Friday, March 03, 2006

Mae West: Gems [ahem]


These gems - - being auctioned by Windsor Auctions at Sea - - come with a "certificate of authenticity" [whatever that means], and Windsor indicates that MAE owned these pieces. More jewelry associated with MAE WEST can be seen [this week only] on Ebay.
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photo • jewelry associated with Mae West •

Mae West.

Sunday, February 26, 2006

Mae West: Gilded Lil

In prison Chick Clark complains to a fellow inmate about "givin' most of those sparklers to [Diamond] Lil" - - and now he's paying for it with hard time.

• • In the midst of fiction she was writing for the stage [such as "Diamond Lil"] and screen [for instance, "She Done Him Wrong"], Mae West always injected a little truth. And it's quite true that she loved diamonds. Call her a two-bracelet babe. Even drawings of her would zing with bling.
• • "Vegetables don't interest me," Mae once joked during an interview. "The only karats I pay attention to are the ones in a diamond."
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photo • Mae West • 1928

Mae West.

Wednesday, February 22, 2006

Mae West: 295 Bowery

Mae West had heard all the stories about the infamous Bowery "resort" near Houston Street, namely McGurk's Suicide Hall [295 Bowery]. The second chapter of "Diamond Lil" (a 256-page novelization of the play published by Macaulay in 1932) is SUICIDE HALL. Lil's adventures take her further downtown to the hidden dens of Chinatown; the tenth chapter is A NIGHT ON DIVISION STREET.
• • Say "cheese"! Ready for the wrecking ball at 295 Bowery. Before demolition, part of the exterior was photographed.


___________________________________
• • Mae West was not the only writer to revisit the Bowery. In May 1904, married actors Mr. and Mrs. Terry McGovern starred in Theodore Kremer's stirring melodrama "The Bowery After Dark" at the People's Theatre. Kremer set his scenes in Suicide Hall, Chatham Square, Chinatown, etc.
• • During the 1890s
The New York World commissioned artist Julius C. Fireman to illustrate the interior of Suicide Hall.
• • Unfortunately, a sketch was sketchy. You really had to BE there - - on site - - to understand how well the place functioned. Rich in real estate, John McGurk owned a 4-story establishment that he joined to a charming one-story annex. Each building fronted on the Bowery (numbered 251-253 Bowery during the 1890s) and could be exited by way of several secret passageways, so that the customer could escape an enemy easily and wind up on First Street, Second Avenue, Houston, or even in a private courtyard.
• • Owen Kildare lived in the Bowery and wrote about it. Stephen Crane set "Maggie, Girl of the Streets" [1893] near Suicide Hall. From 1880 - 1920, it's been said that no street ever made such an impression on writers as the Bowery did. The New York Times called it "the liveliest mile on the face of the earth during 1880-1895." The more the literary types set fiction there, the trendier it became to rediscover
low life.

• • Mae West and the self-confessed saloon scholars understood that the Bowery boy and his female counterpart, the "Tough Girl," had to be made amusing before they would be accepted as entertainment.
• • By the time
Diamond Lil sashays inside Suicide Hall, bejeweled and gowned, the sinister setting had been properly de-fanged. Public acclaim kept Mae busy, touring with the play, and then filming it as a Hollywood movie with her leading man Cary Grant.
• • According to an article [13 May 1999] in The New York Times, the building had been a hotel during the Civil War, catering to returning soldiers. By the 1890s it was a brothel and a dive where . . . a half-dozen destitute courtesans drank carbolic acid and died. John H. McGurk, the owner of the saloon on the ground floor, then capitalized on the notoriety of the place by renaming it McGurk’s Suicide hall.
• • Later, beginning in World War I and continuing into the 1950s and early 1960s, it was a flophouse for Skid Row veterans. In the mid-80’s it was converted into artists’ studios.
• • The N.Y. Times concluded: "Despite this colorful past, the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission denied landmark status to the building, finding that it did not have sufficient historical, cultural, or architectural merit."
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml

Add to Google

• • Photo • Mae West was interviewed about reprising the role of "Diamond Lil" for the silver screen [1934] • Suicide Hall in 2004

Mae West.

Tuesday, February 21, 2006

Mae: Star Sapphire


Shhh, it's a secret! Most of all MAE WEST loved diamonds. But she also had a sweet spot for sapphires. Here are some pieces the blue-eyed actress owned.
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photo • Mae West owned this jewelry

Mae West.

