Sunday, January 21, 2018

JEWEL BOX OF GLAMOUR

It wouldn't be a Drag History Month without thinking about the great divas and the touring troupe, The Jewel Box Revue. The Jewel Box Revue was a famous drag/female impersonator touring company that began in 1939 and ran well into the late 1960s. Sort of a all drag Lawrence Welk if you will. Danny Brown and Doc Benner were lovers and longtime producers of the revue, and were said to be pretty tough customers who never backed down from a fight and were known to run a very tight ship. They were hard on their employees but could be brutal to anyone who messed with “their girls.”
Creating America’s first gay community was not what Danny and Doc initially had in mind when they created the revue. They felt that Vaudeville had sidelined female impersonation acts into little more than burlesque shows, and both were passionate about reviving drag as an art form. Danny and Doc also intentionally catered the show to a heterosexual audience and tried their best to be viewed as legitimate entertainment by locals and authorities, to stay clear of any legal charges of sexual deviance. But behind the protective spin of publicity, it cannot be denied that the revue fostered one of the first gay-positive communities in America, if not the first. It was a place where “gayness” was accepted before the concept of gay-identity had even been fully conceived. Many of the performers viewed Danny and Doc not only as his bosses but as no-nonsense parental figures. Danny and Doc took great efforts to protect their girls and the other members of the revue from the often brutal homophobic realities of life in the pre-Stonewall era.
The show became incredibly popular throughout the United States. Stars of the revue such as Mr. Lynne Carter, whose talent and skill as a dancer was legendary, became quite famous and included the Rat Packer and toe-tapper Sammy Davis Jr. as a fan. The drag revue was most often comprised of “25 Men & One Girl.” The one girl was none other than Miss Storme DeLaviere who served as the sole male impersonator for the revue. Storme would garner iconic status within the LGBT community year later in 1969 for being one of the first people to fight back against police officers during the raid on the Stonewall Inn. Despite government crackdowns against gay performers and female impersonators, the revue successfully toured America and Canada anyway, for nearly 30 years. At the height of its popularity the revue headlined at the famed Apollo Theater in Harlem to rave reviews.

I think it's interesting though that some of the drag queens back in the day used male names instead of the campy names we now have today. It had something to do with letting the audience know they were in fact men. Some of the notable divas performing there.
LaVern Cummings was a long-time performer in the traveling troupe of The Jewel Box. Cumming's career seems to have spanned the post-war period into the sixties if you judge by her clothing and hair.

Gita Gilmore was one of the original members of the revue and often impersonated Mae West. Miss West even invited Gita to a show once and was asked backstage to meet the bombshell herself.

Ricky Renee went on to become one of the most well known Jewel Box dancers and can still be seen performing in Europe where she now resides.


Ricki Raymonde had a most amazing operatic voice and could sing a high C, then immediately drop to a deep baritone which would gasp audiences.


The talented Barry Scott, who often left the audience in gasp with his beauty, coiffures, fashion and singing talents.

Jane Korday was with the Jewel Box longer than any other member and was known as the boy with the million dollar legs and was also the revue's hair dresser. Some of the other notables were Don Marshall who was one of the few black men performing in drag at the time, Mr Titanic who was every one's favorite blond bombshells, and Chunga Ochoa who was the featured dancer and choreographer for the review.


In the end Danny Brown and Doc Benner were successful and saw their dreams of reviving female impersonation as an art form come to fruition. The Jewel Box Revue became very successful and toured throughout the country for over three decades, even headlining at famed venues like the Apollo in New York City. But their contributions resonate far beyond their impacts on the field of female impersonation. In a very real sense Danny and Doc are the true godfathers of the modern gay community. The show was billed as “25 Men and 1 Woman,” but hundreds of gay entertainers and female impersonator would come to work with the revue over the years, and their influence on the burgeoning gay rights movement still resonates to this very day, one particular performer somewhat more so than others. The African-American lesbian drag king Storme Delarvarie was the “1 Woman” of the Jewel Box Revue.
She spent decades living, working and traveling with Danny and Doc’s tough but protective community of touring entertainers. Those experiences and life lessons would prove invaluable in Storme’s later life, and her actions continue to inspire generations of gay people. Storme Delarvarie is credited as being one of the first people to bravely fight back against the police as they raided the Stonewall Inn in New York City on the night of June 27, 1969. Her courage helped to spark a riot that begat the modern gay rights movement. She sadly has since passed back in 2014, as many of the performers have. I do get the feeling though,somewhere out there in the cosmos, Danny Brown and Doc Benner couldn’t be prouder.

