Read American Rose: A Nation Laid Bare: The Life and Times of Gypsy Rose Lee Online
Authors: Karen Abbott
Tags: #Biography & Autobiography, #Historical, #Entertainment & Performing Arts, #Women
71
“Thank you for the champagne”: Ibid., 263.
72
“No names”: Ibid.
73
“Gyps,” she whispered: Preminger, 74.
74
“I don’t understand this”: Lee,
Gypsy
, 263.
75
“brushed good”: Ibid., 269.
76
“You can fuck or suck”: Author’s interview with Arthur Laurents, October 2008.
77
“She was very involved”: Author’s interview with June Havoc, June 2008.
78
3,600 hours on her feet: June Havoc, interview with George Bettinger, 1997.
79
“Plenty of popcorn, dear”: Havoc,
More Havoc
, 68.
80
“Let go of me, June”: Ibid., 61.
81
“And this is my baby”: Ibid., 66.
82
“Gypsy assured us”: Minsky and Machlin, 142.
83
Gypsy held out: Author’s interview with June Havoc, June 2008.
84
“There are a lot of influential people”: Ibid.
85
“It was a society”: Ibid.
86
she didn’t really love her: Ibid.
1
“There are three things”: Mitgang,
Once Upon a Time
, 2.
2
“Where is the green room?”: Lee,
Gypsy
, 251.
3
“Remember now”: Ibid., 252.
4
“She had mastered the art”: Minsky and Machlin, 97.
5
For the first time in burlesque history: Barber, 340.
6
Miss Seattle:
New York Evening Journal
, March 28, 1931, Gypsy Rose Lee scrapbooks, Reel 1, Gypsy Rose Lee Papers, BRTD.
7
“I stuck a pin into you”: James Thurber, “Robot,”
The New Yorker
, August 29, 1931.
8
“No religious act”: Lee,
Gypsy
, 254.
9
“had her idiosyncrasies”: Minsky and Machlin, 140.
10
“She used foul words”: Author’s interview with Dardy Minsky, October 2009.
11
A day riding the Ferris wheel: Author’s interview with Erik Preminger, November 2009.
12
“He could keep a hard-on”: Havoc,
More Havoc
, 220–221.
13
“She had a monkey”: Minsky and Machlin, 140.
14
More than eleven thousand: Ibid., 147.
15
the final night:
The New York Times
, September 19, 1931.
16
“Minsky American Wheel”:
The New York Times
, May 16, 1931.
17
To Whom It May Concern: Minsky and Machlin, 130.
18
“Minskyville”: Alva Johnston, “Tour of Minskyville,”
The New Yorker
, May 28, 1932.
19
“Lose a few hundred”: Ibid.
20
“I have never yet heard”: Walsh, 35.
21
“a reformer is a guy”: Walker, 224.
22
“Do you think anything’s broken?”: Minsky and Machlin, 131.
23
“Tweed Courthouse”:
The New York Times
, December 2, 2001.
24
Q: Where did you keep these moneys: Mitgang,
Once Upon a Time
, 107–109.
25
“Atta boy, Jimmy!”: Ibid., 147.
26
“Presumably by a goy”: Minsky and Machlin, 106–107.
27
Paget’s disease: Minsky, 131. I spoke with Charlene Waidman, executive director of the Paget and Bone and Cancer Foundations, who said that Billy Minsky’s diagnosis was “undoubtedly due to a wrong assumption” by his doctor. At the time of Billy’s death in 1932, little was known about Paget’s disease; it is not a fatal condition.
28
“Never work north of Fourteenth Street”: Minsky and Machlin, 132.
1
“I am going to give”: Rose Thompson Hovick to Gypsy Rose Lee, August 23, 1945, Series I, Box 1, Folder 12, Gypsy Rose Lee Papers, BRTD.
2
“Who is paying”: Havoc,
More Havoc
, 3–4.
3
“Closer, please”: Ibid., 4.
4
He’s been stealing money: Preminger, 187–190; Series II, Box 10, Folder 4, diary entry for June 25, 1953, Gypsy Rose Lee Papers, BRTD.
5
“Is your mother home?”: Erik Preminger, interview with Laura Jacobs, 2002.
6
She opened her purse: Ibid.
7
“So very elegant”: Series II, Box 10, Folder 4, diary entry for November 8, 1953, Gypsy Rose Lee Papers, BRTD.
8
“I hope this is”: Ibid., entry for November 23, 1953.
