Monday, September 23, 2019

Afro-Americans in Imperial Russia: Irene Ford

Clara Irene Ford (1877-1906)


Clara Irene Ford, born December 17th, 1877 in New York traveled to Europe early-1895 with a group consisting of Walter Wilkins (Dec.25, 1874 - Petersburg, VA) and Josephine B. Kent (Dec.25, 1873 - Washington DC)

Under the direction of German Impresario, Adele Weltenburg, the trio toured around Germany, Sweden and Russia for a year. On November 29th, 1895, Irene and Josephine signed a four-year contract with Frau Weltenburg, and continued touring successfully across Germany, Scandinavia and Russia until 1898. At some point, Marguerite Rhodes (Apr.27, 1877 - Washington DC) and Victoria Crockett (Aug.20, 1876 - Manhattan, NY) also joined the troupe.

In 1899, Irene Ford went solo, adopting the pseudonym, "Brazil Girl" performing her exotic songs and dances for eight consecutive years.

1899:
Berlin, Germany {Applied for passport} (Feb.3)
Copenhagen, Denmark- Circus Variete (Mar.6)/Amsterdam, Holland- Circus Carre (Mar.16-19)
Riga, Latvia- Variete Monopol (Apr.4-30)
Saint Petersburg, Russia- Aquarium Theatre (Sep.13)

1900:
Posen, Germany- Apollo Theater (Nov.?)
Berlin, Germany- Passage Theater (Nov.4-Dec.30)

1901:
Dresden, Germany {Applied for passport} (Feb.11)
Hamburg, Germany- Apollo Theater (Sep.14)
Hamburg, Germany- Apollo Theater (Dec.1)

1904:
Moscow, Russia- Aumont Theatre (May 1-5)

1905:
Moscow, Russia {Applied for passport} (Dec.24)

1906:
Moscow, Russia {Entertains Laura Bowman & Pete Hampton during their visit} (?)
Kiev, Ukraine {Clara Irene Ford dies mysteriously in Kiev} (Nov.28)

Since her arrival in Europe, Ms. Ford established a permanent residence in Moscow and after 1904, spent the majority of her time performing mainly around the Russian Empire.

In early 1906, together with Ollie Burgoyne, she entertained Afro-American duo, Hampton & Bowman during their Moscow engagement. In her later memoires, Laura Bowman recalls that Irene Ford was a popular attraction that had a string of Russian lovers from whom she frequently received expensive gifts.

On November 28th, 1906, during the chaos of the 1905 Revolution, Clara Irene died at age 28 in the provincial city of Kiev. Although her death was reported by the American Consulate, they never mentioned in any of the reports exactly her cause of death.

Thursday, July 18, 2019

Pearl Hobson (1879-1919)

Pearl Lillian Hobson (1879-1919)

Pearl Lillian Hobson was born on July 7, 1879 in Bedford County to Susan Hobson and a unknown (possibly white) father. In 1870, according the United States Census, Susan and her son Pompey (born 1869) still lived at the home of her parents. However, by 1880, she had bore several other children, Pompey (1870), Claude (1872), Virginia (1874) and Romeo (birth date unknown) and was residing in a local boardinghouse employed as domestic. Pearl was never listed on the 1880 US Census, and was most likely born at another date as by the time of her death, 1883 was used as her birthyear. Eventually the Hobson family relocated to Roanoke.

In 1898, at age 19 (or 15), Pearl had migrated north to New York, where she frequently posted ads in various New York newspapers seeking employment as a live-in housekeeper. By 1900, she found as a maid for the Leventritt family.



During the summer of 1901, French actress, Nina Diva, wife of the Austrian millionaire Baron Erlanger organized the Fencing Musketeers (also known as the Fencing Octoroons and Les Mousquetaires Noirs) consisting of eleven black women, which after two months of rehearsing, opened at New York's Circle Theater (October 26, 1901). The show consisted of lead performer, Jennie Scheper (born 1877 in Washington DC), who had come from the Sons of Ham show. There was also, Bidie Hall (born 1882 in Dunkirk, NY), Edith Adams (born 1876 in Indianapolis), Ollie Fitch (born 1880 in Staunton, VA), Mattie Stafford (born 1870 in Norfolk, VA), Minnie Brown (born 1884 in Chicago, Il), William H. Ward (born 1876 in Salisbury, MO), Jennie Ward and of course, Pearl as well as two other unnamed women. In January 1902, the show played Boston's Howard Theater (January 12–18) and New York's Garden Terrace.

