Molly Spotted Elk: A Penobscot in Paris

Portada
University of Oklahoma Press, 1997 M09 1 - 384 páginas

This biography chronicles the extraordinary life of twentieth-century performing artist Molly Spotted Elk. Born in 1903 on the Penobscot reservation in Maine, Molly ventured into show business at an early age, performing vaudeville in New York, starring in the classic docudrama The Silent Enemy, then dancing for royalty and mingling with the literary elite in Europe. In Paris she found an audience more appreciative of authentic Native dance than in the United States. There she married a French journalist, but she was forced to leave him and flee France with her daughter during the German occupation of 1940. Using extensive diaries in conjunction with letters, interviews, and other sources, Bunny McBride reconstructs Molly’s story and sheds light on the pressure she and her peers endured in having to act out white stereotypes of the "Indian."

 

Contenido

Escape
3
Roots
5
Changes in the Land
8
Island Paths
14
Road Shows and Ballyhoo
36
Anthropologists and Ranchers
56
Cabarets and Speakeasies
72
The Silent Enemy
96
Paris Noir
191
Birth
208
A Far Cry
217
Paris Revisited
249
Home
268
Postscript by Jean Archambaud Moore
288
Notes
291
Bibliography
339

New York to Paris
128
A Penobscot in Paris
147
City of Lights
162

Términos y frases comunes

Acerca del autor (1997)

Bunny McBride, a writer with an M.A. in anthropology from Columbia University, is an adjunct lecturer at Kansas State University and the author or coauthor of numerous articles and books.

Información bibliográfica