9
answering “Miss Lee’s Residence”: Author’s interview with Erik Preminger, November 2009.
10
“Mother died at 6:30”: Series II, Box 10, Folder 4, entry for January 28, 1954, Gypsy Rose Lee Papers, BRTD.
11
“I know about you”: Havoc,
More Havoc
, 275.
12
“You’ll fall”: Ibid.
13
“You’ll never forget”: Ibid., 276.
14
“This isn’t the end”: Ibid.
15
Gypsy and one of Rose’s neighbors: Details courtesy of researcher/writer Carolyn Quinn.
16
without any marker: Ibid.
1
“H. L. Mencken called me an ecdysiast”: Lee,
Gypsy
, 2.
2
“
We take great pride”:
Ibid., 296.
3
“childishly leering”: Shteir,
Striptease
, 88; Carl Van Vechten, “A Note on Tights,”
American Mercury
, July 1924.
4
“kimonophobe”: Kenneth Tynan, “Cornucopia,”
The New Yorker
, May 30, 1959.
5
“went for Miss Lee”: Russell Maloney, “Burlesk,”
The New Yorker
, June 8, 1935.
6
“How vital!”: Lee,
Gypsy
, 290.
7
“three stains bluer”: Kyle Crichton, “Strip for Fame: Miss Gypsy Rose Lee, in Person,”
Collier’s
, December 19, 1936.
8
La Traviata
at the Met:
The New York Times
, December 17, 1935.
9
a humming effect: Author’s interview with D. A. Pennebaker, December 2008.
10
“Don’t ask questions”: Lee,
Gypsy
, 272.
11
“The moment I said it”: Ibid., 273.
12
“depressing times”:
The New York Times
, May 25, 1932.
13
“I don’t know myself”: Minsky and Machlin, 150.
14
“You were getting $60”: Crichton, “Strip for Fame.”
15
“It made me uncomfortable”: Preminger, 75.
16
“I guess I wasn’t used to”: Crichton, “Strip for Fame.”
17
when the show closed:
The New York Times
, April 18, 1933.
18
“burlesque moderne”:
Boston Post
, November 24, 1933, Gypsy Rose Lee scrapbooks, Reel 1, Gypsy Rose Lee Papers, BRTD.
19
“limousine trade”:
Boston Evening Transcript
, December 1, 1933, Gypsy Rose Lee scrapbooks, Reel 1, Gypsy Rose Lee Papers, BRTD.
20
Gypsy would even wear: J. P. McEvoy, “More Tease than Strip,”
Reader’s Digest
, July 1941.
21
“Burlesque pays well”:
New York World Telegram
, June 11, 1934.
22
“Drive out the racketeers”: Brodsky, 342.
23
“stands in need of”: Mitgang,
Once Upon a Time
, 119.
24
“You let them shit”: Brodsky, 399.
25
“Half Wop”: Lawrence Elliott, 195.
26
“will be to Newark”:
The New York Times
, September 10, 1937.
27
“you know I’d never end”: Frankel, 234–235.
28
“Gypsy Rose Lee Guardia”:
The New York Times
, March 7, 1937.
29
“incorporated filth”: Zeidman, 230.
30
“the usual 50 showgirls”:
The New York Times
, October 2, 1994.
31
“And now in Jimmy Savo’s opinion”: Walter Winchell column, syndicated in
Port Arthur
(Tex.)
News
, May 7, 1934.
32
“Get your money”: Lee,
Gypsy
, 282.
33
“connected”: Crichton, “Strip for Fame.”
34
snubbed by the “café girls”:
New York Daily Mirror
clipping, no headline, 1933, Gypsy Rose Lee scrapbooks, Reel 1, Gypsy Rose Lee Papers, BRTD.
35
“Darlings, please don’t ask”: John Richmond, “Gypsy Rose Lee, Striptease Intellectual,”
American Mercury
, January 1941.
36
Edwin Bruns:
The New York Times
, May 16, 1925.
37
“mythical admirer”:
New York Woman
, October 7, 1936.
38
“He’s so darned handsome”: Ibid.
39
he promised to take care of Gypsy: Author’s interview with Erik Preminger, November 2009.
40
Billy Rose’s gaudy circus:
The New York Times
November 18, 1935.
41
“ignoring the others”: Havoc,
More Havoc
, 106.
42
“Among the death watch”:
New York Journal American
, August 24, 1936, Gypsy Rose Lee scrapbooks, Reel 1, Gypsy Rose Lee Papers, BRTD.