On February 5, 1902, the troupe departed from Philadelphia aboard the SS Belgenland, arriving 4–5 days later in Liverpool. By the time the show reached Europe, the show had lost member, now advertised as the 10 Fencing Musketeers Company. Early February through March, the toured across Germany, appearing in Bremen, Kiel and Hamburg. On April 14, while appearing in Copenhagen's Arenatheatret, the women applied for passports at the US Embassy. Later the women appeared in Stockholm's Svea-Teatern (May 1–5) and Budapest (June–July). On July 5, while appearing in the Hungarian capital, the furious women attacked their manager for not paying as a much as they were promised. The fighting became so severe that Hungarian police had to intervene.

Afterwards, the women reappeared that October in London, now managed by Geraldine de Grant, a German impresario who renamed them, Die 7 Florida Creols Girls sending them off to continue touring across the continent. The troupe later moved on to Düsseldorf's Apollotheater, Leipzig's Kristallpalast, Brussels, Amsterdam's Rembrandt Theater (November 24-December 9) and Rotterdam's Casino Variete.


In January 1903, the troupe opened in Paris at the Casino de Paris (January 1-February 23), where they were praised for their extraordinary demonstration of the Cakewalk. So popular were the women, that they were photographed at Studio Waléry, who distributed their photos as postcards for eager European and American tourists. During their sujourn in the French capital, the troupe quickly began to dissolve. Mattie Stafford quickly became a popular French attraction, Bidie Hall began her solo tour and Edith Hall probably returned to America. The remaining quartette, continued on with a month's engagement at Vienna's Ronacher Theater (March 7-31) and two weeks at Budapest's Municipal Orpheum Theater (Apr.1-15). In June, the troupe finally reached the vast expanses of Imperial Russia, appearing at a popular café-chantant in Moscow. Unfortunately, in Russia, every theater is under the power of the police. Nothing can be said or done against their wishes, and if the wish to stop any performance, why they stop it, and that is all that there is to it. The police saw their first performance and allowed them to go on. However, after their tenth performance, the police have stopped them, saying that the American cake-walk was too suggestive. On July 4th, the American Consul, Samuel Smith, invited all the American performers who were in Moscow to a celebration on the grounds of the consulate. The program included, the Manhattan Quartette, Smith & Doretto, Weston of loop the Hoopology, Miss Walcott, the Florida Creole Girls Quartette and Harry Houdini (who wrote about the women in his diary).

Afterwards the troupe moved on to appear in St. Petersburg and Riga's Hagenstalna Wafaras Teatris (August 18-23). In October, the troupe were in London, appearing at the Royal Holborn Theatre before finally completely dissolving. Minnie Brown returned to Germany and Jennie Scheper adopted the pseudonym, Madagascar Girl and departed for her own solo tour. 



At the beginning of 1904, as the Russo-Japanese War raged, Pearl and Ollie Fitch returned to St. Petersburg to pursue their solo careers. On February 18th, Pearl opened successfully at Helsinki's Nymark & Stavenow Restaurant (February 18-March 19). On April 15, she returned to St. Petersburg and applied for a new passport at the American Embassy. Immidiately afterwards, she began traversing across the Russian Empire as a popular American variety artist around musichalls between St. Petersburg, Odessa and Moscow. On January 22, 1905, a large public demonstration outside of the Tsar's palace escalated into the Bloody Sunday riots. Chaos quickly ensued across the Imperial capital and soon across the Russian Empire. Throughout 1905, serfs and radicals took to the streets and engaged in armed struggle with soldiers and the gendarmerie, sailors of the Potemkin battleship muntinied at the Black Sea port of Odessa. Tsar Nikolai badly misjudged the Russo-Japanese War in the Far East, which soon lost public support and exposed the many weaknesses of the Russian military and political institutions. Defeat at the hands of 'inferior' Asians served to speed up public unrest that was becoming so serious that the Tsar was forced to end the war with the Treaty of Portsmouth on September 5, 1905. To overcome the heartbreak due to the loss of the war, St. Petersburg was overcome with forced gaiety, which Pearl joined in.