20 comments:

  1. Another wonderful post!!!!! Ah, The Jewel Box Revue! When I was a kid very little, my mom and her friends went every year! I remember they would get so excited. I asked once what this jewel box revue was and the answer came back that it was a dance. I was 18 when I found out what it really was and by then, my mom had stopped going and wouldn't let me go. Drag is just so fascinating.

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  2. THANK YOU FOR THIS!! This is fab! Drag and gay history at it's finest. And these queens were STUNNING!!!!

    Get cultured.

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  3. Great history lesson. I'd like to someday write a novel or book of interrelated short stories on that era, and in doing some research on it a while back came across the name Stormé Delarvarie. Yes, according to one version, she was the spark that set off the Stonewall riot. I hasten to say there's about five or six different versions about how the riot began (including stories involving Marsha P. Johnson and Sylvia Rivera.) But it seems certain that Stormé was at least there that night.

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  4. Some of these performers are just stupendous. This is truly a gem.

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  5. A fantastic post! Very informative and the photos are great. I agree with Scarlett (comment above) - it's a gem!

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  6. Love this. All of these men and women lit the way for the rest of us, drag personas or not, to stand tall and proud and live our lives. And they did so at a time when they could have been arrested or worse for being gay or in drag.

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  7. Ricky Renee and Barry Scott were a 1950-60s drag stars who had a huge influence on me I bought the Female Impersonator’s Handbook by Pudgie Roberts at a Salvation Army when I was about 15, and it featured photos of Ricky, Barry, Capuccine, Kim Christy and more. The book was from the 60s, so the look du jour was heavy eyelashes on top and on bottom, with loads of black liner and lighter lips. And of course, teased up wigs. I was so fascinated by them that this was to become my look as soon as I knew how to achieve it. There was some great advice in that book. Ricky still maintains a website, although the last photos are from a 2003 tour in Germany. She pretty much looks the same! I would love to hear the take from some living queens from the revue on today’s drag. Like a lot of older queens, myself included, I believe she frowns on lip-synch because she comes from the world of the Jewel Box Revue where the queens either sang live or did striptease or comedy numbers without miming. Great post Mistress.

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  8. Pearl Shaghoople1/21/2018

    I saw a couple performances of The Jewel Box Review Indianapolis back in the 1960s - verrry interesting! I remember Ty Tanic being very drop dead gorgeous.

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  9. North America really needs to start an LGBTQ history month, so many many steps that got us here today that most of us don't know about. I feel so much gratitude towards those early activists.

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  10. Fantabulosa, indeed! Jx

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  11. The Jewel Box was indeed full of such extraordinary gems and fantastic treasures! Wonderful, entertaining, and very informative post.

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  12. Stormé DeLarverie is a lesbian LEGEND!

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  13. If they were to bring this back now, even with queens we have now, it still wouldn't have the same charm. Those girls just had a air about them.

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  14. Such incredibly brave people. I will be forever grateful. But "jewel box of glamour"? Is that what you're calling "it" these days?

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    1. I don't currently call "it" that, but what a lovely idea Mitchell!!!!

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  15. Fascinating post!!! Learning a lot from these.

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  16. Thank you for continuing the lessons!

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  17. These snippets of history are fascinating, Mistress! I'm always tempted to read more - and sometimes do! So, thank you for sowing the seeds.

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  18. Glamour at it's finest indeed.....not to much the talent. We never got to see one of these revues, but did see marquees for them in several cities. The Jewel Box came to the Latin Casino once and we were to go....but a snow storm hampered that evening. Damn it.

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Go ahead darling, tell me something fabulous!