Thursday, December 25, 2008

The Lady In Red



"You'll be the death of me" might well have been something John Dillinger, Public Enemy Number One during the middle of the 1930's an era referred to as "Public Enemy era", when the likes of Dillinger, Baby Face Nelson, Ma Barker and others ran amuk throughout the Midwest and the Southwest.

Chicago Madam, Anna Sage (the "professional name" of Ana Cumpanas, was along with the robber and Polly Hamilton, Dillinger's date (and the Madam's friend, bad luck for John) for the movies at the Lincoln Park theatre, the Biograph, on the night of July 22, 1934.

"Little Mel" Melvin Purvis, the socialite turned FBI agent had #1 in his sights. He was in luck when Cumpanas came on the scene because she was deemed an "undesirable alien" and he was able to gain her cooperation via threats of deportation. And that cause was helping Dillinger to reach the end of the road in his short, explosive, publicly sensational bank robbing career.

Dillinger, 31, had been named Public Enemy Number 1 just a few short months before. Despite his high profile career, including an escape from the Crown Point jail with a wooden gun, he would pale in comparison to some of today's criminals. In fact, he killed few people and it was Hoover - in the hot seat and being threatened with removal from his post at the head of the young FBI operation - who despised the public enthusiasm for the "Robin Hood" type hero, flamboyant and handsome.

Cumpanas had recognized Dillinger when he visited Ana's apartment with his girlfriend, Polly Hamilton. She was able to "sell" her information for the promise of "a good word" with the Department of Labor (at that time the arm of government responsible for deportation and immigration follow-through). No doubt the promise of a $15,000 reward aided the madam in her complicity with the Feds.
Purvis eschewed the Chicago police who were believed to be corrupt and in the pay of a variety of bad guys. Instead a slew of FBI agents accompanied their boss and took up positions outside the Biograph. (In fact, because Cumpanas' information indicated she didn't know which theatre they might attend, there was a second compliment of agents at the Marbro that hot July night).

In order to guarantee that she was recognized and could give Purvis the high sign, Ana said she would be wearing an orange dress. She appeared with Dillinger and Hamilton at 10:30 that night, exiting the theatre following the showing of Manhattan Melodrama. Though Dillinger realized what was happening, and took off into the alley next to the theatre, the gun battle was short and fatal. He was pronounced dead at 10:50.

It was, in fact, the odd effect of the movie marquee lighting that made the dress appear red, which fact was later immortalized in the poem scrawled on the wall in the alley where Dillinger met his maker:

"Stranger stop and wish me well,
Just say a prayer for my soul in hell.
I was a good fellow, most people said,
Betrayed by a woman dressed all in red."


Despite her cooperation in bringing down Dillinger, the reward was reduced to a paltry $5,000, and Cumpanas was quickly deported to Romania where she lived the remaining 11 years of her life.

Wednesday, April 30, 2008

What fresh hell is this?

Dorothy Parker was one of the original Algonquin Roundtable wits. Yet for all of her cutting witticisms, she lived a sad and unfulfilled life.

More on Dot and her wisdom later.

For now:

Resume

Razors pain you
Rivers are damp
Acids stain you
And Drugs cause cramps
Guns aren't lawful
Nooses give
Gas smells awful
You might as well live

Monday, April 28, 2008

Coming Soon! Ladies of the Night!

Mata Hari. Mae West. Greta Garbo. Etta Place. Catherine the Great.

What did they have in common?

A disregard for the rules.

Coming soon the life and times of the wild and wanton women of history. They lived, they died, they ruled kingdoms and they brought them down.

Even today, the wicked women of the world tickle our fancy and absorb our attention on the covers of newspapers, magazines, and books, the world over.

Monica Lewinsky. Jennifer Flowers. The Mayflower Madam. Ma Barker.

Join me as we investigate and examine the women, their lives, and loves and the punishment society decreed. First up - Boudica. That wacky ruler of the Iceni who didn't take Roman plundering lying down. Stay tuned!

Sunday, April 6, 2008

Welcome to Ladies Night

Wild. Wicked. Wanton.

Ladies have been making history since the dawn of time. And probably earlier. Heaven knows what those naughty primordial babes were up to.

But here comes my blog on the women who made press. The good, the bad and the ugly. And the nasty, naughty and nice.

Cleopatra? Boudica? Elizabeth I? Isabella?

And don't forget Blood Mary, Typhoid Mary and Mary Queen of Scots.

They made trouble, and they made history.

Rock On Girls.