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Leslie Zemeckis - Feuding Fan Dancers: Faith Bacon, Sally Rand, and the Golden Age of the Showgirl

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Leslie Zemeckis Feuding Fan Dancers: Faith Bacon, Sally Rand, and the Golden Age of the Showgirl
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Feuding Fan Dancers: Faith Bacon, Sally Rand, and the Golden Age of the Showgirl: summary, description and annotation

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Discover two forgotten icons from the golden age of entertainment: the lost stories of Sally Rand and Faith Baconwomen who each claimed to be the inventor of the notorious fan dance in this detailed, deeply researched, and compelling feminist history (Chicago Tribune).
Some women capture our attention like no others. Faith Bacon and Sally Rand were beautiful blondes from humble backgrounds who shot to fame behind a pair of oversize ostrich fans, but with very different outcomes. Sally Rand would go on to perform for the millions who attended the 1933 Worlds Fair in Chicago, becoming Americas sweetheart. Faith Baconthe Marilyn Monroe of her time who was once anointed the worlds most beautiful womanwould experience the dark side of fame and slip into drug use.
It was the golden age of American entertainment, and Bacon and Rand fought their way through the competitive showgirl scene of New York with grit and perseverance. They played peek-a-boo with their lives, allowing their audiences to see only slivers of themselves. A hint of a breast? A forbidden love affair? They were both towering figures, goddesses, icons. Until the world started to change. Little is known about who they really were, until now.
Feuding Fan Dancers tells the story of two remarkable women during a tumultuous time in entertainment history. Leslie Zemeckis has pieced together their story andnearly one hundred years laterboth women come alive again.

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ALSO BY LESLIE ZEMECKIS Goddess of Love Incarnate The Life of Stripteuse - photo 1

ALSO BY LESLIE ZEMECKIS Goddess of Love Incarnate The Life of Stripteuse - photo 2

ALSO BY LESLIE ZEMECKIS

Goddess of Love Incarnate:

The Life of Stripteuse Lili St. Cyr

Behind the Burly Q:

The Story of Burlesque in America

FEUDING FAN DANCERS Copyright 2018 by Mistress Inc First hardcover - photo 3

FEUDING FAN DANCERS

Copyright 2018 by Mistress, Inc.

First hardcover edition: 2018

All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission from the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Zemeckis, Leslie Harter, author.

Title: Feuding fan dancers : Faith Bacon, Sally Rand, and the golden age of the showgirl / Leslie Zemeckis.

Description: First hardcover edition. | Berkeley, California : Counterpoint, 2018. | Includes bibliographical references.

Identifiers: LCCN 2018019509 | ISBN 9781640091146 | eISBN 9781640090606

Subjects: LCSH: Bacon, Faith, 1910-1956. | Rand, Sally, 19041979. | StripteasersUnited StatesBiography. | Burlesque (Theater)United StatesHistory20th century.

Classification: LCC PN1949.S7 Z455 2018 | DDC 792.780922 [B] dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018019509

Jacket design by Sarah Brody

Book design by Wah-Ming Chang

COUNTERPOINT

2560 Ninth Street, Suite

Berkeley, CA 94710

www.counterpointpress.com

Printed in the United States of America

Distributed by Publishers Group West

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

For my boys

Bob, Zane & Rhys

The reason birds can fly and we cant is
simply because they have perfect faith,
for to have faith is to have wings.

J. M. BARRIE , The Little White Bird

Sally Rand Faith Bacon CONTENTS Prologue Chicago 1956 It had been a - photo 4

Sally Rand

Faith Bacon CONTENTS Prologue Chicago 1956 It had been a terrible day a - photo 5

Faith Bacon

CONTENTS

Prologue Chicago 1956 It had been a terrible day a terrible few weeks - photo 6

Prologue

Chicago, 1956

It had been a terrible day. a terrible few weeks, months, years if she was honest.