Sunday, February 19, 2006

The Night Mae Met Oscar

On Sunday March 5th, 2006 - - as the world waits to see which stars will take the golden statuette home - - here's an Oscar moment from the past.

• • Never nominated for an Oscar nor any other entertainment award, Mae West was invited in 1958 to open the ceremony with Rock Hudson.
• • It's an Academy tradition to begin each telecast with a musical medley. The 1958 medley climaxed with 33-year-old Rock Hudson and 64-year-old Mae West singing "Baby, It's Cold Outside." As they concluded the number, Rock offered Mae a cigarette, noting that it was "king-sized" - - and Mae replied, "Mmmm, it's not the men in your life, it's the life in your men!"
• • They ended with a long, slow, passionate kiss.
• • The Mae West - Rock Hudson number lived on. Years ago, bootleg recordings of it were circulated.
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photo • Mae West with Rock Hudson 1958

Mae West.

Friday, February 17, 2006

Take Mae West Home with You

Here's an opportunity to bring movie star Mae West to your home.
• • Ableauctions.com (AMEX: AAC), through their subsidiary iCollector.com, will host the Movieland Wax Museum auction for Asset Reliance, Inc. on 11 March 2006 in Buena Park, California.

• • This event offers the chance to own one lifesize figure or more - - MAE WEST, Marilyn Monroe, Bob Hope, Bing Crosby, the Little Rascals, "StarTrek" crew members, or Burt Reynolds.
• • Asset Reliance and the Movieland Wax Museum will also auction movie props, wax figures, autographed celebrity photos, etc.
• • In 1962, Movieland Wax Museum opened and showcased nearly 300 wax figures [the largest wax museum in the United States] for 43 years. About 10 million visitors passed through the exhibitions. On October 31, 2006 they closed and were replaced by an entertainment centre and pizza parlor.
• • Asset Reliance offers more details about this sale:
• • • Auction info: www.icollector.com
• • • Auction catalog: http://www.liveauctions.ebay.com/catalogs/18808
• • • Auction contact: Karen Grace 604-521-3369
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photo • Mae West dressed for her role in "She Done Him Wrong"

Mae West.

Wednesday, February 15, 2006

Mae West: Convict 1927

Former felon Dewitt Gilmore, 41, served time in the Groveland Correctional Facility [Sonyea, NY] as well as in a federal prison in New Jersey for check-cashing fraud. Using his "street cred" to break into publishing, Gilmore penned several novels about life behind bars and recently inked a four-book-deal with St. Martin's Press for a sum "in the low six figures," he said. Large publishing house are rubbing their hands together anticipating the profits from a "surging interest in street lit" in February 2006.
• • Once again it must be said: Mae West was ahead of her time.

In 1927 she spent the night of February 9th incarcerated in Jefferson Market Prison, held in a cell with prostitutes, addicts, and pickpockets. After a trial at Jefferson Market Court, she was found guilty and sentenced to the Women's Workhouse for ten days in April 1927. [The Warden shaved off two days for good behavior.]
• • Mae was paid $1,000 to write about her experiences for a women's magazine. Some of her essay appears here. [Mae donated the $1,000 to the workhouse to establish a library for female inmates.]
• • Released from the lock-up, Mae told reporters she had enough material for several plays. In April 1928, the actress opened on Broadway at the Royale Theatre playing a "kept woman" with an unsavoury past and a jailbird lover named Chick. Set in a saloon on the Bowery, her play "Diamond Lil" became a novel and a Hollywood film [retitled "She Done Him Wrong"]. Mae West, a star with "street cred"!
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photo • Mae West, convicted felon 1927

Mae West.

Sunday, February 12, 2006

Mae West: Ruby Ring

In March 1921, Mae West mailed to the Library of Congress her playscript: "The Ruby Ring." At 20 pages, this manuscript was more of an extended "sketch" than a play. Gloria, the female lead, is a mantrap who is able to pick the gents off with ease. Her parents were living in Woodhaven in 1921 [705 Boyd Avenue] and Mae used this address when she registered the copyright.

• • In 1922, 29-year-old Mae added a full-length play — — "The Hussy" — — to these Washington, DC archives.
Nona, the female lead, likes generous fellows who demonstrate their devotion to a gal by dropping jewelry on her.
• • Nona: "Most men value you by what they spend on you."
• • Joking that she was never a
gold-digger, Mae liked to say: "I take diamonds. We may be off the gold standard someday."
• • Coming up is Valentine's Day. Rubies, anyone? [Mmmm, I wish, I wish!]