43
“the hillbilly’s Juliet”:
Daily News
(New York), August 24, 1936.
44
“Keep them waiting”: Fiske, 108.
45
81 Irving Place: Series I, Box 7, Folder 2, Gypsy Rose Lee Papers, BRTD.
46
Eva Morcur: Series VI, Box 24, Folder 1, Gypsy Rose Lee Papers, BRTD.
47
Every star had one: Havoc,
More Havoc
, 143.
48
Otis Chatfield-Taylors: George Davis, “The Dark Young Pet of Burlesque,”
Vanity Fair
, February 1936.
49
courses of comfort food: Tippins, 90.
50
“We’re broke or we wouldn’t”:
New York World Telegram
, November 28, 1936.
51
loosened a few: Havoc,
More Havoc
, 160.
52
Strip Girl
, the show: “No Hits, Several Errors,”
The New Yorker
, October 26, 1935.
53
“I consider that show”:
New York Evening Journal
, October 21, 1935.
54
“Mae West,” she said: McEvoy, “More Tease Than Strip.” 274 “Leg art requires no protection”: Ibid.
55
“I think he was a swell general”: Ibid.
56
“Right End”:
The Princeton Tiger
, November 5, 1935, Gypsy Rose Lee scrapbooks, Reel 1, Gypsy Rose Lee Papers, BRTD.
57
seasoning her conversation: “It was so contrived,” June told Laura Jacobs in 2002. “She didn’t know French … but she had all these bits and pieces and she knew when to lay them in and that they would be funny.”
58
“Whither the New Negro?”: Davis, “The Dark Young Pet of Burlesque.”
59
“Dear, beloved, dazzling Gypsy”: Bernard Sobel to Gypsy Rose Lee, Series I, Box 7, Folder 2, Gypsy Rose Lee Papers, BRTD.
60
“every ladies’ luncheon”: Havoc,
More Havoc
, 89.
61
“There was someone”: Ibid., 91.
62
June, ironically: Author’s interview with Erik Preminger, November 2009. Erik Preminger and June Havoc were estranged for many years.
63
“What in hell has happened”: Havoc,
More Havoc
, 99.
64
“I’d like to be sure”: Ibid., 106.
65
“Getting on my nerves”: Ibid., 159.
66
“Look at that”: Ibid., 160.
67
After Florenz Ziegfeld’s death:
The New York Times
, July 23, 1932.
68
previously played by Josephine Baker: Lee,
Gypsy
, 289.
69
“saws, hatchets, chisels”:
Orlean
(N.Y.)
Evening Herald
, August 17, 1923.
70
“Think I’ve got”: Havoc,
More Havoc
, 161.
71
“I gave up marriage”: Ibid., 109.
72
“Give Me a Lay!”: Henry Miller, 3.
73
“The strippers talk”: Ibid.
74
her rooster, Solly: Author’s interview with June Havoc, March 2008.
75
“I guess he’s not good enough”: Lee,
Gypsy
, 279.
76
“Get the hell out of here”: Havoc,
More Havoc
, 146.
77
“unnatural child”: Ibid., 101.
78
“The world knows of Gypsy”: Lee,
Gypsy
, 317.
79
filched from June’s career: Author’s interview with Tana Sibilio, January 2010.
80
“We know you are on dinner break”: Havoc,
More Havoc
, 183.
81
“You mean,” June said: Ibid.
1
“Whenever La Guardia talks”: McIntyre, 130.
2
“Billy was dead”: Minsky and Machlin, 132.
3
“I don’t know how to tell you”: Ibid.
4
“You’re acceptable”: Ibid., 231.
5
“Not one new burlesque”: Ibid., 252.
6
He planned his own theater:
The New York Times
, July 29, 1932.
7
“I go my own way”: Minsky and Machlin, 136.
8
“He thinks he can fill”: Ibid., 137.
9
“battle of burlesque”:
The New York Times
, July 19, 1932.
10
“His puritanical streak”: Lawrence Elliott, 221–222.
11
at the Trocadero: Shteir,
Striptease
, 157.
12
“If I shake”: Ibid., 115.
13
“that promised land”: Minsky and Machlin, 154.
14
“Margie Hart Scholarship”: Ibid., 247.
15
“Gypsy Rose Lee’s act”: Ibid.
16
developed an activist conscience: John Richmond, “Gypsy Rose Lee, Striptease Intellectual,”
American Mercury
, January 1941.