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Photographs of Donn Arden production "Ca C'Est Paris" proof sheet, Hollywood (Calif.), 1954-1955

Date
1954 to 1955
Description
Proof sheet of ten images from "Carnival Martinquais," a scene from the Donn Arden production "Ca C'Est Paris" at Frank Sennes' Moulin Rouge in Hollywood, California. Credit for creating the image goes to Wilbur Jerger and Graphic House. Site Name: Moulin Rouge (Hollywood, Calif.)

Image

Transcript of interview with Anna Bailey by Claytee D. White, March 3, 1997

Date
1997-03-03
Description

Interview with Anna Bailey conducted by Claytee D. White on March 3, 1997. Arriving in Las Vegas in 1955 to perform as a dancer for the opening of the Moulin Rouge, Bailey also starred in traveling shows nationally and in Europe. Returning to Las Vegas, she became the first African American to dance in a house chorus line on the Strip. Later she became one of the first black women in Nevada to hold a gaming license, owning and operating several small nightclubs.

Text

Kenny Bayless oral history interview

Identifier
OH-02195
Abstract

Oral history interview with Kenny Bayless conducted by Eric Billington on November 20, 2014 for the African Americans in Las Vegas: a Collaborative Oral History Project. Bayless begins the interview by talking about his childhood in California and his religious upbringing. He then discusses moving to Las Vegas, Nevada in 1972 in order to pursue a career in teaching and coaching track. Bayless discusses his views of Las Vegas upon his arrival, namely the perceptions towards black people in the area. He then details his life as a teacher for the Clark County School District (CCSD), and teaching at the juvenile detention center after his retirement from CCSD. Bayless also discusses the night life in Las Vegas from the 1970s to the present, he talks about the exclusion of black people from certain establishments and the Moulin Rouge Hotel as a respite for black night life in West Las Vegas.

Archival Collection

Set of photographs including a wrecked truck for Ray's father, Wilma Prudhummne, a horse jumping, Trena, and Loronza Calhumn

Date
1968
Description

Photographer's notations: Wrecked truck for Ray's father, Wilma Prudhummne [?] (at Moulin Rouge), Horse jumping (at Highland), Trena (sleeping), Loronza Calhumn (family).

Image

Elizebeth Dewey Russell oral history interview

Identifier
OH-03270
Abstract

Oral history interview with Elizebeth Dewey Russell conducted by Claytee D. White on March 23, 2024 for the African Americans in Las Vegas: a Collaborative Oral History Project. In this interview, Russell talks about her mother, Ruth Bradshaw Dewey, a white woman, who taught at the Westside School (1949-1955), saw Josephine Baker at the El Rancho in 1952, attended the opening night of the Moulin Rouge in 1955, and served as the secretary of the Las Vegas branch of the NAACP for several years. Russell describes living with her mother in the Mayfair deveopment just south of 17th Street at Charleston and graduating from Las Vegas High School. She recalls spending summers with her father, John Bradshaw, in Caliente, Nevada, where he worked as a mechanic for the Union Pacific Railroad.

Archival Collection