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  • The life of Josephine Baker

  • is a dazzling rags-to-riches story of a musical icon,

  • stage sensation,

  • and heroine of the French Resistance,

  • who took 20th Century Europe by storm -

  • think Janelle Monáe meets James Bond.

  • Josephine Baker was born Freda Josephine McDonald

  • in St Louis, Missouri in 1906.

  • Her mother had dreams of being a dancer,

  • but made a living as a laundress.

  • Were not sure who her dad was,

  • but we do know her childhood was difficult.

  • She worked from the age of 8, and spent time

  • as a live-in maid for a cruel employer

  • who made Josephine sleep in a box in the basement.

  • The East St Louis race riots broke out in 1917,

  • and Josephine left shortly after

  • to pursue her dreams of stardom.

  • She worked on some touring shows,

  • but having already been married twice by the age of 15,

  • she moved to New York.

  • Neither were happy marriages,

  • but she kept Willie Baker’s surname.

  • After landing roles in successful black stage shows,

  • her talent, stage presence

  • and utterly unique dancing style

  • got her a reputation as a 'funny girl'.

  • Baker was then spotted by a scout

  • and soon after packed her bags and set sail for Paree.

  • Baker adored Paris, saying that the first time she danced there

  • it felt like a frenzy took possession of her body.

  • Not only did Baker have that 'je ne sais quoi' on stage,

  • she was also a sartorial sensation, and it was

  • in Paris the world first saw

  • Baker’s famously provocative banana skirt.

  • Fruity!

  • Skyrocketing to fame, Baker embarked on a world tour

  • and opened her own cabaret club called Chez Josephine.

  • She became one of the highest paid entertainers

  • in the world.

  • You could even buy a Josephine Baker doll.

  • Baker was now making serious money

  • and bought a luxury hotel suite.

  • She also acquired a few pets -

  • parakeets, monkeys, a tortoise,

  • a horse, a goat, a pig, a chimpanzee,

  • Kiki the friendly snake and, of course,

  • the diamond collar-cladded Chiquita the cheetah

  • who accompanied Baker on trips to the cinema.

  • But animals weren’t her only love.

  • After a marriage to her manager,

  • Giuseppe Pepito - which was probably for publicity -

  • and several relationships with women,

  • in 1937 she married the aptly named Jean Lion.

  • In the 1930s, she started to sing and star in movies.

  • As if being a wildly successful performer

  • and cat lady wasn’t enough,

  • when the Nazis invaded France in World War Two,

  • Baker joined the French Resistance.

  • While travelling, she flirted with diplomats

  • to gain information,

  • stashed papers in her underwear,

  • and had secret notes written in invisible ink

  • on her sheet music.

  • Move over, 007!

  • In recognition of her courageous contributions,

  • Baker received the Resistance Medal in 1946.

  • Baker was a shining star in Europe,

  • but when she returned home to segregated America,

  • the welcome was not so warm.

  • In 1951, she made charges of racism against the owner

  • of the famous Stork Club in New York City

  • for failing to serve her.

  • She was then targeted by high-profile journalist

  • Walter Winchell, who accused her of communism -

  • a very serious charge at the time.

  • As a result, Baker was placed on an FBI watch list

  • and her movements in and out of the US

  • were heavily restricted by the US government.

  • She toured Latin America and the Caribbean,

  • but her FBI file meant

  • she wasn’t able to go back to the US until 1963.

  • When she did return to America, she spoke alongside

  • Martin Luther King at the landmark

  • 1963 civil rights March on Washington.

  • After another marriage, this time to Jo Bouillon,

  • Baker adopted 12 children that she called her Rainbow Tribe.

  • On the 8th of April 1975,

  • she starred in a retrospective revue in Paris,

  • Joséphine à Bobino 1975,

  • celebrating her 50 years in showbusiness.

  • It was attended by Princess Grace, Sophia Loren,

  • Mick Jagger, Diana Ross, and Liza Minnelli

  • to name a few - and it was a smash!

  • Days after this performance, she died,

  • but in the iconic fashion

  • weve come to expect from Josephine Baker,

  • she was surrounded by rave reviews of her show.

  • She continues to influence culture today,

  • and in 2021, 46 years after her death,

  • Josephine Baker became the first black woman

  • memorialised at France's Panthéon.

The life of Josephine Baker

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