Chocolate Kiddies 1925 European tour

The Chocolate Kiddies is a three-act Broadway-styled revue that, in its inaugural production – from May to September 1925 – toured Berlin, Hamburg, Stockholm, and Copenhagen. The show never actually performed on Broadway,[1] but was conceived, assembled, and rehearsed there. Chocolate Kiddies commissioned new works, but was also an amalgamation and adaptation of several leading African American acts in New York, specifically Harlem, intended to showcase exemplary jazz and African American artistry of the Harlem Renaissance. Early jazz was uniquely American; and, while New Orleans enjoys popularity for being its birthplace, the jazz emerging from Harlem during the Renaissance had, on its own merits, captured international intrigue.[2]

History

The impetus for producing the Chocolate Kiddies was partly a culmination or outgrowth of (i) the success of a Harlem (and Atlantic City) jazz band led by Sam Wooding (1895–1985) and a floor show, initially developed for the 1923 opening of the Nest Club and (ii) the success of Eubie Blake and Noble Sissle's Broadway musical, The Chocolate Dandies, which, after 96 performances, closed November 22, 1924 ... leaving some of the cast available, from which, the Chocolate Kiddies picked up choreographer Charlie Davis and singer Lottie Gee. The cast included singer Adelaide Hall, who came from the Miller and Lyles Broadway production Runnin' Wild, The Three Eddies, Rufus Greenlee and Thaddeus Drayton, Bobbie and Babe Goins, Charles Davis and Sam Wooding and his Orchestra.

Leoni Leonidoff[1] (né Leonid Davydovich Leonidoff-Bermann; born abt. 1886) became the owner-producer of the Chocolate Kiddies tour. He was a Russian-Jewish exile living in Berlin as a theatrical impresario.

Leonidoff's introduction to Wooding was possibly influenced by a Russian-Jewish-born American impresario living in New York, Morris Gest (1875–1942)[3] and his brother and partner, Sam Gest (1889–1960), an impresario living in Berlin. Leonidoff, in 1925, signed Wooding to take his band on a European tour, provided that a musical revue was added.[4]

Russian-born Jewish American impresario Arthur Seymour Lyons[5] (1895–1964) staged an adaptation and, for several weeks prior to departure, rehearsed the company at Bryant Hall.[6] Before settling on the name Chocolate Kiddies, the show had been billed as the Club Alabam Revue and Club Alabam Fantasies.[Note 1]

Duke Ellington, with Jo Trent as lyricist, composed four songs for the production – his first work for a musical revue genre.[7]

1925 Departure

After a farewell reception at the Bamville Club in Harlem two days earlier, over 500 theatrical professionals swarmed the White Star Line Pier (either Pier 59 or 60; current site of Chelsea Piers) on May 6, 1925, as Wooding, his band, and the revue performers boarded the SS Arabic and departed for Hamburg.[6]

Members of the revue who did not travel aboard the SS Arabic included Helen Miles, Willie Robbins, Arthur Robbins, Ruth Williams, and Evelyn Dove, who traveled from London.[8] Lottie Gee was aboard as Lottie Kyer – she had been married from 1913 to 1924 to pianist "Peaches" Kyer (né Wilson Harrison Kyer; 1888–1982).[9]

Arrival and tour

The company arrived in Hamburg May 17, 1925, and traveled to Berlin, arriving May 18 and opened May 25 at the Admiralspalast, where they performed 8 weeks. One of the audience members, 17-year-old Berliner Alfred Lion, later said, "It was the first time I saw colored musicians and heard the music. I was flabbergasted . . . – It was something brand new, but it registered with me right away." Thirteen years later, in 1938, Lions co-founded Blue Note Records in New York.[4] The Chocolate Kiddies Orchestra also did a recording sessions in Berlin June 5–10, 1925, at Vox Records.

