Ada "Bricktop" Smith

Ada Beatrice Queen Victoria Louise Virginia Smith, better known as Bricktop, (August 14, 1894 February 1, 1984) was an American dancer, jazz singer, vaudevillian, and self-described saloon-keeper who owned the nightclub Chez Bricktop in Paris from 1924 to 1961, as well as clubs in Mexico City and Rome. She has been called "...one of the most legendary and enduring figures of twentieth-century American cultural history."

Ada "Bricktop" Smith
Smith in 1934
BornAugust 14, 1894
DiedFebruary 1, 1984(1984-02-01) (aged 89)
Other namesAda DuConge
Known forDancer, singer, vaudeville performer, nightclub owner

Early life

Smith was born in Alderson, West Virginia, the youngest of four children by a Black father and a mixed-race Black mother, who had been born into slavery two years before the Emancipation Proclamation. Her grandfather was likely her mother's Irish-American slavemaster.[1] When her father died, her family relocated to Chicago, and she was raised there for her greater youth.[2] It was there that saloon life caught her fancy, and where she acquired her nickname, "Bricktop," for the flaming red hair and freckles inherited from her grandfather.[3] She began performing when she was very young, and by 16, she was touring with TOBA (Theatre Owners' Booking Association) and on the Pantages vaudeville circuit. Aged 20, her performance tours brought her to New York City. While at Barron's Exclusive Club, a nightspot in Harlem, she put in a good word for a band called Elmer Snowden's Washingtonians, and the club booked them. One of its members was Duke Ellington.[4]

Her first meeting with Cole Porter is related in her obituary in the Huntington (West Virginia) Herald-Dispatch:

Porter once walked into the cabaret and ordered a bottle of wine. "Little girl, can you do the Charleston?" he asked. Yes, she said. And when she demonstrated the new dance, he exclaimed, "What legs! What legs!"

John Steinbeck was once thrown out of her club for "ungentlemanly behavior." He regained her affection by sending a taxi full of roses.

Cafe society

By 1924, she was in Paris. Cole Porter hosted many parties, "lovely parties" as Bricktop called them, where he hired her as an entertainer, often to teach his guests the latest dance craze such as the Charleston and the Black Bottom. At age 28, Smith was invited to sing at the Montmartre club Le Grand Duc owned by Eugène Bullard. There, she befriended Langston Hughes, a then struggling poet who worked alongside her as a dishwasher and busboy.[5] In Paris, Bricktop began operating the clubs where she performed, including The Music Box and Le Grand Duc. She called her next club "Chez Bricktop," and in 1929 she relocated it to 66 rue Pigalle. Her headliner was a young Mabel Mercer, who was to become a legend in cabaret.

Known for her signature cigars, the "doyenne of cafe society" drew many celebrated figures to her club, including Cole Porter, the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, and F. Scott Fitzgerald. Fitzgerald mentions the club in his 1931 short story Babylon Revisited. Her protégés included Duke Ellington, Mabel Mercer and Josephine Baker. The Cole Porter song "Miss Otis Regrets" was written especially for her to perform. Django Reinhardt and Stephane Grappelli wrote a song called "Brick Top," which they recorded in Paris in 1937 and in Rome in 1949.

She married saxophonist Peter DuConge in 1929.[6] Though they separated after a few years, they never divorced, Bricktop later saying that "as a Catholic I do not recognize divorce".[7] According to Jean-Claude Baker, one of Josephine Baker's children, as recorded in his book about his mother's life, titled Josephine: The Hungry Heart, Baker and Bricktop were involved in a lesbian affair for a time, early in their careers.[8]

Bricktop broadcast a radio program in Paris from 1938 to 1939, for the French government. During WWII, she closed "Chez Bricktop" and moved to Mexico City where she opened a new nightclub in 1944.

In 1949, she returned to Europe and started a club in Rome called "Roman Chez Bricktop"[9] located on the Via Veneto where she entertained famous guests including Elizabeth Taylor, Frank Sinatra, and Martin Luther King, Jr.[10] Shortly after moving to Rome, Bricktop received a call from the first secretary, Amin, to the abdicated King Farouk. According to Bricktop, when Amin asked for her to visit, she said, “I’m not drinking. I’m on a novena,” to which he responded with, “ We’re not drinking either, but we’re with everybody here at the hotel. They’re all talking about you, and my king wants to meet the woman who makes everyone scream when she walks through the door.” King Farouk and Bricktop had a friendship for many years. Farouk would bring Bricktop gifts from his travels like bottles of perfume and cigars though Bricktop didn’t smoke. After King Farouk fired Amin, he didn’t want Bricktop to have anything to do with his former secretary. Bricktop told Farouk, “Majesty, I didn’t even allow my own mother to choose my friends for me.” At that point, King Farouk stopped coming to the club and Bricktop never saw him again.[9]

