05-29-2012, 11:01 AM
i would have loved to see the heyday of Harlem and the Cotton Club!
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daily mail
One of the original dancers at a world famous jazz club in which some of the biggest names in music have performed has died.
Juanita Boisseau, who starred at the legendary Cotton Club in New York, died last week at the age of 100.
She began performing at the notorious Harlem club - which was a white-only establishment - in the early 1930s.
It saw her work with some of the Jazz world's most famous musicians including Lena Horne, Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong.
The Cotton Club - which was run by the gangster Dutch Schultz, was her base until she moved to France and became famous during Paris' Jazz Age.
However, she eventually returned to Harlem where she lived in an apartment a few streets from the corner where the Cotton Club stood.
The club was open from 1923 to 1940 - notably through the Prohibition Era.
Despite many of the greatest African-American entertainers ever to have performed at the club, it was a white-only establishment.
Among those who performed at the Cotton Club are Cab Calloway, Ella Fitzgerald, Fats Waller, Dizzy Gillespie and Billie Holiday.
Chorus girls at the club wore skimpy outfits and were expected to be at least feet 6 inches tall, light-skinned and under the age of 21.
She wrote: 'I wanted to be rare, I wanted to be noticed, I wanted to be exotic as a Cotton Club chorus girl, and I wanted to be obvious as the most flamboyant hooker on the street. I just wanted to be.'
Ms Boisseau was the subject of a documentary which was released in 2002 called Cotton Club Girl.
The club was open from 1923 to 1940. This picture was taken in 1937 and shows American bandleader and singer Cab Calloway leading an orchestra during a New Year's Ball
---------------------------------------------------
daily mail
One of the original dancers at a world famous jazz club in which some of the biggest names in music have performed has died.
Juanita Boisseau, who starred at the legendary Cotton Club in New York, died last week at the age of 100.
She began performing at the notorious Harlem club - which was a white-only establishment - in the early 1930s.
It saw her work with some of the Jazz world's most famous musicians including Lena Horne, Duke Ellington and Louis Armstrong.
The Cotton Club - which was run by the gangster Dutch Schultz, was her base until she moved to France and became famous during Paris' Jazz Age.
However, she eventually returned to Harlem where she lived in an apartment a few streets from the corner where the Cotton Club stood.
The club was open from 1923 to 1940 - notably through the Prohibition Era.
Despite many of the greatest African-American entertainers ever to have performed at the club, it was a white-only establishment.
Among those who performed at the Cotton Club are Cab Calloway, Ella Fitzgerald, Fats Waller, Dizzy Gillespie and Billie Holiday.
Chorus girls at the club wore skimpy outfits and were expected to be at least feet 6 inches tall, light-skinned and under the age of 21.
She wrote: 'I wanted to be rare, I wanted to be noticed, I wanted to be exotic as a Cotton Club chorus girl, and I wanted to be obvious as the most flamboyant hooker on the street. I just wanted to be.'
Ms Boisseau was the subject of a documentary which was released in 2002 called Cotton Club Girl.
The club was open from 1923 to 1940. This picture was taken in 1937 and shows American bandleader and singer Cab Calloway leading an orchestra during a New Year's Ball