On July 28, Chocolate Kiddies opened in Hamburg at the Thalia Theater for 32 performances, ending August 24. Then Stockholm, opening August 25 and closing September 14. The Stockholm performances included a benefit for the Swedish Red Cross, for the brother of the King.[10] Then they performed in Copenhagen in the Circus Building,[11] opening September 15, closing September 25.[12][8][13]

La Revue Nègre 1925 opening in Paris

Hotsy Totsy, a tab dance revue backed by The Charleston Jazz Band, led by Claude Hopkins, renamed La Revue Nègre, opened in Paris October 2, 1925. The cast included Will Marion Cook and Josephine Baker. At least one Chocolate Kiddies cast member, Lydia Jones, joined the production.[14]

Production personnel and cast

Production

Book and staging:

Music:

  • Joe Trent (né Joseph Hannibal Trent; 1892–1954), lyrics
  • Duke Ellington, music
  1. "Deacon Jazz" – prior to the 1925 debut of the Chocolate Kiddies, Jo Trent and the Deacons recorded "Deacon Jazz" c. November 1924 in New York; Jo Trent (vocals); Otto Hardwick (C-melody sax); Duke Ellington (piano); George Francis (banjo); Sonny Greer (drums) – discographer Brian Rust lists Fred Guy on banjo; Matrix T-2007-1; Jazz Panorama JPLP12
  2. "Jig Walk," Charleston
  3. "Jim Dandy"
  4. "With You"[15]

Orchestration:

Choreographer:

  • Charles Davis (né Charles Columbus Davis; 1894–1963) ‡ [Note 2][16]

Set design and costumes:

Publisher:

  • Robbins-Engel; OCLC 498586615

Cast

Sam Wooding's Orchestra from Club Alabam


  1. Sam Wooding, piano, leader
  2. Willie Lewis (1905–1971), clarinet
  3. Eugene Sedric (1907–1963), clarinet, tenor sax
  4. Garvin Bushell (1902–1991), clarinet, alto sax, oboe, bassoon
  5. Tommy Ladnier (1900–1939), trumpet
  6. Bobby Martin (1903–1983), trumpet
  7. Maceo Elmer Edwards (1900–1988), trumpet
  8. Herb Flemming (1898–1976), trombone
  9. John Warren, tuba
  10. Johnny Mitchell, banjo
  11. George Howe (1892–1936),[Note 3] drums

Huvudroller (Swedish)
(leading roles)
:


Greenlee & Drayton
  1. Rufus Greenlee (1893–1963)[Note 4]
  2. Thaddeus "Teddy" Drayton (1893–1964)[17]
The Three Eddies
  1. Shakey Beasley (né Clarence Beasley; (1897-1939)
  2. Earle "Tiny" Ray (1887–1963)
  3. Chick Horsey (1903–1933)[Note 5]
Leading roles (continued)
  1. Evelyn Dove (1902–1987)
  2. Margaret Sims (maiden 1903–1974)[Note 6][11][18][19]
Bobby and Babe Goins
(acrobatic dancers)[20][21][22][Note 7]
  1. Robert Goins (né Walter Robert Goins; 1902–1986)
  2. Mary Goins (née Mary or Marie Hall; 1906)
Leading roles (continued)
  1. Arthur "Strut" Payne (né Arthur Henry Payne; 1878–1937), baritone
  2. Adelaide Hall (1901–1993)[23]
  3. Lottie Gee (1886–1973)
  4. Charles Davis (1894–1963)[Note 2]
  5. George Staton (né George Franklin Staten; 1904–1967)
  6. Willy Robbins – In one segment, Robbins and Chick Horsey performed "Two Happy Boys" in blackface. According to recollections of Garvin Bushell, "They sang a song, then they went 'Wah wah, wah wah,' and Bobby Martin emulated their speech with his trumpet. That was a big hit. They were trying to do Johnny Hudgins's act."[24][25]
  7. Jessie Crawford
  8. Arabella Fields (1879–1931)
  9. Lydia Jones[Note 8]
  10. Helen Miles
  11. Ruth Williams

Prisbelönta dansöser från New Yorks största Neger teatrar
(Award Winning Dance Shows From New York's Greatest Black Theaters)


  1. Allegritta Anderson (1898–1944)[Note 9]
  2. Viola ("Jap") Branch
  3. Pearl Brown
  4. Marie Bushell (née Marie Roberts; 1902–1971)[Note 10]
  5. Thelma Green (1900–1990), wife of Rufus Greenlee[Note 11]
  6. Bernice Miles (née Bernice M. Miles; 1907–1931)
  7. Rita Walker (1905–1983)[Note 12]
  8. Thelma Watkins (maiden; 1906–1954)[Note 13]
  9. Mamie Savoy
  10. Bobbie Vincent (1906–1978)[Note 14][26][27]
  11. Arthur Robbins