During the spring of 1906, Pearl was entertaining in Moscow as noted by her visit to the American Consulate on April 28th. That summer, despite increasing violence across Russia, Pearl was in the seaside Ukrainian city of Odessa entertaining audiences at the popular famous North Hotel-Restaurant, which had a beautiful open-air café chantant in the back gardens. Odessa was a polyglot city and a cosmopolitan city, and theatrical life there was in full swing. Its population numbered 630 thousand people, a third of whom were Jews and 30 thousand of whom were foreigners - Greeks, Armenians, Germans, Romanians, Italians and many others. With its wide, straight, shady streets and elegant stone houses, it would not be out of place anywhere in the Mediterranean. The city was an important trading center and, despite its distance from two capitals, it was never a quiet or provincial city. Trendy restaurants and hotels, gourmet shops, popular cafes and several theaters enjoyed the attention of many wealthy citizens. Sailors from exotic ports mixed up with the city robbers in noisy taverns next to the commercial port. On the outskirts of the city, the coast of the estuaries was littered with villas, looking at the sparkling sea surface. Meanwhile, throughout the summer, the violence prompted many of the elite to flee to the comfort of their country homes. Soon, these same estates were being torched and pillaged nightly, sometimes entire villages would out for the looting. On the horizons, nobleman and their families could see the glow of fires and the cries of the savage mobs. That autumn, as Russia became isolated due to the sudden halt of telegraph and postal services, many American expatriates began boarding trains and ships in the chaos back towards America, or at least other safer European countries. Around September 1906, Pearl sailed to New York to wait until the violence of the revolution died down. She eventually decided to visit her relatives, spending ten months in Bluefield with her brother Pompey, a brakeman with the Pocahontas division. She also made trips to visit her other brothers, Claude in Columbus and Romeo in Roanoke. Pearl attracted considerable attention in West Virginia for owning many valuable gems and wearing a $1500 fur coat. While in Bluefield, she also took the liberty of taking out a $800 life insurance policy with the Metropolitan Life Insurance Company. 


On June 6, 1907, the 1905 Revolution was finally extinguished with brutal force. Although order was established, the issues that sparked the violence remained and fueled the peasants' desire for revenge. A tense atmosphere gripped the country. There was the constant presence of the strongly emerging left-wing movement which was bent on purging the decadence of Tsarist Russia. This was, of course, the infant Bolshevik movement, but despite this business was booming again. After the revolution, a small suffragette movement swelled across Russia. The emancipation of women brought a shift in Russian society, billowing Victorian gowns were thrown aside and replaced by fashionable unimpeding svelte dresses designed by designer Lamanova. Divorce laws were eased in response to feminine demands for freedom of choice in marriage. Throughout the summer, theaters and cabarets reopened, foreigners returned and entertainers resumed their tours through the major cities. Throughout the year, Black entertainers traveled to Russia in droves. With the exception of random artists touring Europe, very few black people have ever been to Russia, and very few of them have remained in it to live. All across the Russia, Black performers such as Belle Davis, Abbie Mitchell, Josephine Morcashani, the Black Troubadours, and the popular duo Johnson & Dean filled the musichalls with excitement every night. They treated each other cordially and invited each new fellow Negro performer into their hotel rooms for breakfasts consisting of neckbones and beans to feel more at home. In St. Petersburg, a confectioner exploited the popularity of Ragtime by issuing the latest Negro minstrel hits on records pressed into discs of hard baker’s chocolate. 



