Dencukaay:Krazy Kat LOC npcc.04658.jpg

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Faramfacce
English: Title: Krazy Kat (a reference to the Krazy Kat speakeasy in Washington, D.C.)
  • Description: 23-year-old artist Cleon "The Throck" Throckmorton (1897–1965) (far right), his Chicago-born muse and future wife 18-year-old Kathryn Marie "Kat" Mullin (1902–1994) (far left), and three unidentified friends at the back-alley entrance of Throckmorton's speakeasy, The Krazy Kat, circa July 1921. This Jazz Age speakeasy operated in Washington, D.C. during the Prohibition era. The speakeasy's name derived from the androgynous title character of a comic strip that was popular at the time, and this namesake communicated that the venue catered to clientele of all sexual persuasions, including polysexual and homosexual patrons. The venue became a clandestine rendezvous spot for Washington, D.C.'s gay community to meet without fear of exposure. By 1922, the speakeasy had become locally infamous, and municipal authorities publicly identified the venue as a "disorderly house" (a euphemism for a brothel). Its libertine clientele were known for their public advocacy of free love ("unrestricted impulse").

    Six months after this photograph, Cleon Throckmorton and Kathryn Mullin were married in January 1922 in Manhattan, New York. A model, singer, sketch artist and costume designer, Mullin was known for her radio and stage performances as a ukulele player with Harry Crandall's Saturday Nighters. For her stage performances, she was billed as "The Girl With the Million Dollar Legs." When not performing on stage or radio, she was an expert in women's saber fencing and gave public exhibitions. After four years of marriage, Mullin sued Throckmorton for divorce on December 17, 1926, after catching him in an extramarital affair with an unidentified woman—possibly film actress Juliet Brenon (1895–1979)—in their Greenwich Village apartment in Manhattan. Mullin's friend, African-American stage actress Blanche Dunn, served as a witness on her behalf in the divorce suit. Throckmorton did not contest the divorce, and Mullin did not seek alimony. Immediately after his divorce from Mullin, Throckmorton married Juliet Brenon on March 13, 1927.
  • Abstract/medium: National Photo Company Collection (Library of Congress)
  • Physical description: 1 negative :
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Library of Congress

Aji-jëf National Photo Company Collection
Sañal
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No known restrictions on publication. For more information, see National Photo Company Collection - Rights and Restrictions Information

Cette image est disponible sur la Prints and Photographs division de la Bibliothèque du Congrès des États-Unis sous le numéro d’identification npcc.04658.
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Public domain This work is from the National Photo Company collection at the Library of Congress. According to the library, there are no known copyright restrictions on the use of this work.
Public domain

Cette œuvre est également dans le domaine public dans tous les pays pour lesquels le droit d’auteur a une durée de vie de 70 ans ou moins après la mort de l’auteur.


Cette œuvre est dans le domaine public aux États-Unis car elle a été publiée avant le 1er janvier 1929.

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Patrons await the opening of the Krazy Kat Klub, a speakeasy, in 1921.

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teew11 Sulet 2018 à 08:33Tuutal gu sumb bu 11 Sulet 2018 à 08:335 328 × 4 315 (3,11 Mio)LOC upscale 1,024 × 829 → 5,328 × 4,315
2 Maars 2018 à 12:52Tuutal gu sumb bu 2 Maars 2018 à 12:521 024 × 829 (188 kio)Library of Congress National Photo Company Collection 1921 LOC npcc.04658 jpg # 12,646 / 35,621

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