Selected songs

From Act 1
"Night Life in a Negro Cafe in Harlem in New York"
  1. "Deacon Jazz," sang by Adelaide Hall with chorus
From Act 2
"Symphonic Concert Jazz Concert by the Sam Wooding Orchestra of the Club Alabam, New York"
  1. "Medley of American Hits"
  2. "Shanghai Shuffle" – Vox (audio) (1925 recording)
  3. "Alabamy Bound" – Vox (audio) (1925 recording)
  4. "O Katharina," L. Wolfe Gilbert (1886–1970) (words), Richard Fall (1882–1945) (music) – Vox 01882; re-released on Jazz Panorama (vinyl) LP 20 (audio) (1925 recording)
  5. "By the Waters of Minnetonka," Thurlow Lieurance (1878–1963) (w&m) – Vox; re-released on Jazz Oracle (sv) BDW 8070 (CD Vol. 1 of 3) (audio)
From Act 3
  1. "Jim Dandy," a strut dance
  2. "With You," sung by Lottie Gee
  3. "Jig Walk," Charleston, to which an ensemble danced the Charleston

While in Berlin, the band, recorded several selections for the Berlin-based Vox label.

Selected subsequent tours

  • 1926 – Chocolate Kiddies 1926 Russian tour
  • 1927 – Sam Wooding and the Chocolate Kiddies, with much of the 1925 cast performed in Argentina in 1927 for six months, returning to New York December 3, 1927, aboard the Voltaire (de).
  • 1929 – Sam Wooding and His Orchestra, billed as the "Chocolate Kiddies Orchestra," toured Spain in 1929, without the chorus and dancers. They performed in San Sebastián, Madrid, and Barcelona. The tour has been chronicled as Spain's first live jazz performances by Americans. On July 3, 1929, while in Barcelona, the orchestra recorded ten songs for Parlophon. Eight of the songs were recorded twice, to accommodate different record formats.
Musicians: Bobby Martin (1903–1983) (trumpet, vocals), Doc Cheatham (1905–1997) (trumpet, vocals, arranger), Albert Wynn (1907–1973) (trombone), Billy Burns (1904–1963) (trombone), Willie Lewis (1905–1971) (clarinet, alto sax, bari sax, vocals), Jerry Blake (1908–1961) (clarinet, alto sax, vocals), Gene Sedric (1907–1963) (clarinet, tenor sax, vocals), Freddy Johnson (1904–1961) (piano, vocals, arranger), Johnny Mitchell (banjo, guitar), Sumner Leslie "King" Edwards (1894–1957) (tuba, bass), Ted Fields (né Edward Fields; 1905–1959) (drums), Sam Wooding (director)


Bibliography

Bourne, Stephen Evelyn Dove: Britain's Black Cabaret Queen [Jacaranda Books, 2016] ISBN 978-1-909762-35-0. Chapter 4: The Chocolate Kiddies.