On August 8, 1907, Pearl returned to New York and immediately applied for a new passport before returning to Europe. Arriving back in Russia on September 17, Pearl re-established herself in St. Petersburg and by the winter had established a considerable following in Moscow during her successful engagement at the prestigious Yar restaurant. Located on the northwestern edge of Moscow, the Yar Restaurant, opened in the 19th Century, was among Moscow’s most celebrated restaurants and stood out because due to its age. The Yar was considered by many connoisseurs to be the finest in Russia and of the best in all of Europe. Whenever she wasn't performing, Pearl watched from the wings as the popular Sokolovsky Gypsy choir performed beautiful Russian romance songs led by the gypsy guitarist Nikolai Shishkin. The Yar's artistic director was Afro-American, Frederick Bruce Thomas, a former waiter whom immigrated to Russia in 1899 and had worked at the popular Aumont Theater since then. He too had fled Russia during the terrible 1905 revolution and upon his return had gained a position at the Yar. It was he, who had possibly arranged Pearl's engagement at the restaurant, and was soon even managing her career. Pearl became a well loved, wealthy and respected entertainer, performing in Russian, German and French, attending films, symphonies, operas and making conquests in high society. Thousands flocked to the theaters to hear this Virginia coloured girl perform, and soon the Rubles poured in.

During the summer of 1908, Pearl had returned to St. Petersburg, performing in a revue "Grand Concert Divertissement Cosmopolite" at the Bouff Theatre-Garden (May 20-June 14) on 114 Fontanka Embankment in the heart of the Izmailovo Gardens. Built in 1901 by Russian merchant,  Pyotr Tumpakov, the Bouff became a favorite recreation area for locals of the Russian capital. Mr. Tumpakov made it a tradition that the Bouff opened every spring and all true Petersburgers considered it their duty to attend the opening of the latest show. The wooden theater, completely flooded with light, greeted the audiences with a large curtain, which was entirely covered with advertisements. The ticket prices to the theater were quite affordable at the time, and those who could not afford them could, walking in the evenings along the Fontanka, listen to their favorite tunes for free. However, many were able to easily peek through the cracks of the wooden walls to catch the shows.

That winter, she moved over to the popular Theatre-Garden Aquarium located on 10-12 Kamennoostrovsky Avenue. In between the nonstop masquerade balls, fireworks and festivals, Pearl sang beautiful Russian Romances and performed her dramatically orchestrated dances nightly at the most fashionable venue in the capital of the Russian Empire (October 20-December 1).



In 1909, Pearl returned south, to her old stomping grounds at Odessa's North Hotel-Reataurant, where posters plastered everywhere proclaimed her as Russia's Mulatto Sharpshooter. 



By the beginning of 1910, Pearl was residing in a luxurious apartment at 20 Kamennoostrovsky Prospect, down the street from the Aquarium Theatre. Upkept by a team of servants and chauffeured around the city in her own personal car, Pearl Hobson had become a precursor to Josephine Baker. She was among the highest paid Black actresses in Russian cabarets and music halls. From January 18th to February 12th, 1910, she returned to Moscow for another season at the Yar Restaurant.

During this successful period, Pearl soon caught the eye of the illustrious Count Alexander Sheremetev. Born in St. Petersburg in 1859, Sheremetev attended the Corps des Pages before joining a guard regiment and being later named aide-de-camp to Tsar Nikolai II in 1902. Like his grandfather, Sheremetev had a passionate love of music. In the 1880s, he established his own symphony orchestra, which gave free concerts in St. Petersburg. He was himself a fine pianist and head of the Imperial Court Choir (since 1901) where he worked alongside composer, Mily Balakirev. His other love was firefighting. He even established at his Ulyanka estate the Peter the Great Firefighting Brigade, which was composed of six hundred strong men outfitted with the latest firefighting technology. Tsar Nikolai II granted him special permission to quit receptions at the court whenever there was a fire, so he could ride off with his brigade to battle the flames. From his father, Aleksandr inherited more than five hundred thousand acres in thirteen provinces, one fashionable mansion on the French embankment in St. Petersburg and ten homes in Moscow (including the extraordinary palatial estate of Ostankino) where he lived grandly with his wife, Countess Maria Geiden, and their four children. He never traveled without a large entourage of servants, personal musicians and even cows from his villages to assure a steady supply of fresh milk. Surprisingly Countess Maria wasn't angered by her husband's relationship with a negress, and in fact considered Pearl a friend. It wasn't unusual for the Countess to occupy a private box on one side of the theatre while Pearl occupied one on the other side. In Moscow, Sheremetev kept up another mistress, Dagmara Karozus, a dancer at the Moscow Arts Theatre and shared an apartment on 3, Sheremetevsky Lane with several other Russian dancers, such as Elizaveta Otten. With the help of Sheremetev, Pearl developed into a well-received singer and ballet dancer, that headlined nightly at the Aquarium Theatre. 