________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photo • Mae West owned this ring

Mae West.

Wednesday, February 08, 2006

Mae West: "Broadway After Dark"

Journalist and dramatist Ward Morehouse used to write a newspaper column "Broadway After Dark" that sometimes mentioned a rowdy comedienne MAE WEST. Truthfully, he didn't appreciate the actress very much.
• • So it's quite a thrill to report that the critic's son, Ward Morehouse III, came up to see the party celebrating the Mae West episode on "Dead Famous" [broadcast on January 31st and February 4th on A&E] and this is what he wrote in his column "Broadway After Dark" [The Epoch Times, 6 February 2006, p. 8]:
• • • • Pop singer EJ vamped it up with a rendition of "Frankie and Johnny" and a couple of Cole Porter favorites the next evening at BILL'S GAY NINETIES, a former Manhattan speakeasy on East 54th Street, where
dramatist LindaAnn Loschiavo, whose play on the legendary American film star Mae West is being produced later this year, threw a party
for The Biography Channel's program on Mae West which aired twice - - on January 31st and February 4th, 2006. • • • •
Source:www.TheEpochTimes.com
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photo

Mae West.

Monday, February 06, 2006

Mae West Says Merci!

On 31 January 2006 one giftbag was photographed.

Each adult who attended the MAE WEST/ "DEAD FAMOUS" press party took home a combo of different hair products by JOICO.
• • Everyone received these goodies: Dewar's 12-year-old scotch, Jane Iredale's LipKit, Sampar's Face Peel, and Nat Sherman's premium cigarettes.
• • Thank you to our wonderful product sponsors!
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photo of giftbag on 31 January 2006 at Bill's Gay Nineties

Mae West.

Thursday, February 02, 2006

Spend Feb. 4th with Mae

Spend Saturday 4 February 2006 with Mae on cable TV.
• • Millinery and mustaches give that "Diamond Lil" look at Bill's Gay Nineties, where la bella gente have a passion for fashion.

• • • • MEDIA ADVISORY • • • •
• • WHAT: DEAD FAMOUS: GHOSTLY ENCOUNTERS. Each week, hosts Gail Porter, a self-confessed skeptic, and Chris Fleming, a psychic able to detect paranormal events beyond the range of five senses, set off to investigate reported sightings of legendary figures such as Mae West [or James Dean, Lucille Ball, Jim Morrison, or Marilyn Monroe]. Part travelogue, part "X-Files," DEAD FAMOUS: GHOSTLY ENCOUNTERS explores the beloved locales of the world's most famous departed to unveil the real story of their lives... after their deaths.
• • WHEN: Tuesday evening 31 January 2006 [10:00pm ET]; episode repeats Saturday 4 February [2:00pm ET].
• • WHERE: A&E's Biography Channel [TVPG].
• • WHO: Psychic Chris Fleming, Gail Porter, LindaAnn Loschiavo, Joe Franklin, Ward Morehouse III, psychic Terry Iacuzzo, Conrad Bradford, along with several Mae West fans and friends.
• • WEB: http://MaeWest.blogspot.com
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photos from 31 January 2006 at Bill's Gay Nineties

Mae West.

Only a MAE Away at Bill's Gay 90s

Come up and see Mae 4 February 2006 on A&E's Biography Channel.
• • A press party at Bill's Gay Nineties on 31 January celebrated the MAE WEST episode on "DEAD FAMOUS" with some live wires.

• • Electrifying E.J. vamped it up with a rendition of "Frankie and Johnny" [brought to Broadway in 1928 by Mae West in "Diamond Lil"] and a couple of Cole Porter favorites.
• • Mustaches printed in 1940 by vaudevillian Bill Hardy [original owner of the world-famous nightspot at 57 East 54th Street that opened in 1930] made for mischievous photo opps.