September 26, 1956, was an unseasonably cold day in Chicago with temperatures in the 30s. It was evening and the roommates had been arguing for hours. Money, or rather the lack of it. The slender blonde had just returned from a futile trip homeif one could call it thatbegging for money, her roommate would later say. But it wasnt to her mother that she had pledand fledbut to an uncertain lover, still married, with a kind heart. He probably gave her a little cash, but not enough. Later, the one thing the roommate said that was true (and God knows there wasnt much) involved the blondes lack of money. The years had caught up to her.

Looking in the cracked mirror of the hotel bathroom, she would have seen an aging face. What had happened to time? She had ridden off her looks for years. Now, vanished. Gone. Drunk up and drugged away. Not enough beauty to afford a drink at the bar next door. Desperate. End of her rope.

She was no longer part of the scene. She was rudely treated like a relic from the past, if given any attention at all. While Elvis Presleys Heartbreak Hotel climbed to #1 on the charts and Dear Abbys advice column debuted, she was relegated to offering her wares to whoever had enough pity to give a fallen star a dime. A job. Thats what she wanted.

She was looking for an opportunity to climb back to the top, though it had been more than two decades since she had broken box office records. She had been dubbed the most beautiful girl in the world. They would hang that title on her for the rest of her days.

She earned headlines and an arrest. Though at the time it was perfectly legal to appear nude under the lights of a Broadway production, she had stepped out of line and offered a suggestion, which got a $500 fine and her name in print. From there her head swelled with the attention (and the need for what, love?) she had been seeking, or been pushed toward, since she was a child. On recalling the night in question and what she was thinking, all she could remember was One Love by Arlen and Koehler had been playing.

Burlesque straight man Lee Stuart and his wife caught her begging outside a theatre, looking like a bag lady.some cash. Grateful, she promised to catch their show. They would never see her again.

For years her determination had kept her going through lawsuits, disappointments, a suicide attempt or two. And, of course, that feud. No matter how rough things had gottenand Lord knows they hadthere was usually a sliver of hope to penetrate nights of darkness and despondency. She had believed so hard for so long. Was it willpower that had gotten her through that awful dance school where she tried to teach movement and artistry to snot-nosed kids, whose mothers were even worse than their talentless children? The mothers would have reminded her of her own. And though the work was beneath her, she suffered when even that failed.

Some strength, some inkling of better days to come had gotten her through affairs and a marriage that wasnt much of anything. But she could feel her resolve slipping. Her hands werent numb from the wind blowing off Lake Michigan. They were anesthetized from holding on so hard for so long. For nothing.

She wanted another fistful of fame. Even a finger-full of what she once had.

She lied about her age. Did anyone really believe she was still thirty-something? She was close to fifty. Her unlined, wide-eyed face had adorned the newspapers; now it was only her arrests, but even those no longer made the front pages. On chasing fame she had once blithely advised, Try to get yourself arrested as much as possible. And she had. But that was par for the course for those working in the nude.

Back in 1934, while society doyenne Mrs. Harry Payne Whitney was cringing at seeing herself in the headlines (those of a certain ilk were not in the papers), accused of stealing her niece Gloria Vanderbilt from the poor little rich girls mother (who was intolerably negligent), this luminescent blonde had reveled in her own scandalous headlines. Ink spilled for the most minor of incidents, like when her appendix was removed. Her every move had been broadcast.

Dancer Wants Trial by Jury

War of Fan Dancers Begins at Worlds Fair

Held Up by Bandits and Rebuked

Today she needed to eat. Her roommate was harping at her. They argued whether she should return to her family and beg for more money. What family?

There had been nothing for her in Erie, Pennsylvania. She had to be feeling so alone.

If no one else remembered, at least she knew she had once been a sensation who earned great sums, performing to standing-room-only crowds. The Marilyn Monroe of her day, an inspiration for a legion of beautiful dancers, now down to less than a dollar in her stained pocketbook.

Perhaps she looked in the mirror and was finally honest with her reflection. There was no work. No romance. Nothing.

Time was running out.

Like numerous third-rate hotels, it would have had a long narrow hallway with a grimy window at the end. Imagine hazy light from the dim hallway casting uneven shadows over the pattern of the worn carpet. Neither light nor optimism could penetrate the broken souls in the cheap hotel. A last stop, a temporary asylum from dashed dreams and delusional schemes.

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