An Evening at Chez Nous
@ Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts
915 E 60th St, Chicago, IL 60637
Opening Saturday, November 18th, from 7PM - 10PM
For fifty years, the West Berlin cabaret Chez Nous was a star-studded dance club, visited by celebrities and featured in Hollywood films. Chez Nous celebrated the artistry of female impersonators and trans women, including Coccinelle, the first French trans woman to legally change her name following gender confirmation surgery; Ricky Reneé, a drag performer who played Elke in Cabaret (1972); and Chicago’s own Marlow La Fantastique, an internationally acclaimed performer now residing in Bronzeville in her retirement. An Evening at Chez Nous brings that history alive with a cabaret-inspired event including clips of the cabaret’s revue from the 1970s, scenes from films set at the nightclub starring Michael Caine and Omar Sharif, Chicago dancer Darling Shear recreating Marlow’s fan dance, and Marlow La Fantastique herself, sharing her stories and memories of the famous dance club.
Note: This event takes place in room 901 of the Logan Center.
Raised in Bronzeville, Marlow La Fantastique began performing in Chicago, winning grand prizes at drag balls before moving to New York City in the 1960s. There, she joined the House of La Beija, spent time at Stonewall, performed at the Jewel Box, and competed as Miss Chicago in the drag pageant featured in the cult classic documentary The Queen (1968). Encouraged by her friends to explore Europe, she moved to Berlin and ended up performing at Chez Nous, hired on the spot because of her resemblance to Josephine Baker. After working in Berlin for years, Marlow continued performing internationally in Indonesia and elsewhere, finally returning to Chicago, where she and her husband live in Bronzeville.
Darling Shear has worked with choreographers including Bubba Carr, Rhonda Henriksen, Tracy Vogt, and Hinton Battle, and founded her own collaborative company, Suna Dance. In Chicago, she has worked with The Fly Honeys of The Inconvenience, apprenticed with the Cerqua Rivera Dance Theatre, and regularly performs at Salonathon and other queer arts spaces. Working with the Neo-Futurists, she specialized in recreating historical dance numbers from musicals from the 1920s through the 1970s.
Curated by Nicole Morse (CMS) as part of the Film Studies Center’s Graduate Student Curatorial Program.
Co-sponsored by the Center for the Study of Gender and Sexuality, the Department of Cinema and Media Studies, the Department of Germanic Studies, the Center for Theater and Performance Studies, and the Student Fine Arts Fund.
**Tickets are FREE but required**
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