• • Broadcast legend Joe Franklin came up to see Mae, his old friend, and left with a big contest prize - - thanks to his knowledge of Mae nostalgia - - as well as a giftbag loaded with Dewar's 12-year-old Scotch Whiskey, Nat Sherman's cigarettes, and beautiful products courtesy of Joico, Sampar, and Jane Iredale.
• • Spend Saturday with Mae on cable TV.
• • • • MEDIA ADVISORY • • • •
• • WHAT: DEAD FAMOUS: GHOSTLY ENCOUNTERS. Each week, hosts Gail Porter, a self-confessed skeptic, and Chris Fleming, a psychic able to detect paranormal events beyond the range of five senses, set off to investigate reported sightings of legendary figures such as Mae West [or James Dean, Lucille Ball, Jim Morrison, or Marilyn Monroe]. Part travelogue, part "X-Files," DEAD FAMOUS: GHOSTLY ENCOUNTERS explores the beloved locales of the world's most famous departed to unveil the real story of their lives... after their deaths.
• • WHEN: Tuesday evening 31 January 2006 [10:00pm ET]; episode repeats Saturday 4 February [2:00pm ET].
• • WHERE: A&E's Biography Channel [TVPG].
• • WHO: Psychic Chris Fleming, Gail Porter, LindaAnn Loschiavo, Joe Franklin, Ward Morehouse III, psychic Terry Iacuzzo, Conrad Bradford, along with several Mae West fans and friends.
• • WEB: http://MaeWest.blogspot.com
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photos from 31 January 2006 at Bill's Gay Nineties

Mae West.

Tuesday, January 31, 2006

2 Ways to Come Up & See Mae


January's chill is merely a MAE away.
• • An exciting press party is in progress in midtown Manhattan that will provide a climax to the month of January Mae West would approve of. Members of the media and the blonde bombshell's friends are celebrating the Mae West episode on "Dead Famous" with outstanding refreshments, live entertainment, and a luxury-lover's giftbag [Retail Value: $125].
• • You, too, can come up and see Mae tonight and on Saturday by tuning in for A&E's Biography Channel series "Dead Famous: Ghostly Encounters." You must come over!
• • • • MEDIA ADVISORY • • • •
• • WHAT: DEAD FAMOUS: GHOSTLY ENCOUNTERS. Each week, hosts Gail Porter, a self-confessed skeptic, and Chris Fleming, a psychic able to detect paranormal events beyond the range of five senses, set off to investigate reported sightings of legendary figures such as Mae West [or James Dean, Lucille Ball, Jim Morrison, or Marilyn Monroe]. Part travelogue, part "X-Files," DEAD FAMOUS: GHOSTLY ENCOUNTERS explores the beloved locales of the world's most famous departed to unveil the real story of their lives... after their deaths.
• • WHEN: Tuesday evening 31 January 2006 [10:00pm ET]; episode repeats Saturday 4 February.
• • WHERE: A&E's Biography Channel [TVPG].
• • WHO: Psychic Chris Fleming, Gail Porter, LindaAnn Loschiavo, Joe Franklin, Ward Morehouse III, psychic Terry Iacuzzo, Conrad Bradford, along with several Mae West fans and friends.
• • WEB: http://MaeWest.blogspot.com
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Illustration: Mae West during her stage career

Mae West.

Sunday, January 29, 2006

Mae West: Songbird & Giftbags End January


Singer-composer ERIN JIVIDEN will perform a few covers once associated with MAE WEST as well as a smattering of classic Cole Porter at a chic press party that celebrates the MAE WEST episode being broadcast on The Biography Channel 31 January 2006 [repeated on Saturday 4 February 2006].
• • Formerly a SONY recording artist, the blonde beauty is currently signed to BonGiovi Entertainment Records. This multi-talented musician has released four albums, has written a Broadway musical "The Skye Is Falling" with Ward Morehouse III [wardmorehouseiii.com], and is studying acting with Terry Schreiber.
• • Guests will leave the party with more than memories. The luxury-lover's giftbag [Retail Value: $125] will contain SAMPAR Equalizing Foam Peel (to make wrinkles fade away before your eyes and revitalize your complexion) • • JOICO's unique Hair Protection System (which is known as the K-PAK Collection, a trio that leaves hair looking and feeling salon treated) • • Jane Iredale's new LipKit (which gives you six miniature glosses in her top selling colors and a lip plumper). Special thanks to the wonderful folks at Pierce Mattie Public Relations.
• • All the more reason to come up and see Mae for a hot time in January!

• • • • MEDIA ADVISORY • • • •
• • WHAT: DEAD FAMOUS: GHOSTLY ENCOUNTERS. Each week, hosts Gail Porter, a self-confessed skeptic, and Chris Fleming, a psychic able to detect paranormal events beyond the range of five senses, set off to investigate reported sightings of legendary figures such as Mae West [or James Dean, Lucille Ball, Jim Morrison, or Marilyn Monroe]. Part travelogue, part "X-Files," DEAD FAMOUS: GHOSTLY ENCOUNTERS explores the beloved locales of the world's most famous departed to unveil the real story of their lives... after their deaths.
• • WHEN: Tuesday evening 31 January 2006 [10:00pm ET].
• • WHERE: The Biography Channel [TVPG].
• • WHO: Psychic Chris Fleming, Gail Porter, LindaAnn Loschiavo, Joe Franklin, Ward Morehouse III, Conrad Bradford, along with several Mae West fans and friends.
• • WEB: http://MaeWest.blogspot.com
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photo: Erin Jividen

Mae West.

