ridiculous friends, because they taught me how to eat right. Even though it sometimes gets dear, I always eat the right food — as organic as possible.
I’ve just finished a part in a silent movie Charles Ludlam has made with all the Ridiculous people and Crazy Arthur, “The Sorrows of Dolores.”
It was I who introduced Crazy Arthur to the Ridiculous company and they re-introduced him to show business. As a kid he’d been a burlesque comic that worked the Loew’s circuit and now he was Orgone, the hunchback pin-headed sex maniac in Turds in Hell, one of the great Ridiculous productions. I told Crazy Arthur to come today, but I think he wanted you to interview him lying down in bed. You just tell him, “Mother, it’s not nice to talk with your mouth full.”
Besides my Avegraph career, I was used for the soundtrack of the movie “The Queen.” I sang “Am I Blue.” I started with that song at three years old and there I was still singing it.
The Queen’s producer, Flawless Sabrina, came up to me at the Crazy Horse where I was working. Flawless Sabrina was actually very unflawless, sort of like a World War II record, which would crack if you looked at it. “One night, $50,” she says, so I said okay. It turned out the band was Sam the Man Taylor, who I had played with a few years before in Hazelton, Pennsylvania, so that was gay. But the Flawless Sabrina was another story. She thought she had removed all the professional impersonators from the film, but little did they know that Mario Montez was a professional. She was in the classic, “Flaming Creatures,” and all those Andy Warhol films. In this show of Flawless Sabrina’s, they brought her down in a wrinkled lame dress in a bathtub, and they had her in greasepaint without any powder over, so she looked like a grease ball. I later taught Mario how to use powder. A fabulous queen. But you know how much Miss Montez has been paid for all the films she did for Andy Warhol? A total of $110. That is usury.
But back to another usurer, the Flawless Sabrina. She said it was a sold out house and we couldn’t even get any comps. When I looked through the curtains, about a fifth of the orchestra was filled, so I quick asked the secretary how we were going to get paid. “In checks,” she said. Well, I went to my sisters from the Jewel Box Revue and said, “Girls, this looks serious. They’re going to pay us in checks.” Fortunately, we demanded on the spot cash from the Flawless Sabrina. Mario has still never been paid a cent for that show.
By 1965, after my celluloid career, I had had a nervous stomach for a dozen years, mostly because I was in show business. Where was I going to work next? Where was the money going to come from? I was going to emigrate to Morocco with my friend the Professor. We thought we could both live off his GI bill. And then I took acid.
I was sitting here in the parlor with a couple boys like you and in came a man I knew who was a real sad sack, a non compes mentis, “the worst thing on Christopher Street,” he is now called. But on this day, his lowness came in and his eyes were all lit up and he’s so vivacious. “I took LSD 25,” he said. “Lead me to it” I said. “If it can do that for you, it can make me a genius.”
So I took a trip and my nervous stomach cleared up. On that trip I said to myself, “Kid, all your life jobs have been dying out from under you. Burlesque. Vaudeville. Nightclubs. Everything died out.” And I said, “Why go to Morocco? Morocco has come to me.” See, you’d go over to the Casbah — that’s what I call the section of Tompkins Square — and you’d think you were in Morocco. All these hippies and these freaky fabulous people.
That was 1965 and to me, honey, the hippies were a Renaissance. There was never anything in my experience like them — it was the only period that I lived through that I identify with good art. I felt like all my life I had been waiting for the hippies to come along. It was the only time I was ever in style — I had always been 10 years ahead and 20 years behind.
Gay Liberation
It was Billy Bike that first told me about the Gay Liberation Front. He said, “You must come.” Another friend of mine said, “Oh, don’t go there — there’s nothing but dirty old men: they want it for nothing.” Well, there were a few dirty young men, but very few old ones. There were more lezzies mixed in with the fairies in the GLF than any other group. It was lovely, I never went to the meetings much — I could never figure out when to talk and I was always out of turn.
That wasn’t so true in the GLF as it was in GAA. When GAA took over, Mary, gay liberation started getting very straight, talking about Robert’s Rules of Order. I remember Sylvia Rivera who founded STAR — Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries. She was always trying to say things — the same kinds of things Marcia P. Johnson says in a sweeter way — and they treated her like garbage. If that’s what “order” is, haven’t we had enough?
Gay liberation was natural for me because I was a hippy. It was much tougher for the ribbon clerks, the straight life ones, because they had to live a double life. But, after acid and after the hippies, it was easy for me.
