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Post by I Love Melvin on Apr 26, 2023 14:49:02 GMT
I'm using the term "old-school" because there doesn't seem to be much of it these days. Jinkx Monsoon, a winner of RuPaul's Drag Race and a season of Drag Race All-Stars, has won challenges impersonating Judy Garland, Little Edie Beale from Grey Gardens and....I love it...Natasha Lyonne, but that's an exception in an age when most drag performers concentrate on recording artists, if there is even any impersonation involved at all. But there was a time when female impersonators were able to make careers out of lovingly (usually) skewering larger-than-life actresses such as Bette Davis, Tallulah Bankhead and Mae West for audiences of (but not exclusively) gay men who were well versed in movie lore and history. It wasn't an easy evolution; to begin with they were generally faced with local laws either forbidding men from wearing women's clothing or limiting the number of items they could wear. So the earliest impersonators were often doing it in male attire, which made it all the more important that the impersonations be good. Arthur BlakeArthur Blake was the earliest one I was ever aware of, and that was basically near the end of his career, when he had a seasonal semi-residency at a local club. But there was a time when the field was nearly his alone, though fame was of course relative, since it involved mostly word of mouth about appearances in small local venues. There's not a lot I can share by way of example. At one point he issued an album, which I've never been able to track down. There's an interesting but very brief clip of his appearance in a Tyrone Power movie, Diplomatic Courier (1952), where he's performing at a club where Power goes for a meeting. Notice that he's in formal men's dress, with some embellishments, because of...well..1952.Here's an appearance on Gloria Swanson's radio show. He doesn't do any of his act but it's a nice discussion about what he did as well as about some others who were doing it at the time. Gloria is such a great host that it makes me see her in a whole new way.I wish I could go back in time and see the Jayne Mansfield Las Vegas act The House of Love, in which he appeared in 1962. His impersonations were worked periodically into the show and he interacted with Jayne as a variety of characters, including Louella Parsons, Bette Davis, etc. This clip of Bette Davis impressions includes an excerpt from that album I mentioned, as well as others whom I intend to cover here as well.Next up: T. C. Jones.
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Post by I Love Melvin on Apr 26, 2023 18:48:09 GMT
T. C. JonesT. C. Jones came to the attention of the general public in 1956 when he did hosting duties as Tallulah Bankhead in New Faces of 1956 in New York, a follow-up to the successful New Faces of 1952. In 1958 he appeared in the revue Mask and Gown, in which he toured nationally. He began his career doing celebrity impersonations in the late 1940's, working in nightclubs, particularly in Miami's Jewel Box Revue, where he perfected a lot of his act. He also appeared in Las Vegas lounges and at select West Coast venues. He died of cancer at about age 50 in 1971, so he unfortunately missed out on the kind of audience the new "gay liberation" movement was making possible. I came across his 1961 live album at a yard sale in the 1970's and still treasure it; it's one of the few existing records of his work.
From that live recording at The Crescendo on Sunset Strip, here's a clever skit satirizing Louella Parsons' sycophantic promotion of her boss' mistress, Marion Davies. "Marion never looked lovelier."He also reprised parts of his Tallulah impersonation from New Faces, giving it a more "adult" spin. "I could have sworn that was the right key" cracks me up every time. Also the hilariously rude "I'm sorry to be late but we stopped at the motel for a something to eat".The act also included a rather unusual choice, Shelley Winters, applying her "Method" style to "How Did He Look?".As I mentioned, there's not a lot on record beside these few recordings. He did some movie and television work, appearing in male roles in Promises, Promises (1963) with Jayne Mansfield and in 3 Nuts in Search of a Bolt (1964) with Mamie Van Doren. If you've ever seen the Monkees movie Head (1968) he played the diner waitress who ripped off the wig in frustration after a scene with the boys. Wiki has an Ed Sullivan appearance to his credit but I can't find any evidence of it; it wasn't until later decades when this type of performer was regularly featured on TV, as can be seen with performers whose careers lasted into the 1970's, 80's and beyond.Next up: Lynne Carter.
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Post by topbilled on Apr 27, 2023 4:01:04 GMT
This is an interesting topic. Thanks for posting some of those clips.
Are there any notable examples of women impersonating male icons?
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Post by I Love Melvin on Apr 27, 2023 13:19:52 GMT
This is an interesting topic. Thanks for posting some of those clips.
