Friday, June 19, 2026

GAY PRIDE-JEAN MALIN

The other night on TCM I finally caught Jean Malin in Arizonia to Broadway in his bit part, but very memorable and entertaining, nonetheless. All these posts for Pride over the years and I can't believe I never once posted about trailblazer Jean, who was a pioneering openly gay entertainer, "Queen of the Panzies" and drag performer during the 1930 and is almost credited with the booming of the infamous Pansy Craze. While he began his early career performing in drag, he became a cultural sensation by emceeing in a tuxedo, using his very flamboyantly queer personality and extreme razor-sharp wit, to shatter gender norms. Although he was six feet and was a bigger boy, with wavy blonde hair to die for, he was effeminate and a female impersonator, and he was known to put hecklers, homophobes and even some mobsters in their place with his wit and at time fists.

Some fun tidbits-

Born Victor Eugene James Malinovsky. He won prizes at the Manhattan drag balls as a teenager and performed in drag as Imogene Wilson in Greenwich Village. As an MC at NYC'S upscale Club Abbey however, he traded dresses for elegant tuxedos. He strolled through audiences, campily interacting with crowds and fiercely defend himself a few times with hecklers and haters. Even tangoed with a few mobsters.

As New York police began cracking down on queer speakeasies, Malin then moved to Los Angeles in 1932, opening his own Club New Yorker. He attempted a film career in 1933 and made three movies, the best being Arizonia to Broadway, where he appeared on screen in drag which was extremely rare for movies then, doing an imitation of Mae West and singing Frankie and Johnny. By this time, he was the highest paid impersonator in the business in the Panzy Craze. Jean continued to sass mobsters and slay audiences with that film and in his routines in his own club, where Malin's out and proud shows drew stars like Clara Bow, Marlene Deitrich, Cary Grant, Gary Cooper, Carole Lombard and Talulah Bankhead. Malin has had self-composed Malin songs like "I'd Rather be Spanish than Mannish." At the height of his fame Jean's life was cut short when in August of 1933, after a farewell performance at the Ship Cafe in Venice CA, he accidentally put his car into reverse and drove off a pier, drowning at age of 25. But no doubt Jean Malin was a trailblazer and he took no prisoners! Fight, Fire and Guts, with no fucks to give


Happy Gay Pride!

17 comments:

  1. What a tragic end for a talented man.

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  2. Not long ago, I saw his mini-bio on TCM too. Unfortunately, the Hayes Code silenced any realistic portrayals of life in film. That's why Pre-Code movies are so important to preserve, restore and watch!

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    1. And I love that they show them all too. The channel is an earthly delight you ask me.

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  3. He was a legend, indeed!

    Apparently, by his mid-teens he was winning prizes for his costumes in the drag balls of the 20s.  After one win, still in drag, he wandered into a nearby cafeteria, and was attacked by four thugs, but was able to beat three of them unconscious.

    If only he'd lived longer - imagine him on the chat-show circuit!

    Jx

    PS Neither this post nor your previous one about Pride have shown up so far in the Blogger Reading List. Something has gone very wrong behind the scenes...

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    1. I love that he came across as a bull in a China shop! Jean was not to be trifled with! I myself one got heckled in a gay bar. I had had just enough gin, punched a guy and tripped his harpy girlfriend. I'm like you're on MY turf RIGHT NOW! Needless to say they went to the bouncer to have me removed...(from a gay bar mind you) who unbeknownst to them was a friend of mine. He kicked there asses out.

      Blogger...it is getting terrible. It is certainly hurting visits......

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  4. He should have moved to Berlin. The nightclub scene there was very progressive in the early to late thirties.

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    1. Ummm - the Berlin scene to which you refer was during the post-WWI era, up until the economic crash of 1929. The whole scene was brutally crushed by the Nazis, who came to power in 1933. Jx

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  5. The talent!
    And TCM? Totally on my radar now. Such fabulous life. Which tragic end!

    Happy Pride, babes!

    XOXO

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    1. I tell you...between PBS and TCM it's about all I watch. And both are featuring Pride showings. Matter of Fact American Masters on PBS just did a whole bio on Jean and hosted by the lovely Peppermint.

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  6. Thanks for introducing her to me! I'd never heard of her and now I want to seek her out.
    Happy Pride

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  7. Anonymous6/19/2026

    For more infor-tainment on Jean Malin and others of the Pansy Craze check out the website Queer Music Heritage, a treasury of LGBTQ history. :-)

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    1. Thanks for popping in! Oh I agree about the Queer Music Heritage site...what a achieve alright! I've spent hours on it sometimes.

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  8. Anonymous6/19/2026

    That is the Spirit We Need Now. A true person who confronts the bigotry with a smile and a laugh.

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  9. I forgot to push the google account button. that is me

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  10. Happy Pride month, dahling! I used to love watching TMC (The Movie Channel, isn't it?) with all the oldies, but goodies. My Grandpa particularly loved the Spaghetti Westerns.

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  11. This is great! More queer history!!! Love these post, and Jean is one I was not aware of.

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  12. Interesting Gene Malin mimicking Mae West. I've read speculation that Mae patterned her persona after what at the time was referred to as female impersonators.

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Go ahead darling, tell me something fabulous!