I joined a gay consciousness-raising group and I was very lucky because my CR group was all radical young hippies. I was the oldest one of all of them, but I always had a generation gap with my own generation so that didn’t make any difference. We’d take a subject apart and we would relate our own experiences so I could see my own life as more than just a personal thing. I saw it in a better context. That was the crux of a good consciousness-raising group.
I got involved with Communitas, a gay liberation group in Brooklyn, and they wanted me to put together a show for them. The place was out in God’s country, beyond Flatbush, at the end of the subway line, so it was cursed before it started, but I decided to give it a try. And I got all these singers and dancers and all but I had to get a stripper. You gotta have a stripper to make it look professional, you know. And it couldn’t be an amateur. “It’s got to be graceful, it’s got to be done right,” I told them. And about that time Taffy Titz rang me up. “Titz with a Z,” she always said. And I had my stripper.
I met Taffy when he was a teenager named Clyde, and it was at one of Frannie’s soirees. Franny — she’s the queen that still runs The Opulent Era on Christopher Street — used to have these soirees and then she’d stop them in the middle and show people how lovely her shop things were. That was the only soiree I’d been to that had a commercial break. I met Taffy there before she was in drag, and she’d always call me up asking advice on this and that. And Taffy started getting in the business. Her specialty was a tassel dance. A tassel dancer has tassels attached to the end of the tit cups and usually on the ass, and gets them all going at once, sometimes in opposite directions. It takes enormous skill to do well.
When Taffy rang me up, she said, “Oh, I just gave away my wardrobe a few months ago and I’m out of drag now.” So I pulled together things from my Free Store. The Free Store was leftovers from rummage sales and things I get from my sisters, and from the street. I said to Taffy, “Look at this beaded top, Taffy, you could make a bra out of that, and this chiffon skirt could make gorgeous panels, and if you need any help with the stitches, I’m an experienced stitch bitch.” So Taffy returned to the business.
I arrived late for the show. I was in semi-drag in the pouring rain, climbing over a fence, my curls coming down, my shoes soggy, with a full face on, running down. The first half was over, but Taffy was yet to come. And I will say, she was lovely, like a Theda Kara with her dark hair. And she kept her mouth shut, so her routine was fabulous. She was so graceful she tore the house down.
Alter the first show, they asked me to put together other shows. They had the Hot Peaches, and Mario Montez and Alexis Del Lago (the male Marlene Dietrich, star of “Shanghai Local”), and James Mofogin, and of course Taffy Titz. But Taffy couldn’t stay graceful forever. She was supposed to be glamorous, but she had to be campy. So we put this show in a church. Can you imagine, they built a special runway for Taffy, and she came out with industrial house numbers on her ass. There she is, on the church runway, flashing 69 on her ass. Taffy was a punk before her time.
This is the Gay Day Be-In of 1972 — looks like I’ve got some campy thought buzzing around up there. That gay button I’m wearing was designed by Spin Star. I met Spin in a picket line in front of a homophobic bookstore on Fifth Avenue — I only picket in the best areas. I guess Spin and I were sort of lovers, until we started living together. This was the only Gay Day I ever marched in — I usually just showed up at the end rallies — and that was because of Spin and because he worked day and night for Gay Day.
Here I am at the benefit the Hot Peaches did for WBAI in 1977. It was my last public performance, until now anyway. It was a gorgeous show and the Peaches were at their peachiest. I sang the “St. Louis Blues” parody, which starts out “I hate to see my little son go down.”
At Home in the New Depression
Making money is a difficult thing to do during this Depression. My last steady job was at the Crazy Horse in 1967, and then it got so that I could make more money staying home on a weekend doing horizontal entertainment than I could make working all week long at the Crazy Horse. I had johns then, before they all got “liberated.”
I remember one I picked up about 15 years ago on the way to the Brooklyn Navy Yard, which is gone now. He was sort of shot, had an awful lot to drink, and a lot of mileage, but he started calling me “Baby” and holding my hand. He was only a $10 trick, but he was a darling boy, and a marvelous lover. He was only a $10 trick, but whenever he’d come into town he’d call me up, and he’d really treat me like a lady. I last saw him about six years ago. That last time he gave me $15.
Most of these guys in recent years — well, they’re weirdoes. What’s a weirdo’? I don’t know. Use your imagination. I just used to add $5 for anything new they wanted to do. Between the Depression and my age — I’m not sweet sixteen anymore and they always want youth and they don’t make many two-watt lightbulbs — it doesn’t make much sense to do johns anymore. Maybe I’ll become a telephonic Madame.