Are there any notable examples of women impersonating male icons? I know that there's been a "drag king" scene, particularly centered in San Francisco, since the 1940's and 50's, but I don't know of particular performers who specialized in the kind of thing we're talking about here, impersonating icons. Male impersonation in general has the same kind of long history that female impersonation does, mostly in a theatrical setting. Interestingly, the earliest examples of both which made their way to American audiences seem to have originated in England. American vaudeville in the early part of the Twentieth Century allowed for both males as females and females as males, but it was more as niche "filler" segments rather than as headliners. If anyone has more information on this question, I hope you'll post about it here. The first thing which came to my mind was the character which Lily Tomlin created, Tommy Velour, who was more a "type" than a specific impersonation of an individual. She resurrected the character occasionally, including an appearance on Letterman and this fun salute to Elizabeth Taylor during her televised birthday celebration. And I can't not include the brilliant Christine Pedi, who does vocal impressions of female icons (mostly from musical theater), but is a rare example of a woman specializing in this kind of thing. EDIT: I'm adding this at a later point because it's somewhat related to the idea of women impersonating men. Debbie Reynolds was a fantastic mimic and often showed it off on TV talk shows. In this 1996 interview with Larry King she speaks about it and when Larry asks if she ever imitated men, she came up with Liberace and, of all people, Barry Fitzgerald. LATER EDIT: I just came across this clip of Carol Channing doing a very amusing impersonation of Marlene Dietrich, so I want to add it to the mix. The source is apparently a 1969 show she did with Pearl Bailey on Broadway, which I'm assuming was later recorded for television.
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Post by I Love Melvin on Apr 27, 2023 17:54:01 GMT
Lynne Carter.Lynne Carter specialized in very precise vocal impersonations combined with a satirical eye as to the personalities and idiosyncrasies of the women he imitated. It won him some friends and allies among those women and at least one foe; Kay Thompson famously threatened to sue him for "appropriating" some of her material but was probably advised to let the matter lie. Pearl Bailey was an early champion who gave him some old wardrobe and his New York Times obituary reported that Josephine Baker at one time dispatched taxi-loads of designer gowns to him. He originally focused on being a dancer but his talent for mimicry won the day when friends encouraged him to put it all into an act. He played in small clubs nationwide and built up enough of a reputation to be the first female impersonator to play Carnegie Hall in 1971. In the late 1960's he had what would now be called a "residency" at the Madeira Room in Provincetown, where I first got to see him. His Marlene Dietrich was particularly memorable as he continually harkened back to glory days while dealing with an increasingly less resilient face and body. (Not as harsh as it might seem since Marlene at the time was still touring well past her prime.) "You remember the War, don't you? It was in all the papers." Lynne died in 1985 of pneumonia and complications from AIDS and, as I mentioned, The New York Times carried his obituary.
As I was contemplating this particular entry I wasn't expecting to find much that would represent his talent, but in recent years there have been some new postings on YouTube, for which I'm grateful, both for the sake of anyone reading this but also for my own sake because I get to experience him again after all these years. I'm assuming Emerald City TV was an early cable show. This is partly an interview with Lynne, interspersed with performance clips from a recent show. I especially love Hermione Gingold, as hilarious as it is unexpected. And the Marlene I remember is there too. I'm so glad to be able to show at least some of what he could do live. It's news to me but Lynne appeared in a low-budget spy spoof, The Man from O.R.G.Y. (1970), which I'll include because it's mercifully brief.Like the others mentioned above, Lynne released an album on a small independent label. This one primarily features Pearl Bailey. I'll post it in its entirety because that's the only form in which it's available, so anyone can listen to as little or as much as they care to.Finally, I want to post this picture which somehow found a home on the internet. It must have been in the early 1970's and shows, left to right, Craig Russell, Lynne Carter, Arthur Blake and Charles Pierce in Provincetown, which is like the Yalta Conference of female impersonators, the best of the best and the last remaining. Up next: Charles Pierce.
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Post by I Love Melvin on Apr 28, 2023 14:35:50 GMT
Charles Pierce.
