Suits Me: The Double Life of Billy Tipton"Suits Me is the biography of a now notorious jazz musician named Billy Tipton, who grew up as Dorothy Tipton in Oklahoma City and Kansas City but lived as a man from the time she was nineteen until she died at age seventy-four. Billy Tipton's death in Spokane, Washington, made news all over the world, not because he was celebrated as a musician but because the scale of his deception - he had been "married" to five women and had reared several adopted children - and the scarcity of ready explanations endowed the skimpy available facts with the aura of myth." "But locked away in Billy's office closet lay files of clippings and photographs documenting the transformation of Billy from she to he, as well as a legacy of annotated comic routines, musical arrangements, and program notes. These revealed to Diane Wood Middlebrook how Billy scattered clues and riddles night after night about the drag she wore. These hints were so bold that they helped conceal Billy's secrets." "With brio and pathos, Suits Me tells the life story of this brilliant deceiver, who lived and loved in two skins, one of each sex."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved |
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Page 80
... radio . Wallin's model in this marketing strategy was the Tulsa - based radio star Bob Wills , the most popular musician in Oklahoma . After mak- ing his living for several years playing fiddle at country dances , Wills had evolved an ...
... radio . Wallin's model in this marketing strategy was the Tulsa - based radio star Bob Wills , the most popular musician in Oklahoma . After mak- ing his living for several years playing fiddle at country dances , Wills had evolved an ...
Page 81
... radio shows in the Midwest . Farmers would haul their big battery - powered radios into the fields so they wouldn't miss the midday show , bars and cafés would turn up the volume , lower - case playboys and their girlfriends would wake ...
... radio shows in the Midwest . Farmers would haul their big battery - powered radios into the fields so they wouldn't miss the midday show , bars and cafés would turn up the volume , lower - case playboys and their girlfriends would wake ...
Page 84
... radio station in Oklahoma City . Every radio station was looking for the next Bob Wills , and WKY of- fered the Banner Cavaliers a one - month contract , renewable , at the precious noon hour , playing “ old - time Western songs " for ...
... radio station in Oklahoma City . Every radio station was looking for the next Bob Wills , and WKY of- fered the Banner Cavaliers a one - month contract , renewable , at the precious noon hour , playing “ old - time Western songs " for ...
Contents
But Who Was She? 18891928 | 13 |
Kansas City 19291932 | 33 |
19331940 | 47 |
Copyright | |
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