Digital Transgender Archive
McMahon and King, two actors made up as blackface minstrels, with King in drag. Photographic postcard, 191-.
She ain't a bit like the other girls, this little girl o'mine. McMahon & King
King looks over his shoulder, whilst McMahon in a top hat holds out his finger, pointing. Blackface minstrels (white actors with faces blackened to represent and mock Black people) were a form of entertainment in vaudeville shows in the US from the middle of the nineteenth century. By the end of that century such "minstrel shows" were a staple of entertainment all over Europe, particularly in English seaside towns, where minstrels entertained on pier and beach the length and breadth of the country. However, black-face combined with drag was a rarity. The caption says "She ain't a bit like the other girls…"
Part of James Gardiner Collection: photograph album labelled ‘Drag’.
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- https://wellcomelibrary.org/item/b20447590
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- Citation
- Cite
- Identifier
- sq87bt87k
- Collection
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James Gardiner 20th Century Drag Postcards
- Institution
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Wellcome Library
- Date Issued
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1910 to 1919?
- Genre
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Photographs
Prints
- Topic(s)
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Female impersonators
Minstrel music
- Resource Type
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Still Image
- Analog Format
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1 photograph : photoprint ;
- Language
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English
- Rights
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Copyright undetermined
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