Notes and references

Notes

  1. Club Alabam was a Broadway after-theater jazz club set in a rathskeller of the now bygone 44th Street Theatre at 216 West 44th Street. The club endured since the theater's inception in 1912, originally known as the "Little Club," but became known as "Club Alabam" in 1924 and henceforth flourished with jazz. Following the Prohibition, the bar closed and remained vacant for years. On March 2, 1942 — 2 months and 19 days after the United States officially entered World War II — the American Theatre Wing opened it back up as the Stage Door Canteen for American and Allied servicemen. The property, as of 2019, was owned and managed by the Kushner Companies.
  2. Charles Davis aka C. Columbus Davis (1894–1963), when he died, was living in Englewood, New Jersey, at 111 Reis Avenue. His big break came as a principal dancer in Shuffle Along, after which, he rapidly rose to notability as a choreographer at the Apollo and Lafayette Theatres in Harlem. Davis also did the choreography for the 1927 Broadway musical, Rang Tang. He and his wife, Cecile (1898–1975), had two daughters, Meta J. Davis (1919–2012) and Anna L. Davis (1921–2016) (Duke Ellington's Music for the Theatre, by John Childs Franceschina, McFarland & Company, 2000, p. 14; OCLC 469316674)
  3. George Howe (aka George Washington Howe; Robert Washington Howe; 1892–1936), drummer, led the house band at the Nest Club beginning 1927, when Teddy Hill was in the band. Luis Russell replaced Howe in 1928. Howe had been the drummer for Sam Wooding. Howe and fellow musician George E. Dyer (1884–1936), both, in the mid-1930s, living in Glens Falls, drowned November 23, 1936, in the Champlain Canal, near Fort Ann, after a car driven by Howe submerged in the canal as a result of side-swiping a 10-ton truck (U.S. Class 6) towing another 10-ton truck on Comstock Road. They were returning from a gig at a nightclub operated by Maxie Gordon (né Maxime Godon Gordon; 1891–1956) – two miles from Whitehall. They had left Hudson Falls at 1:30 am and were followed by Jimmie Gillespie and banjoist Percy Richardson. Trombonist Benny Morton (1907–1985), also at the gig, decided at the last minute not to ride with Howe and Dyer. Howe was buried at Cypress Hills National Cemetery, Brooklyn.
  4. Rufus Greenlee (né Rufus Edward Greenlee; 1893–1963), born in Asheville, North Carolina, became a native of New Haven, Connecticut. From about 1924-1925 to about 1930, he was married to cast member Thelma Greene (see Greene's brief bio in Notes). In Greenlee's post-vaudeville days, beginning in the mid-1930s, until is death, he owned and operated the Monterey Cafe, a jazz venue in New Haven at 265–167 Dixwell Avenue in the Dixwell neighborhood. Johnny "Hammond" Smith's 1962 album, Black Coffee, was recorded there. As a side note, his grand nephew, Lou Jones (1932–2006), was an Olympic Gold Medalist in the 4 × 400 metres relay in the 1956 Summer Games.
  5. Chick Horsey (né Layburn Horsey; 1903–1933), born in Chester, Pennsylvania, died July 19, 1933, in Naples, Italy, at the Hotel Diana.
  6. Margaret Sims (maiden; 1903–1974), born in Washington, D.C., was a blues singer. In 1935, the New York Age stated that she epitomized the complete metamorphosis of the blues singer. She married Broadway producer Irvin Colloden Miller (1884–1975). Her sister, Edith G. Sims (1905–1973), was the second of three wives of actor Jimmy Baskett (1904–1948).
  7. Philadelphia-born Bobby Goins (né Walter Robert Goins; 1902–1986) and Babe (aka "Baby") Goins (née Mary or Marie Hall; born 1906) were a husband-and-wife acrobatic dance team who, with productions, toured Europe several times. Bobby and Babe married April 19, 1925, in Manhattan – seventeen days prior to embarking on the 1925 European tour. That tour, incidentally, was Babe's first break as a performer.