Charles Pierce was in some ways in a class by himself and, to many of his fans, he was the best ever. He was as much a stand-up comedian as a female impersonator and his impressions were done in very broad strokes. He felt more free than some others to color outside the lines and the characterizations could closely border on the ridiculous, while still maintaining the semblance of his subject. I've talked to people who were offended by the way, say, Bette Davis was overexaggerated by female impersonators, with the constant gesturing and staccato puffing of cigarettes, and chances are they were thinking of Charles. Add to that the fact that other impersonators tended to adopt his mannerisms, so that they became commonplace. Humorous caricature rather than slavish interpretation was his goal and, judging from audience response, he met it. He also tended to work a little bluer than some of his contemporaries, but never really crossed the line into vulgarity. He insistently referred to himself as a "male actress" and apparently hated the term drag queen (for himself).
I mentioned earlier that some impersonators started in male attire out of necessity and that was true of Charles, who first worked in a tuxedo, but as laws and attitudes changed out came the gowns and wigs. At first he frequented second-hand stores (and I imagine that Los Angeles thrift stores were a treasure trove) but later upped the glamor quotient by adding specially constructed costumes. He was well known in New York City venues but he was based mostly on the West Coast, San Francisco specifically, and was a fixture at many gay and gay-friendly clubs in the area. In the late 1960's he released an album of his set at Bimbo's, a popular San Francisco club, and that's how I first became aware of him. On that recording he joked that his high school guidance counselor had told him "I've seen you in the halls, Charlie, and you're a female impersonator". Bette Davis is on record as favoring Arthur Blake, but Charles made friends of some of the women he parodied, including Carol Channing and Joan Collins, and his friendship with Dixie Carter led to his appearance on Designing Women. I saw him once live when he came out of semi-retirement to participate in an "all star" performance for Stonewall 25 in 1994. He died in 1999 at age 72 and is buried in Forest Lawn Cemetery in Los Angeles, which seems appropriate.
If you've seen Torch Song Trilogy (1988) you've seen Charles, as one of Harvey Fierstein's fellow club performers. Their number "Dames" is a stand-out, with Charles getting off some of his typical one-liners. That clip used to be on YouTube but has apparently been removed, so sorry. In recent years there's been a book detailing some of his experiences and collecting some of his best material. A number of videos of his live performances have begun to surface on TouTube, so anyone interested should browse away. I'll post a couple here. His complete Dorothy Chandler Pavillion performance is represented on YouTube and I'll include this clip of his kind of Looney Tunes Mae West. This illustrates the point that he was as much standup comedian as female impersonator. Take note of the musicians cracking up. That's when you know you've got 'em.And a 1981 interview with a somewhat befuddled but game Dick Cavett. As I mentioned earlier, we're finally getting to the era when there's a television record of these performers. And, finally, a complete live show from 1987, intended for home video. Charles always managed to stay current, as in the Dynasty-era Joan Collins impersonation and the references to Vanna White and Donna Mills. He starts as "himself" but soon trots out Katharine Hepburn, Bette Davis, etc. It's long-ish but he was in good form and it's a good print. Notice Lucille Ball having a good time in the audience.Next up: Craig Russell.
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Post by I Love Melvin on Apr 30, 2023 14:39:56 GMT
Craig Russell.
Craig Russell is a tough one to write about because of his habit of getting in the way of his own career. As the career took off in the 1970's, so did the popularity and availability of cocaine and that became a factor in his drift away from reliability and from commitment to his craft. Not an uncommon story during that era. But he burned very bright for a long while and became an international success along the way. He performed frequently in a local club so I had the opportunity to watch him perfect his act and workshop new characters and ideas. Like Charles Pierce, he had the ability to improvise, sometimes radically, while still in character, riffing the way a stand-up comic might when he (or she) is on a roll. As well as the impersonations, another strong suit was his singing, particularly as Peggy Lee and Judy Garland, a feat not a lot of the others even attempted to pull off.
Craig was Canadian and as a teenager formed a Mae West fan club, which led to a correspondence with Mae and then, as a young adult, a stint as her personal assistant. He eventually returned to Toronto and worked a hairdresser, later turning his talent as a mimic into gigs at local clubs and finally into a vocation. His reputation was boosted tremendously by starring in a Canadian independent film, Outrageous!, in 1977, which won him a Best Actor award at the Berlin Film Festival, which definitely made him an international draw. The film leans heavily on his drag show performances but it's also hard-hitting in it's portrayal of his character's deep friendship with a schizophrenic young woman. In his personal life he married and fathered a daughter but still continued to publicly identify as gay. He and his wife remained married until his death in 1990 from an AIDS-related stroke. A decade after the first film he appeared in Too Outrageous (1987), which wasn't particularly successful but managed to boost the career of a new talent, Jimmy James, who went on to have probably the furthest reach into public consciousness of any of those covered so far. The latter part of Craig's career petered out somewhat quickly, especially after a performance when he essentially turned on the audience. For anyone interested, there's an hour-long Canadian television program about him on YouTube, with lots of details about his life and interviews with people who knew him. But the relatively ignominious end shouldn't cloud the brilliance of what he was able to achieve at his height.
