


Regardless, her role in the Jewel Box Revue and her efforts to protect LGBT individuals in the decades that followed Stonewall cemented her as an important figure in the community.ĭeLarverie’s contributions were recognized in 2002 with a Gay Lifetime Achievement Award from Senior Action in a Gay Environment ( SAGE, now Services & Advocacy for GLBT Elders), and she was selected as an “Imperial King” by the Imperial Kings and Queens of New York. However, as historian David Carter reveals through interviews with witnesses in his book Stonewall: The Riots That Sparked the Gay Revolution (2004), there are many inconsistencies that refute this, and the historic record is unclear whether DeLarverie was even present that night.
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Brandishing her pistol, she was also known to patrol the hallways of the Chelsea during its more troubled years in the 1970s and 1980s, while also ensuring that the neighborhood streets were free of what she deemed “ugliness” against the LGBT community.ĭeLarverie was alleged to be the documented butch lesbian whose struggle with the police agitated the crowd at the 1969 uprising at the Stonewall Inn. She moved to the Chelsea in the 1970s and, for much of her time here, worked as a bouncer (she preferred to call herself a “babysitter of my people”) at various Greenwich Village lesbian bars, including DT’s Fat Cat, Cubby Hole, and Henrietta Hudson. In 1969, DeLarverie retired from performing with the Revue, shortly after the death of her partner of over 25 years, a dancer named Diana.

Lesbian activist and co-founder of the Lesbian Herstory Archives In Michelle Parkerson‘s Storme, Lady of the Jewel Box (1987), a short documentary that profiled DeLarverie’s career and life, Joan Nestle emphasized her influence: Many consider DeLarverie’s gender non-conformity, both on and off stage, to have influenced the burgeoning popularity and societal acceptance of gender-fluid expression. From 1955 to 1969, DeLarverie toured around the US and Canada with the Revue, including New York, where they headlined at the Apollo Theater in Harlem, Bal Tabarin (demolished) at 225 West 46th Street and Loew’s State Theatre at 1540 Broadway (demolished) in Times Square, Shore Theater at 1301 Surf Avenue in Coney Island, Maksik’s Town & Country Club (demolished) at 2544 Flatbush Avenue in Brooklyn’s Marine Park neighborhood, and Hillside Theatre (demolished) at 90-29 Sutphin Boulevard in Jamaica, Queens. Born to a Black mother and white father in Jim Crow-era New Orleans, Stormé DeLarverie (1920-2014) rose to prominence as the emcee and sole male impersonator of the Jewel Box Revue, a racially integrated group of female impersonators founded in Miami around 1939 by lovers Danny Brown and Doc Brenner.