During the summer of 1911, while engaged once again at Odessa's North Hotel, she applied for a new passport on August 5th. The following year, Pearl was in Kiev, performing for a week at the Apollo Theater (March 7-14). 

On June 28, 1914, Gavrilo Princip assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria in Sarajevo, setting in motion the events leading to the outbreak of World War I. On August 4, after Germany invaded Belgium, while simultaneously attacking France, Great Britain declared war on Germany. On August 23, Japan entered the war on the side of the Entente. Throughout the Russian Empire, the war was greeted with an eruption of patriotic fervor. Posters appeared everywhere, calling every able-bodied man to help defend their country. Men were seen standing in long lines to enlist (or to answer the draft), boys were boarded into trucks heading for their local regiment bases. On every street corner stood a soldier. Russia entered a period of unprecedented bloody savagery which would last for seven years and claim the lives of more than ten million people. No other country paid the price for the folly of 1914 as Russia did. Since the outbreak of the war, Russia's lack of arms and ammunition was quite apparent. The shortages became so severe that soldiers were sent to the front without guns and ordered to look for them amongst the dead. Many soldiers didn't even have boots. The officer corps, half of which were noblemen, suffered terrible losses in the first battles against the Germans. In the early months of war, many families began following the action closely on a large map of Europe. Most men were away fighting on the front lines, leaving the women and children behind alone in the villages and cities. Caring for the sick and wounded soldiers became a popular way for noblewomen to do their part for the war effort. Although most of their motives were honest and sincere, there was some elements of vanity and rivalry amongst the aristocratic women to see who could house, feed and care for the soldiers more splendidly than the rest. Other nobles, such as the Sheremetev family, converted several of their properties into hospitals, organized shipments of relief packages to Russian prisoners of war, helped bandage the wounded at private infirmaries and formed organizations dedicated to helping war orphans. On September 1st, the Tsar declared that St. Petersburg would from then onwards be known as Petrograd. Russian high society began basking in what would be the Russian Empire's last spectacular year and to be Russian society's greatest season. There was a feverish desire to have a good time to combat the undercurrent of nervousness. It was possibly a large distraction upon newspapers reporting on October 29 that the Ottoman Empire attacked Russia. All of Petrograd indulged in wild partying, amusement and merrymaking before the Tsarist government initiated prohibition that November (alcohol was banned for the remainder of the war). One highlight of the year was Countess Shuvalov's black and white ball, with the uniformed Chevalier Gardes in attendance. Everyone spent their evenings out at the opera and attending parties. Pearl entertained at the popular establishments, watching everyone dance the tango and downing champagne to the wailing of gypsy singers, red-clad Romanian violinists and clinking glasses. Everyone was spending money as quickly as they could because they weren't sure what was to happen next. 



In January 1915, in the middle of a very cold winter, the attention of Russians was riveted to another terrible wave, reports of war in Galicia. Austro-Hungarian troops launched a counter-offensive against the Russian forces in the Carpathians. But this attack was a fiasco, and by March the advancing Russians had taken the great fortress of Przemysl, thus preparing for the march along the pass to Budapest and Vienna - the two capitals of the Habsburg monarchy. Dramatic events unfolded in the south and the Russian populace watched them, experiencing a mixture of anxiety and arousal. At this time, Russia opened a second front - in the Caucasus Mountains and the Black Sea. The Ottoman Empire was its longtime enemy, which is now united with the Central Powers. Two months after the start of the war, Turkish warships shelled cities on the southern coast of Russia, including Odessa.