Bricktop also had a professional relationship with Maya Angelou, which Angelou writes about in her book Singin' and Swingin' and Gettin' Merry Like Christmas. Angelou worked at Bricktop's as a singer and was known for not allowing unescorted women in her club. [11]

While in Rome, Bricktop befriended The Duke of Windsor. After being a big fan of hers since the early ’30s, he visited her in Rome. He asked her: “Brick, where were you born?” She told him West Virginia. The Duke responded with “That’s just what I told the Duchess, when we were in Hot Springs. I said to the Duchess: ‘You know, Bricktop was born around here somewhere!’”[9] Bricktop closed her club and retired in 1961 at the age of 67, saying: "I'm tired, honey. Tired of staying up all night." Afterwards, she moved back to the United States.[9]

Bricktop had planned on creating a film centered around her life. Both Lena Horne and Dorothy Dandrige were up to play Bricktop, though she preferred Pearl Bailey. Bricktop comments that Bailey is “more familiar with my life” and that Dandrige “can’t go the way I used to go at her age.” [9]

Later life

Bricktop continued to perform as a cabaret entertainer well into her eighties, including some engagements at the age of 84 in London, where she proved herself to be as professional and feisty as she had ever been and included Cole Porter's "Love for Sale" in her repertoire.

Bricktop made a brief cameo appearance, as herself, in Woody Allen's 1983 mockumentary film Zelig, in which she "reminisced" about a visit by Leonard Zelig to her club, and an unsuccessful attempt by Cole Porter to find a rhyme for "You're the tops, you're Leonard Zelig." She appeared in the 1974 Michael Schultz's film Honeybaby, Honeybaby, in which she played herself, operating a "Bricktop's" in Beirut, Lebanon. In 1972, Bricktop made a recording of "So Long Baby," with Cy Coleman. She also recorded a few Cole Porter songs in New-York City at the end of the seventies with pianist Dorothy Donegan. The session was directed by Otis Blackwell, produced by Jack Jordan on behalf of the Sweet Box Company. The songs recorded are: "Love For Sale", "Miss Otis Regrets", "Happiness Is a Thing Called Joe", "A Good Man Is Hard to Find", "Am I Blue?" and "He's Funny That Way". This recording was never released as of today. She preferred not to be called a singer or dancer, but rather a performer.[12]

She wrote her autobiography, Bricktop by Bricktop, with the help of James Haskins, the prolific author who wrote biographies of Thurgood Marshall and Rosa Parks. It was published in 1983 by Welcome Rain Publishers (ISBN 0-689-11349-8).

Death

The grave of Bricktop

Bricktop died in her sleep at her apartment in Manhattan in 1984, aged 89. She remained active into her old age and according to James Haskins, had talked to friends on the phone hours before her death.[13][14] She is interred in the Zinnia Plot (Range 32, Grave 74) at Woodlawn Cemetery.

See also

  • Bricktop's at the Parlour

References

  1. "Bricktop". Greenbrier Valley Quarterly. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  2. McMahan, Matthew (2015). "Let Me See You Dance': Ada 'Bricktop' Smith, the Charleston, and Racial Commodification in Interwar France". Journal of Dramatic Theory and Criticism. 2: 43–61 via Project MUSE.
  3. "Bricktop". Greenbrier Valley Quarterly. Retrieved 2020-07-31.
  4. Dance, Stanley, The World of Duke Ellington, Da Capo Press, 1970, p. 57.
  5. Glass, Charles, 1951- (2011). Americans in Paris : life and death under Nazi occupation. New York: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-311866-4. OCLC 609540107.CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  6. Ada "Bricktop" Smith, FindaGrave.com. Retrieved March 11, 2015.
  7. Jet magazine, April 19, 1962, p. 60. Retrieved March 10, 2015.
  8. Lester Strong, "Josephine Baker's Hungry Heart". Archived June 22, 2009, at the Wayback Machine. Glreview.com. Retrieved August 2, 2011.
  9. Bricktop. Bricktop. Haskins, James. New York. ISBN 0-689-11349-8. OCLC 9154523.
  10. Monahan, Patrick (2011-08-15). "To Bricktop, on Her Belated Birthday". The Paris Review. Retrieved 2020-11-12.
  11. Angelou, Maya (1976). Singin' and Swingin' and Gettin' Merry Like Christmas. United States: Random House. ISBN 9780394405452.
  12. "Bricktop Tells About Cole Porter And Her Singing" on YouTube
  13. New York Times obituary. Select.nytimes.com, February 5, 1984. Retrieved April 7, 2017.
  14. "Cabaret Queen, Bricktop Is Dead". Wvculture.org, February 2, 1984. Retrieved April 7, 2017.

Sources

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