         Babe, who toured Europe three more times, won celebrated acclaim on all tours. According to an article published by the New York Age (May 18, 1932), Babe was born in Havana, Cuba; tho', some sources give Washington, D.C., as her place of birth. At age three Babe moved to Washington, D.C. Bobby and Babe divorced around 1930.
         Bobby – on January 13, 1933, in Manhattan – married again to Irene Winifred Bennett (maiden; 1914–1986). Babe – on May 10, 1936, in Manhattan – married again to William F. Joyce, Jr. However, a 1932 article in the New York Age (May 28) stated that Babe and Joyce were married (in 1932).
         Bobby went on to dance as a member of the Crackerjacks, a dance team that influenced the next-generation of professional dancers in Harlem. Bobby became a member of the American Guild of Variety Artists. Bobby – on January 13, 1933, in Manhattan – married again to Irene Winifred Bennett (maiden; 1914–1986).
  8. Lydia Jones was portrayed in a one-woman off-Broadway play, The Sensational Josephine Baker, by Cheryl Howard (née Cheryl Gay Alley; born 1953), wife of Ron Howard
  9. Allegretta Anderson (née Alegretta Summers; 1898–1944) was a Chicago-born actress who – on May 29, 1916, in Chicago – married Julian Kirby Anderson (1895–1954). She later was married to Agaton H. Magboo. She acted in the 1930 film, Georgia Rose.
  10. Marie Bushell (née Marie Roberts; 1902–1971) was the first of two wives of Garvin Bushell. They married July 24, 1923, in Manhattan.
  11. Thelma Greene (née Thelma M. Contee; 1900–1990) was, from about 1924 to about 1929, married to cast member Rufus Greenlee. Her stage surname was that of her ex-husband, Jesse Warren Greene (born 1898), who she married around 1918, and with whom she had a daughter, Jessica Iris Greene (1918–2007), who, in 1939, married Edward D. Julian Austin. Thelma, between 1942 and 1946, married Leonard G. Hyman (né Leonard Grimke Hyman; born 1894), who, from 1927 to 1932, had been Head of the Photography Division and Official Photographer at the Tuskegee Institute. Leonard Hyman's predecessors and successors there were distinguished photographers, notably Frances Benjamin Johnston (1862–1952) and C. M. Battey (1873–1927), who he replaced. P. H. Polk (1898–1984) was, at the time, one of Hyman's assistants, and in 1933, succeeded him as Head of Photography.
  12. Rita Walker (maiden 1905–1983) – on April 9, 1945, in Manhattan – married Dennis Ragland (1896–1971).
  13. Thelma Watkins (maiden; 1906–1954) was born in Philadelphia. At some point, she married James Adrian McDaniel (born c. 1917). The date-of-birth on her birth certificate – November 11, 1906 – differs from the date listed on two ship manifests:
    1. SS Arabic, which departed New York May 6, 1925, and arrived in Hamburg May 17, 1925 (Storyville, Vol. 60, August–September 1975, p. 218)
    2. SS Nieuw Amsterdam, which departed Boulogne-sur-Mer February 24, 1926, and arrived in New York March 6, 1926 (Ancestry.com)
  14. Bobbie Vincent (née Bobbye Vincson; 1906–1978), born in Kansas City, Missouri, went on to perform with other companies, including 37 performances in Buenos Aires in 1938 with Clarence Robinson's Cotton Club Revue Company, booked by B and B Artists Bureau of Harlem, headed by William B. Cohen and B.L. Burtt (né Bernard Lamberson Burtt; 1884–1944). More than two decades later, she was an official of the X-Glamour Girls revue, composed of former entertainers from the Cotton Club. The company performed in October 26, 1962, at the Riviera Ballroom in New York at Broadway and 53rd Street. One of her older sisters, Flash Amber Vincson (1902–1975), married – on August 23, 1927, in Chicagovaudeville entertainer Buck Washington (1903–1955) of Buck and Bubbles.