There's an extended sequence in Outrageous! (1977) which gives a good overview of his talent and range. He does many of his standard impersonations, as well as throwing in Bette Midler. He wasn't afraid to try new characters and their popularity with his audience seemed to determine which stayed and which fell by the wayside. Sorry, but YouTube wouldn't allow some of these clips to be embedded; if you click the link "Watch on YouTube" on each screen, it will take you to the clip.And here's a scene as Mae West from the same movie.From one of his later live shows, he uses Carol Channing to channel other characters doing Hello Dolly.And another cast of characters from one of his concert shows. As his fame grew so did the size of some of the venues and that afforded him the luxury of an onstage band. Like Charles Pierce he could play fast and loose with some of his characters and the exact impersonation could sometimes take a back seat to playful ad-libbing. It could be risky but it often worked well.Next up: Randy Allen.
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Post by I Love Melvin on Apr 30, 2023 16:36:45 GMT
Randy Allen.
This one will be unfortunately brief because so was his life and career, but chronologically this would be the right place for him. Randy was a "theater kid" from Indiana who studied music and theater in London and received a degree in directing from the University of Southern California. He slowly built a career as a female impersonator, doing characters such as Judy Garland, Liza Minnelli and Marilyn Monroe. But he had his greatest success when he built an act called P.S. Bette Davis, as in Post Stroke Bette Davis. Bette's stroke changed the public perception of her, especially after her recovery when she hit the talk show circuit, somewhat slurring her words but as feisty as ever and brandishing an amazing wardrobe of colorful hats and outfits. She became something equally as specific as pre-stroke Bette and Randy did a great job of impersonating her in a one-man show, in which I was lucky enough to see him for the only time. Randy died at age 38 in 1995 of complications from AIDS, like so many performers, known and unknown, of his generation. Luckily, a clip from a talk show appearance with Joan Rivers has recently shown up on You Tube, so you'll be able to get a taste of what Randy could do. Just for reference, here's Bette herself during that period.Next up: Jimmy James.
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Post by I Love Melvin on May 1, 2023 14:33:44 GMT
Jim Bailey. I'm taking a slight detour here and will get back to Jimmy James next. I was originally going to save Jim Bailey for an honorable mention section since his specialty was singers, not actresses, so he doesn't quite fit the category. His act was basically done in concert format, with between-song patter but not full impersonations in the sense in which others mentioned have done. But his talent was so undeniable and his reputation so strong that it only seems fair to put him here in a place of honor. Jim captured the public's fancy in a way which none of the others have done, earning him many television appearances, including the Ed Sullivan Show, the holy grail for performers in any category.
Jim studied opera as a teenager and the intense vocal training helped him later in life when he was able to accurately capture the voices of some of the greatest singers of the Twentieth Century. By the late 1960's he'd become a headliner in most of the biggest Las Vegas hotels and began to appear on concert stages around the world. In total, he played Carnegie Hall 9 times and The London Palladium 17 times, as well as appearances at Super Bowl XII as Barbra Streisand and at the 1984 Winter Olympics opening ceremony. Not bad for a kid from Philadelphia and New Jersey. He may not have been quite a household name, but in the field of entertainment his was a name to be reckoned with. He became friends with some of his subjects and once brought Judy Garland herself up from the audience to sing a duet with him onstage in Los Angeles. Phyllis Diller also befriended him and she became one of his few non-singing impersonations. In 1973 he teamed with Liza Minnelli in an act at the Flamingo Hotel in Las Vegas duplicating the famous mother-daughter act from the London Palladium in the late 1960's.
After Judy's passing he performed this (unfortunately abbreviated) tribute on The Ed Sullivan Show. Carol Burnett was as charmed and intrigued by him as were many other members of show business and featured him on her show. Here's that Phyllis Diller impersonation, taken from Here's Lucy in 1973. Peggy Lee was a favorite of his and showed up in most every concert.Since his earlier Judy Garland segment was truncated, I'm going to post this as well. Not only did he tackle one of the most iconic singers of the Twentieth Century, he tackled her most iconic song. This is from a Royal Variety Show in 1992, in front of Charles and Diana. Next up: Jimmy James.