Monday, January 23, 2006

Mae West on TV: January 31st

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

New York Playwright Invites You to Come Up & See Mae
The Blonde Bombshell Reappears January 31st on A&E's Biography Channel


New York, NY: Come up and see Mae on Tuesday January 31, 2006 in a special hour-long episode broadcast by A&E's Biography Channel [10:00pm ET]. New York dramatist LindaAnn Loschiavo, whose play "Courting Mae West" will be in a theatre later this year, was tapped by the TV crew to co-star in this hour-long presentation and select the locations central to Mae's days.
• • Since "Courting Mae West" is based on true events during the 1920s when the Brooklyn bombshell was arrested and jailed on obscenity charges, Loschiavo focused on East Coast addresses for this TV episode, some of which are spotlighted in her play.

* * * On the Streets Where Mae Sashayed * * *

Footage was filmed at several locations familiar to Mae West fans:
* * * 62 West 9th Street [now Stephen Lyle's Village Restaurant], an Italian-French eatery known as Paul & Joe's during the early 1920s, a favorite of heavyweight champion Jack Dempsey who introduced it to Mae;
* * * Jefferson Market on Sixth Avenue at 9th Street, the 19th century courthouse where Mae was on trial several times during 1927-1929 [now a dilapidated library, where worn limestone bits pelt pedestrians];
* * * Cypress Hills Cemetery in Brooklyn, where it took the magic wand of Boro President Marty Markowitz to open the creaky pearly gates for the TV cameras;
* * * 57 East 54th Street, Bill's Gay Nineties, where Mae toasted her vaudeville and Broadway buddies; and other locales.
• • When Mae wasn't occupied with a play or a film, some of her favorite activities were organizing a séance, consulting a psychic at Lily Dale Assembly, or penning a book about ESP. Her passion for the paranormal led her to take part in séances organized by Texas Guinan at Manhattan hotels or backstage at the Royale Theatre [242 West 45th Street], before matinee performances of "Diamond Lil" and "The Constant Sinner."
• • On August 17th, 2005, a birthday gala for Mae in a haunted mansion had featured a séance attended by Loschiavo along with those who knew Mae such as TV legend Joe Franklin. The TV crew recreated this séance, led by psychic Chris Fleming, who connected with some of the entities therein, playing peek-a-boo in hand-held light.
• • Before the TV episode airs, a special press party in Manhattan will announce this. Media and press photographers are welcome to attend.
• • Sponsorship opportunities are available.

• • • • MEDIA ADVISORY • • • •
• • WHAT: DEAD FAMOUS: GHOSTLY ENCOUNTERS. Each week, hosts Gail Porter, a self-confessed skeptic, and Chris Fleming, a psychic able to detect paranormal events beyond the range of five senses, set off to investigate reported sightings of legendary figures such as Mae West [or James Dean, Lucille Ball, Jim Morrison, or Marilyn Monroe]. Part travelogue, part "X-Files," DEAD FAMOUS: GHOSTLY ENCOUNTERS explores the beloved locales of the world's most famous departed to unveil the real story of their lives... after their deaths.
• • WHEN: Tuesday evening 31 January 2006 [10:00pm ET].
• • WHERE: The Biography Channel [TVPG].
• • WHO: Psychic Chris Fleming, Gail Porter, LindaAnn Loschiavo, Joe Franklin, Conrad Bradford, along with several Mae West fans and friends.
• • WEB: http://MaeWest.blogspot.com
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photo: Mae West

Mae West.