On September 3, shortly after moving into a new residence at 23 Kamennoostrovsky, Pearl made sure to renew her American passport. Around the same time, Tsar Nikolai II made the disastrous decision to replace Grand Duke Nikolai Nikolaevich and assume supreme command of Russia's armed forces. From that point onwards, the military's mounting failures were blamed solely on the tsar. With the tsar off at the front, Tsarina Alexandra, along with the mysterious holy man Grigory Rasputin, took command of the government. Rasputin's murky influence and the negative public perception of the German-born Tsarina as an enemy spy fed talk of dark forces at work that destroyed Russian society's waning trust in the Romanovs. Everywhere, pamphlets were distributed claiming: "To be for the Tsar is to be against Russia!" Everyone, even Imperial family members, begged Tsar Nikolai for change and reforms to allow society a greater voice in the government, although it was likely to late by then to halt the drift towards revolution. Society's lack of trust in the government was matched by the government's distrust of the people. Convinced that the people, particularly the bourgeoisie, presented a grave threat to the crown, the Okhrana kept surveillance on the wealthy. Private homes were being monitored for subversive activities. The government feared many aristocratic women were inviting military officers in their salons and encouraging seditious talk. Government agents believed the elite's alienation from the throne a more serious threat than the one posed by the poor and disenfranchised. Many aristocrats found life in the city burdensome and many retreated to their country estates. 



By mid-1916, while the mood was falling in the country, the feverish atmosphere began to penetrate into the entertainment that civilians and military were looking for. On the eve of the war came from Argentina, flew to Paris and sped around the world a new dance fashion, the Tango. During the war years, the popularity of tango increased; however, some professional dancers and singers brought ominous notes to his elegant, stylized eroticism. One couple became famous for their "Tango of Death", in which a man, dressed in a flawless tail coat, was made up in such a way that his face looked like a skull. It was a melodramatic echo of the gloomy news coming from the front. Meanwhile, on July 10th, Pearl relocated again to 26 Kamennoostrovsky, this time with former troupe member, Minnie Brown residing with her.

Throughout the year, with millions of peasants sent off to the front, food shortages loomed over Russia and the rapid increase in the price of goods fueled larger and more frequent strikes in the cities. The gendarmes were becoming reluctant to repel the masses of protesters, instead many policemen began joining the crowds, shouting: "Down with the War!" Once, while Grand Duchess Xenia's automobile drove through the streets of Petrograd, a group of street kids chased the car and pelted it with snowballs, yelling, "Down with the filthy bourgeoisie!" On the night of December 16th, a group of men led by Prince Felix Yusupov murdered Rasputin in an attempt to free Russia from his mysterious influence. Profoundly shaken by his death, the Tsar and his family retreated into seclusion. Petrograd became a massive lunatic asylum, discontent rising with each day. The dire food shortages, combined with the 300% inflation left Russia on the brink of revolution on the part of the lower classes. 

