LizzieMaine
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We've had a popular "Girls in Guys Garb" thread on the Lounge for years, so how about the opposite? Female impersonation was a popular genre on stage and in film for much of the Era, and some of its practitioners could be quite fetching.
Julian Eltinge, best-known female impersonator of the first half of the twentieth century.
Bert Savoy, with -- ah, straight man -- Jay Brennan. "Brennan and Savoy" were one of the top Broadway comedy teams of the twenties, and after Savoy's death Brennan tried to recapture the magic by teaming with the female comic Ann Butler -- who was, for all intents and purposes, a female female impersonator. Savoy essentially created the wisecracking, larger-than-life drag-queen persona that's still popular today.
Eddie Cantor mixes it up with Charlotte Greenwood and The Goldwyn Girls in "Palmy Days." Cantor had such an affinity for cross-dressing that he would from time to time appear in drag for his live radio shows to whip up studio-audience laughs.
Bert Wheeler, vamping it up for Robert Woolsey in the pre-code comedy classic "Peach O'Reno."
Charlie Chaplin giving Charles Insley the business as "A Woman."
Roscoe Arbuckle as "Miss Fatty," with a lovesick Buster Keaton in "Night Nurse."
Wallace Beery as "Sweedie" turns the charm on Ben Turpin in "Sweedie Learns To Swim."
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy as their own wives in "Twice Two."
And Billie "Buckwheat" Thomas gives Spanky something to think about, c. 1935
Julian Eltinge, best-known female impersonator of the first half of the twentieth century.
Bert Savoy, with -- ah, straight man -- Jay Brennan. "Brennan and Savoy" were one of the top Broadway comedy teams of the twenties, and after Savoy's death Brennan tried to recapture the magic by teaming with the female comic Ann Butler -- who was, for all intents and purposes, a female female impersonator. Savoy essentially created the wisecracking, larger-than-life drag-queen persona that's still popular today.
Eddie Cantor mixes it up with Charlotte Greenwood and The Goldwyn Girls in "Palmy Days." Cantor had such an affinity for cross-dressing that he would from time to time appear in drag for his live radio shows to whip up studio-audience laughs.
Bert Wheeler, vamping it up for Robert Woolsey in the pre-code comedy classic "Peach O'Reno."
Charlie Chaplin giving Charles Insley the business as "A Woman."
Roscoe Arbuckle as "Miss Fatty," with a lovesick Buster Keaton in "Night Nurse."
Wallace Beery as "Sweedie" turns the charm on Ben Turpin in "Sweedie Learns To Swim."
Stan Laurel and Oliver Hardy as their own wives in "Twice Two."
And Billie "Buckwheat" Thomas gives Spanky something to think about, c. 1935