Sunday, January 22, 2006

Mae in Her Heyday

Australian writer Joel Greenberg discusses the last biography of Mae West in this article, "Mae in motion"
[published 21 Jan 2006]:

• • • • Mae West: It Ain't No Sin • • • •
By Simon Louvish [Faber & Faber, 491pp, 2005]

I ONCE had the opportunity to observe Mae West at close range. At 82, standing beside the 101-year-old Adolph Zukor, founder of Paramount Pictures, she was the main attraction at a 1975 Hollywood studio function marking the end of shooting of a deservedly forgotten film, Won Ton Ton, the Dog Who Saved Hollywood. Althoughs eemingly well preserved, her physical components - - hair, eyelashes, teeth, bosom - - looked as though they owed more to art than nature, giving her the appearance of a slightly animated waxwork. Yet this was a woman who had created her own legend, who in her heyday was, as she justly claims in her 1959 memoirs, "the most famous and popular motion picture star in the world". And, she might have added, the most notorious, largely responsible for the 1934 tightening of the Motion Picture Production Code that kept American films straitjacketed in hypocrisy and immaturity for the next 30-odd years.

• • As Simon Louvish points out in this latest biography, West's career as an important movie star was quite brief (1932-37) and began when she was in her 40s, having been preceded by years of trouping in vaudeville and burlesque and on the legitimate stage.
• • What Louvish fails to mention is that she was half-Jewish and thus part of that extraordinary generation of American entertainers who came to prominence in early 20th-century New York and included Sophie Tucker, Fanny Brice, George Burns, and the Marx Brothers.
• • Born in 1893 and debuting on stage in 1911, West took some time to develop her unique persona, modelled in part on such stars as Eva Tanguay but with an in-your-face sexuality all her own. By the time she'd written and starred in such plays as Sex and Diamond Lil, and served eight days of a 10-day jail sentence for obscenity in 1927, she'd perfected the slow libidinous drawl, sensual slouch and suggestive double-entendre repartee that became her trademarks.
• • The amazing makeover job done on her appearance by Paramount when she entered films in 1932 transformed what Louvish aptly calls "a somewhat dumpy, short and almost nondescript figure" into a platinum-blonde glamour queen, banishing her double chin, downplaying her generous physical proportions and concealing her unlovely legs beneath floor-length gowns.
• • An instant screen hit, West was by 1934 America's highest-paid performer, earning $US399,166 a year, with her films, most of which she also wrote or co-wrote, box office smashes everywhere.
• • Today, like those of her contemporaries Greta Garbo and Marlene Dietrich, they've achieved a fresh lease of life on DVD, their pictorial beauty stunningly restored.
• • West was more than just a movie star, however. A pioneer women's liberationist, she defiantly asserted their claim to sexual equality with men, proclaiming in her memoirs: "The one departure I have made from the average citizen's way of life has been personal and sexual, and here I have only done openly what comes naturally; I have never felt myself a sinner, or committed what I would call sin." For her, the double standard, not sex, was the real obscenity.
• • Her film vogue more or less over by the 1940s, West dabbled in spiritualism and invested shrewdly in property, furs, and jewels. She also resumed her stage career with a successful revival of Diamond Lil and an idiosyncratic Westian take on Catherine the Great. Following the example of Dietrich, she debuted in Las Vegas in 1954 with a chorus-line of muscle-men, an act she subsequently toured throughout the US.
• • She did appear in two more films before her death at 87 in 1980, the bizarre Myra Breckinridge (1970) and the inept Sextette (1976), but by then she had become grotesque, a campy joke.
• • Louvish has had the advantage of access to a recently opened archive of West memorabilia held at Los Angeles' Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, which includes manuscripts of her plays, some previously unknown, and 2000 pages of jokes she assiduously collected for future use (many of her most celebrated quips were not strictly original).
• • While these documents help Louvish flesh out his portrait, they ultimately add little to what we already know. For me, the best Mae West biography remains Maurice Leonard's 1991 Empress of Sex.
• • "Mae in Motion"
• • by: Joel Greenberg
• • © The Australian 21 Jan 2006
- - - From http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/ - - - ________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photo: Mae West

Mae West.

Saturday, January 21, 2006

No Worse There Is None


The death of 59-year-old Matilda West "was a staggering blow," admitted Mae, who was inconsolable. Born in December 1870 in Bavaria, Matilda died in an apartment at 95 Euclid Avenue, Brooklyn, perhaps being nursed there by relatives. [Matilda and Jack owned a house on 88th Street in Woodhaven, Queens at the time.]
• • On 27 January 1930 Mae West attended the funeral.
• • Gangster Owney Madden waits for her by the door of the sedan, wearing a dark topcoat with a Persian lamb collar.
________________________________
Source:http://maewest.blogspot.com/atom.xml
Add to Google

• • Photo: 27 January 1930 Mae West, leaving the funeral parlor

Mae West.