On March 8 (O.S. February 23), 1917, over seven thousand female textile workers from St. Petersburg's Vyborg district, marched through the streets crying for bread. The shortages had left the lower class starving, cold and desperate. Banners were erected everywhere, denouncing both the war and the Tsar. The crowds began breaking shops windows and raiding bakeries. Before the day ended, as many as ninety thousand had marched through the streets before order was restored. The revolution, however, had just begun. Throughout the night, Bolshevik revolutionaries organized further strikes and marches into the city center. The following morning, more than three hundred thousand workers from the northern outlying neighborhoods, crossed the Neva river at Alexandrovsky Bridge where they pushed through several hundred Cossacks on their way towards Nevsky Prospect. The city's fine inner-city neighborhoods had not seen such chaos since the 1905 revolution. By March 11th, Cossacks patrolled the streets and machine guns were positioned everywhere. Street gatherings were banned and residents were warned that the authorities were ordered to confront any unrest with force. Despite these measures, protesters filled the streets only to be met by gunfire. All the blood spilling in the streets caused many soldiers to mutiny and join the mobs. On March 12th, half of the city's 160,000 man garrison had joined the revolutionaries. Prisoners across the city were released into the streets, gendarmes were murdered, courthouses, arsenals, shops, private homes and the Ministry of the Interior were looted and ransacked. Mobs killed any respectable looking men, causing many gendarmes to strip their uniforms and flee the city. At the Mariinsky Palace, government ministers met to resign from their positions before slipping out of Petrograd by nightfall. Towards the end of the day, a red flag was raised above the Winter Palace. The capital was now under Bolshevik control. On March 16th, Tsar Nikolai abdicated and as their world dissolved around them, many aristocrats fled to the countryside. The old order evaporated and anarchy spread. While the Duma met at the Tauride Palace to consider how to address the chaos, a rival political power, the Petrograd Soviet of Workers & Soldiers Deputies, held a meeting in the palace's right wing. The new provincial government, in order to win the support of the Soviet and it's the leader, Vladimir Lenin, agreed to an amnesty for all political prisoners, freedom of speech, press, and assembly. They also agreed to the abolition of all restrictions based on race, class, religion, and nationality. The Okhrana and corps de Gendarmes was also to be abolished. The Bolsheviks began attacking the Burzhúi (bourgeoisie), or anyone classified as privileged. All it took was a starched white shirt, smooth hands, eyeglasses, a woman's hairstyle or even any evidence of bathing could classify a person as Burzhúi, causing an angry mob to set upon you.

After the February Revolution, on March 28, Pearl registered with the American Embassy instead of bothering to renew her passport like Georgette Harvey, Minnie Brown or any other American citizen planning to flee the country. By May, Russia was already adapting to the country's new political reality, although most activities continued as before. Although it was noted at every prestigious venue, the 19th-century opera "A Life of the Tsar" was hastily dropped from the repertoire. The Provisional Government declared broad civil liberties, it also pardoned all political prisoners, including terrorists; in addition, about two thousand thieves and murderers were released from prisons. Russia was flooded with a wave of crime - there were looting in the streets, attacks on houses and businesses. The new militia, which consisted mainly of volunteer students, was ineffective, and homeowners were forced to organize their own associations for mutual protection.

On November 7, the Bolsheviks struck again in Petrograd. Two days earlier, having changed his appearance, Lenin left the temporary asylum in Finland and slipped into the capital; he managed to convince his comrades that it was time to take power. Red troops, coordinated by Leon Trotsky - a talented assistant of Lenin - occupied a number of strategic sites in the city. That night, the Bolshevik-led soldiers, sailors and factory workers attacked the Winter Palace, the former royal residence where the Provisional Government met. A small defense force in the palace, consisting of two or three junkers' mouths and a part of the women's battalion, was suppressed after several hours of confrontation. Bolsheviks arrested members of the government; Kerensky, who had become prime minister by that time, was able to escape by taking a car at the United States embassy. Throughout the course of the October Revolution, with her artistic career suddenly interrupted, Pearl spent her time with her servants packing up her silverware, linens, furnishings, expensive fur coats, jewelry, stage costumes and musical instruments valued at about two hundred thousand Rubles. 



Early December, after everything was loaded up, Pearl left Petrograd, traveling west along the Primorsky Highway into the Sestroretsky District. This narrow strip of coastal land was occupied by forests, parks and swamps with a much favorable climate compared to the Russian capital, and its beautiful beaches along the Gulf of Finland made it a popular resort destination for Russian nobility, who constructed numerous country villas throughout the area. She possibly arrived in the village of Tyurisevya (now Ushkovo), who's railway station had opened on November 1st, 1916, otherwise, she would've had to stop in the town of Terijoki. It was in this village, a little area known as Harjula stood a small mountain surrounded by deep ravines and covered in ferns and arbors decorated with hazel and blue flowers. Numerous narrow walking paths led up the mountain to several observation platforms and a beautiful country mansion that had been purchased the previous year by Count Sheremetev. It was already teeming with servants, preparing for the arrival of the Count and his wife. It was from here, Pearl continued along the Primorsky Highway towards the coastal village of Metsäkylä (now Molodyozhnoye), a small Finnish village first established in 1721. In the southern part of the village, in tiny Merila district sat a quaint two-story cottage with a four-story tower attached, which became known as, Dacha Hobson. The property, surrounded by acres of trees with a remarkable view of the Gulf of Finland and the mouth of the Vammelsuu River, was Sheremetev’s gift to his mulatto mistress. As she settled into her new home, she sent to America her last letter to her family, mentioning that she had survived the Revolutions and had recently purchased a new house. On December 6th, Finland declared independence from Russia, immidiatlely closing off its borders and completely absorbing the entire Sestroretsky District into the new nation. With Metsäkylä now apart of Finland, Pearl was safe from Russia's chaos. 