References

  1. "Jazz as Deliverance: The Reception and Institution of American Jazz during the Weimar Republic," by Susan Carol Cook, PhD, American Music (peer-reviewed journal published by the University of Illinois Press), Vol. 7, No. 1, Special Jazz Issue, Spring 1989, pps. 30-47; OCLC 6733332917, 7376634279 (article), ISSN 0734-4392 (publication) (accessible via JSTOR at www.jstor.org/stable/3052048; subscription required)
  2. Traveling Blues: The Life and Music of Tommy Ladnier, by Bo Lindström (born 1939) and Daniel Vernhettes (born 1942), Paris: Jazz'Edit (2009); OCLC 471874599, 1010079957
  3. "Berlin Colored Revue," Billboard, May 2, 1925
  4. The Jazz Republic: Music, Race, and American Culture in Weimar Germany, by Jonathan O. Wipplinger, University of Michigan Press (2017), pps. 56–58; OCLC 960969189
  5. "Colored Show Scores Big in Berlin – Chocolate Kiddies With Russian Owner, Opens at Admiral Palast," Variety, Vol. 79, No. 2, May 27, 1925, p. 3
  6. "'Chocolate Kiddies Company Sails for Germany – Over 500 Professionals Swarm White Star Line Pier as S.S. Arabic Leaves – Hundreds of Co-Theatrical Celebrities Attend 'Farewell' as Guest of Colored Vaudeville Comedy Club," by Floyd G. Snelson, Jr. (né Floyd Grant Snelson, Jr.; 1891–1956), Pittsburgh Courier, May 16, 1925, p. 10 (accessible via Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  7. The Biographical Encyclopedia of Jazz, Leonard Feather (posthumous ed.) and Ira Gitler (ed.), Oxford University Press (2007), p. 445
  8. "Sam Wooding and the Chocolate Kiddies at the Thalia-Theater in Hamburg 28th July, 1925 to 24th August, 1925," by Berhard H. Behncke, Storyville, Vol. 60, August–September 1975, p. 217–219 (accessible via National Jazz Archive at link)
  9. An Encyclopedia of South Carolina Jazz and Blues Musicians (re: "William Harrison 'Peaches' Kyer"), by Benjamin Franklin, University of South Carolina Press (2016); OCLC 1023325702
  10. Voices of the Jazz Age: Profiles of Eight Vintage Jazzmen, by Chip Deffaa, University of Illinois Press (1990, 1992), p. 17; OCLC 985530584
  11. "The Chocolate Kiddies in Copenhagen," by Hans Larsen, The Record Changer, No. 67, April 1965, pps. 3–5
  12. "Denne Bande Frække Sorte Slubberter – Sam Wooding i København, 1925" (in Swedish), by Erik Wiedemann (de) (1930–2001), Musik und Forskning, 3, København 1977, pps. 113–127; ISSN 0903-188X
  13. "Staging the Great Migration: The Chocolate Kiddies and the German Experience of the New Negro Renaissance," by Paul J. Edwards, Modernism/modernity (Johns Hopkins University Press ), Vol. 4, Cycle 3, August 27, 2019; OCLC 8302193446
  14. "Will Marion Cook and the Tab Show, with particular emphasis on Hotsy Totsy and La revue nègre (1925)," by Peter M. Lefferts, University of Nebraska-Lincoln (2018)
  15. Chocolate Kiddies, coloured revue (sic), presented by Arthur S. Lyons, Robbins-Engel; European distributor – Berlin: Victor Alberti of the Musikalienhandlung Graphisches Kabinett (©1925); OCLC 498586615
    Note: Alberti's (born abt. 1885 in Miskolc, Hungary) music shop, until 1933, was in Berlin on Rankestrasse (de). He was a music publisher and distributor, well-known for distributing jazz sheet music and recordings. By 1930, he was partners with Armin L. Robinson (de) (1900–1985)
  16. "Obituary: Charlie Davis," New York Daily News, September 24, 1963, p. 40, col. 3 (accessible via Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  17. Thaddeus Drayton collection; 1926–1960 at Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Manuscripts, Archives and Rare Books Division at the New York Public Library OCLC 144682722
  18. "Pleases Galleryites," New York Age, June 1, 1935, p. 4 (accessible via Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  19. "Margaret Sims Dies in New York," Pittsburgh Courier, March 9, 1974, p. 13 (accessible via Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  20. "Death Notices: Goins, Walter Robert, Sr.," New York Daily News, December 22, 1986, p. 22, col. 4 (accessible via Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  21. "On The Spot – Baby Goins," by Dean Glynn, New York Age, May 28, 1932, p. 7 (accessible via Newspapers.com; subscription required)
  22. Jazz Dance: The Story of American Vernacular Dance, Marshall Stearns and Jean Stearns (1994 ed.)
    1. Collier-Macmillan (1968); OCLC 655466715
    2. Macmillan (1971); OCLC 900269
    3. Schirmer (1979); OCLC 720681903, 1069868504; ISBN 978-0-0287-2510-9
    4. Da Capo Press (paperback) (1994); OCLC 610972997; ISBN 978-0-3068-0553-0
  23. Underneath a Harlem Moon: The Harlem to Paris Years of Adelaide Hall (Chapter 6: "The Chocolate Kiddies Come to Town"), by Iain Cameron Williams, Continuum (2002), pps. 68–87 & 289; OCLC 51780394, ISBN 978-0-8264-6536-8
  24. Black People: Entertainers of African Descent in Europe and Germany, by Rainer Erich Lotz (de) (re: "Chocolate Kiddies"), Birgit Lotz Verlag (1997), pps. 327 & 244
  25. "Louis Armstrong, Eccentric Dance, and the Evolution of Jazz on the Eve of Swing," by Brian Harker, Journal of the American Musicological Society, Vol. 61, No. 1, Spring 2008, p. 78 (of pps. 67–121) (accessible via JSTOR at www.jstor.org/stable/10.1525/jams.2008.61.1.67)
  26. "Blues is My Business," by Victoria Spivey (1906–1976), Record Research, Robert Colton & Len Kunstadt, eds., Issue 46, October 1962, begins on p. 12; ISSN 0034-1592
  27. "Pretty Manicurist" (photo of Vincson), Topeka Plain Dealer, Vol. 45, No. 44, November 22, 1930, p. 4 (accessible via GenealogyBank.com at www.genealogybank.com/nbshare/AC01110112104856097231589504979; subscription required)
  28. "Chocolate Kiddies: The Show That Brought Jazz to Europe and Russia in 1925," by Björn Englund (sv) (born 1942), Storyville, December 1975–January 1976, pps. 44–50
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