I keep my hand in a lot of things and make the money to stay alive. I have this transie I see once in a while, Julia Child. My job is to put him in drag and give him tips on being a woman and escort him. I play the male escort. Isn’t that a camp? He’s 6′2″ and he walks like a country rube, all hunched over. And he hunches over his food, asking me if he should take his gloves off while he’s eating. If he gets to be too much for me, I say “Grace and beauty!” and he straightens up.
And of course I have my music lessons. Even if your fingers feel like toes when you tickle the ivories, my new improved music lessons (at no rise in price) will do the trick. I love turning on my friends to old tunes.
But you boys came to hear about the art of female impersonation, and this has more to do with the art of staying alive.
Well, I guess we’ve run out of pictures. So many of those people are gone. Lots from drinking — it’s easy for a queen to become an alcoholic, always working around drinks. And of course there were the benny-heads that were very very brilliant for a short time and then eventually got evil and died. The hormone girls — I’ve known several where the operation was not a success. So they’re gone and here I am, still a young flapper.
When I took my first acid trip, I saw so much, and I’ve become more of a recluse. I no longer have the desire to be the life of the party, to be an Elsa Maxwell, like my sister Tommy. I have lovely things around me here, even if this isn’t such a campy neighborhood. See, most of these things I have had for a long time. They’re old, so the material is good. And I’ve lived with them for a long time. When I first moved here it was middle class. That was 1955. I thought I would stay a short time. Now it’s 24 years later, and the neighborhood is bombed-out looking, and I’m still here. Isn’t that a camp?
Sometimes, it’s not so campy. The slumlord downstairs has this hyperactive child and they feed it sugar all day so it runs around — boom da boom boom boom. All sugar. Look out the window — all black faces — oops! There’s a white face. Must be a cop in drag. Here, let’s close these shutters — we’re not putting on a free show for those bums. Nobody’s paying.
But it’s hard to beat a five-room flat for $32, even if the walls are Niagara when it rains. And I have my piano. I play every day, mostly rags, especially the master, Scott Joplin. There’s one song I’ve been looking for all my life. “I’m the Hostess of a Bum Cabaret.” I never found it, though.
My friend Crazy Arthur contacts spirits and he says one of them helps me play the piano. His name is Bob and he lived here from 1895 to 1905 and he played piano in one of the theaters. He was a straight man that wanted to come out, but didn’t, all those years before gay liberation. Bob’s crazy about me. And Crazy Arthur says that when I relax enough Bob can get into my body and play. So I’ll just relax and sit up real straight and say, “Bob, do your stuff!”
I’m glad I’m not a young queen today, honey. I think it’s very sad and tough, especially since the demise of gay liberation. Things are going in the opposite direction, back to the fifties. It’s like they won. The punks.
I hate to see the hippy style go. All those fabulous clothes. Gone. I have a friend, when I met him he had frizzed hair down to his asshole and glitter on his face. He was a parody of a hippy. Now he’s a parody of a straight person. If he dressed any straighter you’d mistake him for a Chinese waiter. It’s so altered. I definitely have a generation gap with this post hippy generation.
Times have been hard, of course, and they will be hard again, but that doesn’t mean you have to immediately get dark and ugly. No wonder straight people are worried about gay liberation. Now, not only do they think we are going to suck their son’s cock, they think we are going to bite it off. The only way to get out of darkness is to want to be liberated and try for something beautiful. If you do things ugly, people treat you ugly.
That’s all the campy tales for today, boys. I feel so lit up on that bit of tea. I guess it’s talking about all these gay times. If you want to go to the bathroom before you leave, take matches and light the candle over the toilet. The slumlord won’t fix the plumbing and there’s no electricity in there. It looks best in candlelight anyway. But be sure and blow it out when you’re finished, because my sister Double John isn’t working for the church where she liberated those candles from. Not anymore.
Take some tea for the road, boys, and make that subway ride gorgeous.
If you would like another copy of this book, please contact:
Ray Dobbins
57 Second Avenue
New York 10003
(212) 475-0071
Copyright
This book is based on many visits to Minette’s flat. The words are Minette’s. The text was edited by Steven Watson. The photographs from Minette’s album are mostly by anonymous photographers, printed, and re-worked by Ray Dobbins.