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Singing the Gender-Bending Blues

Season 3
March 12, 2019
Gladys Bentley

Gladys Bentley loved women, wore men's clothing, and sang bawdy songs that would make sailors blush...and did it openly in the 1920s and 1930s. This was long before the gay rights or the civil rights movements, yet Bentley became a darling of the Harlem Renaissance alongside icons like Langston Hughes and Josephine Baker. While her provocative performances kept her from becoming as well-known as her peers, they are exactly why she is being rediscovered—and admired—today. In celebration of Women's History Month, we follow the life of a trailblazer who was unapologetically herself at a time when she would have been acutely aware of the risks.

Transcript

From the Collections

Photograph of Gladys Bentley

Photograph of Gladys Bentley

Gladys Bentley, Prentiss Taylor, and Nora Holt

Gladys Bentley: America's Greatest Sepia Player -- The Brown Bomber of Sophisticated Songs

Letter to Paul Kalmanovitz from the Musicians' Protective Association

Musicians' Protective Association Local 767 claim form

Photograph of two men and a woman taken at the Ubangi Club

Photograph of a group of men and women taken at the Ubangi Club

Photograph of Leroy Broomfield and the Ubangi Club dancers

Carl Van Vechten Photographs of Prentiss Taylor with Gladys Bentley and Nora Holt

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