Mademoiselle Fifi (dancer)

Mary Elizabeth Dawson, née Elizabeth Buzby and better known as Mademoiselle Fifi (February 7, 1890 July 21, 1982),[1][2][3] was a dancer whose onstage performance at Winter Garden Theatre on the night of April 20, 1925 was memorialized in The Night They Raided Minsky's.[4] A Philadelphia native, her given name was Mary Dawson. Her mother was a devout Catholic and her father was a Quaker who worked as a policeman.[5]

On the evening of April 20, Mademoiselle Fifi wore a skintight black net from her toe tips to her bra. As the orchestra played a medley of Puccini, ragtime music, and Gaite' Parisienne by Offenbach, she pulled one of her straps from her shoulder and then removed her bra. Mademoiselle Fifi concluded her strip act that evening bare chested.[6] She was arrested by John Sumner, the secretary of the New York Society for the Suppression of Vice.[4] Fond of classic subjects, Mademoiselle Fifi performed The Dance of the September Morn. She also did an oriental shimmy with a live garter snake.[7]

References

  1. "She was Minsky's young Fifi". The Spokesman-Review. Cowles Publishing Company. 1975-12-30. p. 22. Retrieved 2015-07-24.
  2. "M'lle Fifi Postcard". DigitalCommons@UMaine. University of Maine. Retrieved 2015-07-24.
  3. "Dawson, Mary, 1890-1982". Social Networks and Archival Context. University of Virginia. Retrieved 2015-07-24.
  4. 1 2 Striptease: the untold history of the girlie show, Rachel Shteir, Oxford University Press, 2004, pg. 363.
  5. American Rose: A Nation Laid Bare The Life and Times of Gypsy Rose Lee, Karen Abbott, Random House, 2010, pg. 152.
  6. Horrible prettiness: burlesque and American culture, Robert Clyde Allen, UNC Press, 1991, pg. 248.
  7. The Sudden Raid That Ruined Real Burlesque, Life Magazine, May 2, 1960, pg. 123.


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