Tuesday, March 31: "Gypsy & June: Causing Havoc in the Great Depression and Beyond"

Washington State History Museum

By Volcano Staff on March 23, 2015

Gypsy is an origin story, as blunt and deliberate as you'll find in any comic book. Super-stripper Gypsy Rose Lee gets her full powers when she finally stands up to Mama Rose, who pushed her daughter into vaudeville first and then into the seedy bump-and-grind world of burlesque. Supposedly, Lee was such a jammin' stripper that she would take 15 minutes to remove a glove and all the dudes in the audience would still be slobberin' for more. Lee and her actress sister, June Havoc, were made immortal in the play and subsequent movie. Their real lives, however, were far more colorful than anything Hollywood could dream up. Gwen Whiting will tell all at a noon lecture in the Washington State History Museum.

"GYPSY & JUNE: CAUSING HAVOC IN THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND BEYOND," noon, Washington State History Museum, 1911 Pacific Ave., Tacoma, free with admission, 253.272.9747