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Post by I Love Melvin on May 2, 2023 15:41:51 GMT
Jimmy James.
Of all the performers covered, Jimmy James is the only one still living and still performing. Early in his career he gained world-wide attention for his uncanny impersonation of Marilyn Monroe. Only a few others had been brave enough to even try it but Jimmy went there with a vengeance and it brought him immediate fame. He was in high demand as Marilyn on television talk shows but even on some of the more respected ones there was an air of incredulity and a slight freak show vibe to the way he was presented. In the 1980's AIDS was still at its peak and anything gay-related still had a taint in the public's imagination, so for gay performers it was an uphill battle for acceptance. But Jimmy was offering something so unique and so compelling (A man as Marilyn?) that he broke down some of those barriers. But the process of getting ready to appear on stage as Marilyn was so lengthy and elaborate that by 1997 he declared the end of his "Marilyn Years" and retired the character to concentrate instead of his wide range of vocal characterizations, without the elaborate wigs and costumes. His program had typically been about 20 minutes of Marilyn, his only character performed in full costume and makeup, and then a variety of vocal impersonations done in his everyday androgynous look. Other than Marilyn, he did a few actresses like Bette Davis and Mae West, but the bulk of his show was and is devoted to singers, such as Eartha Kitt, Patsy Cline, Barbra Streisand, Diana Ross and Karen Carpenter, then staying current with later additions like Adele.
Jimmy is originally from San Antonio, Texas and started learning about makeup on his own and then from drag performers in local gay clubs. Before long he could offer tips to them and began to think about where his talent could take him when combined with his ability to mimic voices. He settled on one look, Marilyn, to anchor his act since, amazingly, that for him was the easiest; Garland had been done and Streisand's look took too long to prepare. He played cabaret and small clubs, but his preferred venues were gay dance clubs, where he performed to specially recorded instrumental tracks, an economical alternative to hiring and touring with a band. His association with Marilyn led to his involvement in a couple of ad campaigns, one featured on a billboard in Times Square. Another resulted in an image which was mistakenly used in a collage of actual Marilyn images on an African stamp, showing the exactitude of his photographic likeness. Recently he's been involved in creating a demo reel to interest investors in a film project, The Boy Who Was Marilyn, using his extensive personal library of tapes and video. There's a real story there, covering some of the high and low eras of modern gay history, so I'd like to see it happen.
Here's a delightfully playful appearance as Marilyn on The Joan Rivers Show in 1991. Jimmy's Marilyn had previously tried the playful approach on Geraldo in 1989 but Geraldo was enough of a stiff in general that it didn't have the same impact.Jimmy often got stuck on "panels" of drag performers on TV shows, like this one with Phil Donahue being tolerant of "this kind of thing". But Jimmy was generally smart enough not to take the bait and easily won over the audience.Jimmy's performance career has lasted well beyond "The Marilyn Years" and, even though RuPaul-era drag queens command the biggest stages now, there's still an audience for the specific vocal expertise most of them lack. Here's a more recent clip from a Las Vegas TV station of Jimmy doing some of his most famous vocals.Next up: Lypsinka.
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Post by I Love Melvin on May 6, 2023 14:38:01 GMT
Lypsinka (John Epperson).In terms of the specific category of female impersonation of movie actresses, Lypsinka is a bit of an outlier but certainly an honored member of the fraternity/sorority. John Epperson has crafted such a specific alter-ego that it's his character who has become the entity with public recognition, not himself. Drag and lip synching have gone hand in hand for many years and have almost entirely constituted the repertoire of drag performance, using recordings to create the illusion that the performer is singing. Lypsinka has done that as well, specializing in songs from movie soundtracks by artists like Dolores Gray, who is specifically the inspiration for the mid-century glam costuming and image. But those performances have been supplemented with extended sequences of movie dialogue snippets collaged together, which have become the Lypsinka trademark. For movie fans it's fun figuring out the origins of these bits of dialogue, which rely heavily on, shall we say?, some of the more "expressive" actresses.
