Gypsy Rose Lee & Burlesque’s Allure

Fascinating article about Gypsy, the inspiration for “Gypsy, ” from NPR:

Gypsy Rose Lee was hitting vaudeville stages across the country when she was four years old. By fifteen, she was headlining as a burlesque performer.

Eventually, she became beloved by Eleanor Roosevelt, the New York literati and longshoremen alike. She was described, in that day, as the only woman in the world “with a public body and a private mind, both equally exciting.”

The legend of her life is the stuff of Broadway show and film, in “Gypsy.”

Her patter to the audience as the clothes came off was of sociology, ballet, Van Gogh, Cezanne, Puritans and Noel Coward.

“If Lady Gaga and Dorothy Parker had a secret love child it would have been Gypsy Rose Lee,” says Karen Abbott, author of the new book, American Rose – A Nation Laid Bare: The Life and Times of Gypsy Rose Lee. “The woman knew how to make a dramatic entrance. She would arrive at opening nights at the Met wearing a full length cape made entirely of orchids.”

But the reality of who Gypsy — born Louise Hovick — was can be as hard to get at, as tantalizing concealed, as the end of her dance.

“Gypsy Rose Lee was a brand before branding existed,” Abbott says. “And part of that brand was to laugh at herself. It was a bit of a self defense mechanism but it was also the way she connected with the audience and the idea that if she laughs first nobody else will be laughing at her.  And she wanted the audience to be just as culpable for watching her disrobing as she was for disrobing.”

via Gypsy Rose Lee & Burlesque’s Allure | WBUR and NPR – On Point with Tom Ashbrook.

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Filed under Broadway, Entertainment, History, Style

4 responses to “Gypsy Rose Lee & Burlesque’s Allure

  1. Jennifer Kirby's avatar Jennifer Kirby

    I just finished reading Karen Abbott’s book (which was FABULOUS! I highly recommend!) and stumbled across your blog looking for more information about the incomparable Gypsy Rose Lee. Or more importantly, stumbled across your other blog and was immediately hooked just from the title. Especially when I read your review of The Help and laughed my fool head off, then shared it with my mom and two of my best friends. Your mother and my grandma Fran must have been separated at birth. Cannot wait to read more!

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  2. Jennifer Kirby's avatar Jennifer Kirby

    Am driving through TN to get home… Mawmaw Fran passed away yesterday. That era of ladies with the once a week “wash and set” is disappearing all too fast. But I smile thinking of her being able to torture my Pawpaw once again. “Damn, Frances, what’d that piano ever do to you?”

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