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December 27, 2009

Alice Schiller, Pink Pussycat Strip Club Owner Dies at 95

Alice Schiller, the owner of the Pink Pussycat of Hollywood—one of the most vaunted strip clubs of its era—died Dec. 19 at age 95. Though she was at first reluctant to enter the world of burlesque, Schiller eventually embraced it, and styled her husband’s nightclub into a glamorous, celebrity-driven scene. 

According to the New York Times:

Mrs. Schiller, who by her niece’s account never drank or smoked or swore, had not set out to own a supper club in which performers left the stage vastly lighter than when they came on. But for nearly two decades, from the early 1960s to the late 1970s, she reigned gamely as a doyenne of the diaphanous, owning and operating the Pink Pussycat with her husband, Harry.

Located near the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles, the club was a popular destination of tourists and locals alike, known for its glittering stage shows and equally glittering celebrity clientele.

It was a favorite watering hole of the Rat Pack, and for good reason. Mrs. Schiller shrewdly gave her dancers stage names like Fran Sinatra, Samya Davis Jr., Deena Martin and Peeler Lawford, and the originals soon showed up to inspect their namesakes.

Born Alice Feld in 1914, in Indiana, Schiller was raised in an Orthodox Jewish home by her mother, who ran a deli, and her maternal grandfather. She married early and divorced, and then in the mid-1950s married Harry Schiller and together, they opened a men’s clothing store in Beverly Hills, writes The Times.

In the late ’50s, on impulse, Mr. Schiller bought the Club Seville, a Latin dance club on Santa Monica Boulevard. The couple ran it briefly as a jazz club but made little money. One day in the very early ’60s, Mr. Schiller had a brainstorm: burlesque. Mrs. Schiller wept. Then she dried her tears and named the club. It was one of the first instances, if not the first, of the now-ubiquitous “Pink Pussycat” as a business name, her niece said.

The Schillers’ club was tasteful — practically wholesome. Men were encouraged to bring their wives and sometimes did. Dancers took the stage in oceans of sequins, acres of rhinestones and clouds of feathers. They departed peeled, but still strategically covered by G-string and pasties, or, as Mrs. Schiller genteelly called them, “bosom bonnets.”

“I myself am an authority on beauty and glamour,” Mrs. Schiller told The Los Angeles Times in 1967. “I’ve probably glamorized 1,000 pussycats. Twenty of my pussycats married multimillionaires. One of my girls got a $2,700 tip one night. She disappeared. We heard she’d fixed her nose with some of the money, but we never saw her again.”

By day, the club was transformed into the College of Strip Tease. The Pink Pussycat was not the only American strip club to have an adult-education division, but it undoubtedly had the most distinguished faculty: Sally Marr, the noted striptease artist, was for many years its de facto chancellor, provost, dean and sole professor. (Ms. Marr’s son, the comic Lenny Bruce, sometimes appeared on the Pink Pussycat’s stage.)

Tuition was $100 for 10 sessions. The curriculum, as Time magazine reported in 1961, included “The History and Theory of the Striptease,” “The Psychology of Inhibitions,” “Applied Sensual Communication” and “Dynamic Mammary, Navel and Pelvis Rotation.”

 

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Faith and family in Meyer’s resignation

Florida head coach Urban Meyer

I know he coaches the Florida Gators, but Urban Meyer unleashed a hurricane yesterday when he announced he would resign after Tim Tebow and the Gators play in the Sugar Bowl next month. Meyer said it is for health reasons, and, for once in sports (or politics), it sounds like it actually is:

Urban Meyer is in the fight of his life.

It is hard to imagine that that’s overstating it when the immensely popular and successful coach of an envied major-college power steps down abruptly and unequivocally cites his health as the reason.

“I have ignored my health for years, but recent developments have forced me to re-evaluate my priorities of faith and family,’’ Meyer said in the statement explaining his decision.

Ominous words, those. When football coaches talk about priorities in their lives, they generally have in mind whether to run or pass. Little beyond football outweighs the game to so many driven coaches—and Meyer admitted that in 24 years in the profession, he became one of those men.

Meyer later explained to ESPN football analysts and others that he has irregularities in his heart muscle and, though it is not life threatening, the pain is with him all the time and aggravated by stress. (In case you didn’t know, college football coaches eat and sleep football.) Still waiting for more details to emerge regarding the “faith and family” line. But I think we can assume that Meyer was just admitting what many at his level can’t: there is more to life than coaching.

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IDF kills Palestinians who murdered Israeli motorist

Israel Defense Forces troops killed three Palestinian men who were involved in the shooting death of an Israeli motorist in the West Bank.

Israeli soldiers entered Nablus Friday night in an attempt to arrest the men responsible for Thursday night’s murder of Meir Avshalom Hai, a 45-year-old father of seven near the northern West Bank settlement of Shavei Shomron, where he lived.

The men were reportedly each killed in their homes while resisting arrest.

The IDF spokesman said Sunday that a ballistics test on a weapon found in the home of one of the terrorists matched the bullet that killed Hai.

“I would like to commend the Israel Security Association (Shin Bet) and the IDF for the quick operation against the cell that murdered Rabbi Meir Avshalom Hai.  Our policy against terrorism is clear.  We will continue to respond aggressively – against any attack on Israeli citizens and against any firing of rockets or missiles at Israeli territory,” Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said at the start of Sunday’s Cabinet meeting.

Netanyahu said one of the killed terrorists had been released from Israeli prison and said:  “This is precisely the consideration standing against the Shalit deal.”

“The issue of our citizens’ security, particularly in the West Bank, is a cardinal consideration in the negotiations for Shalit’s release. We want our prisoners returned, but at the same time we must minimize the risk to our citizens,” said Netanyahu.

On Friday, two Palestinian terrorist groups, Islamic Jihad and Al-Aksa Martyrs Brigades, the military wing of Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah party, claimed responsibility for killing Hai.

Hai’s car was found in a ditch at the side of the road between Shavei Shomron and Einav on Thursday evening. The motorist died from head wounds at the scene, Magen David Adom said.
Israeli troops were set up roadblocks and searched the area to locate the gunman. The attack occurred in an area where roadblocks had been lifted and travel restrictions eased as an Israeli gesture of goodwill to Palestinians.

On Thursday, the IDF announced that security forces foiled a terror attack last week on the Jerusalem-Modiin Road, or Route 443. A homemade explosive device was found on the road between the Palestinian West Bank town of Dir Nabala and the Jewish community Givat Ze’ev.

A sketch of how the explosive was supposed to work was found with the bomb, with a note on it written in Arabic and pictures of cars with Stars of David drawn on them.

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