John studied piano at an early age in Mississippi and eventually made it a career after he moved to NYC in 1980, becoming a full-time rehearsal pianist with the American Ballet Theater. On his own time he began experimenting with drag and perfected the character throughout the 80's. Eventually his act grew into several full-length solo shows performed in Off-Broadway venues. He became a fixture at the annual Wigstock shows in New York City and has participated in ad campaigns and designer runway shows as his character Lypsinka. He has very smartly carved out a niche for himself where he reigns supreme, though interest in lipsyncing to spoken dialogue has grown and a Dixie Carter speech from Designing Women was a lipsync challenge on a recent season of RuPaul's Drag Race.
This is an early appearance on the Phil Donahue Show in 1990 which consists entirely of lipsyncing to a Kay Thompson song. Again, the way Phil plays up the oddity to his audience bugs me. His "get a load of this" attitude was probably commonplace at the time, but it's still disrespectful.And an appearance on The Joan Rivers Show in 1993, incorporating all the elements, lipsyncing to dialogue and song. Joan was always a good ally.This is a passage from the show "Lypsinka: The Boxed Set", a kind of greatest hits compendium, performed in L. A. in 2001. Glamor fit indeed. it's a good illustration of the basic device Lypsinka used, the telephone calls, to incorporate the dialogue. And a 2018 performance in a show hosted by Drag Race winner Sasha Velour. It also incorporates some of the best of the telephone bits. There are a good number of clips on YouTube, many curated by Lypsinka, so anyone interested can browse further. Particularly recommended: "The Passion of the Crawford".
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Post by Swithin on May 21, 2023 4:54:48 GMT
Vesta Tilley (1869-1920) was a famous male impersonator in her day. On of her best known songs was "Burlington Bertie from Bow," later performed in films by Betty Grable and Julie Andrews, also in male drag. There were and are many drag kings in NYC, and I've met a few of them, most notably Stormé DeLarverie, who is credited with throwing the first punch at Stonewall. Vesta Tilley Stormé DeLarverie
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Post by Swithin on May 21, 2023 4:55:10 GMT
Vesta Tilley (1869-1920) was a famous male impersonator in her day. One of her best known songs was "Burlington Bertie from Bow," later performed in films by Betty Grable and Julie Andrews, also in male drag. There were and are many drag kings in NYC, and I've met a few of them, most notably Stormé DeLarverie, who is credited with throwing the first punch at Stonewall. Vesta Tilley Stormé DeLarverie
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Post by I Love Melvin on Jul 21, 2023 13:41:36 GMT
I've basically exhausted the category I started out with so, keeping with this idea of male impersonation I'd like to post a couple of clips of The Fabulous Dyketones, a band out of Provincetown in the 1980's who specialized in 1950's rock and roll covers. (They liked to call themselves a rock and role band.) They started out their set as themselves, led by lead singer Char, then finished the evening as their male alter-egos, with lead singer Chuckie Linguini. They were a local band for sure, but Provincetown is the kind of place where people come from all over the world, so they became quite well-known that way and had many devoted followers, myself included. The drummer, Brenda, turned out to have quite a voice and later developed a show featuring Patsy Cline songs.
Here they are as their male counterparts playing an event fashioned as a kind of high school prom, but not the Rydell High kind. I still have my Dyke High pennant, part of the band's "merch".
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Post by I Love Melvin on Sept 16, 2023 14:09:45 GMT
Millie De Chirico and TCM Underground both got the chop last year when the great "downsizing" at the network started, but one of the last Slumberground segments she did for the TCM YouTube channel was for the Underground broadcast of All About Alice (1972), a strangely watchable parody of All About Eve done by a West Coast film collaborative who called themselves The Gay Girls Riding Club. They mostly seemed to have some connection to the film industry, so this was probably a natural recreational outlet for them. The Slumberground segment pretty much explains who they were and how prolific they were, considering that they were friends who got together on weekends to do all this. I'd known about the Kuchar Brothers and John Waters on the East Coast but had never had a clue these people ever existed. Obviously, impersonation of female actresses was a big part of these films and, the quality of the impersonations aside, it's important they're now being preserved. Back in high school some friends and I decided on a whim to make our own version of Cleopatra, which at the time was gearing up for release. We got a few things on film but the magnitude of the undertaking got to us, even though we were perfectly happy to be using local marshlands for the Nile, our friend's living room for the palace, etc. It's work in a way we didn't anticipate, which makes what the Gay Girls Riding Club were able to accomplish over decades all the more remarkable to me.
And here's a promo for the restorations.
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