On January 27, 1918, Finland entered into a hectic Civil War, as the former Grand Duchy of the Russian Empire transformed into an independent state. The civil war was fought between the Reds, led by a section of the Social Democratic Party, and the Whites, conducted by the conservative-based Senate and the German Imperial Army. The paramilitary Red Guards, composed of industrial and agrarian workers, controlled the cities and industrial centers of southern Finland. The paramilitary White Guards, composed of farmers, along with middle-class and upper-class social strata, controlled rural central and northern Finland. The conflict finally ended on May 15th, as Finland emerged as an independent, democratic republic. 



In December 1918, Pearl adopted four children: Anselm (1904), Aina (1905), Vanya (1909) and Elina (1913). Their mother, Anna Maria Repatti, had lost her husband in 1914 from smallpox and was now struggling to feed all of her children. Pearl offered to adopt of the children and moved them into her home. Unfortunately, six months later, Pearl Lillian Hobson died on June 4, 1919 at age 39 due to Typhus, although Elina Repatti believes that Pearl instead died of the Spanish Flu.

Monday, July 8, 2019

Listen to Coretti Arle Titz - Pale Moon (1935)



Recorded in Moscow (c.1935) 

Soprano singer, Coretti Arle Titz accompanied by Boris Titz (piano) and Nikolai Platonov (flute).

Tuesday, June 18, 2019

Emma Harris: The Black Nightingale



Emma Harris (1871-c.1940)

Along Georgia's Savannah River, October 7th, 1871, Emma Elizabeth Matthews was born to poor Negro family in the bustling southern city of Augusta. Upon the end of the Civil War in 1865, her parents Sarah Green and Richard Matthews left the Phinizy plantation to seek a better life and opportunities in the city. Sarah worked as a washerwoman, scrubbing the clothes for the local white families while Richard laboured daily in one of the city's numerous cotton processing mills. No sooner was Emma born, two more children followed (Thomas - 1873 and Josephine - 1880) whom served as her playmates as well as aided her with the household chores.

By 1880, the family had settled in an old brick tenement on the grimy narrow 319 Houston Street. Soon after, Emma began attending, Edmund Asa Ware High School, the first public high school for Negroes in Georgia. That summer, Emma was sent to Norfolk, Virginia to live with her widowed Aunt Hattie Matthews to continue her studies and later attend the Negro Mission College (which opened 1883). But after a few years, her Aunt suddenly died, leaving the young Emma stranded in Virginia with no place to go. Instead of returning home, Emma caught the next train north, enrolling herself into the Boston Musical Conservatory and finding work as a chambermaid to support herself. Around 1892, she made her way to New York City. On December 23rd, 1896, Emma met and married local janitor, Joseph B. Harris. The couple settled into a small apartment in Brooklyn, where they hoped to start a family. She also assisted in bringing several of her relatives up from the South. After the sudden death of their only child, Emma began focusing on her singing career. Due to her staunchly religious parents' disapproval of her career as an entertainer, Emma began singing in the Trinity Baptist Church Choir and working as a domestic for nearly five years.



Around April 3rd, 1901, while riding a trolley to work, Emma noticed someone left a copy of the New York Herald beside her. She noticed an advertisement posted by German theatrical impresario, Paula Kohn-Wöllner, seeking seven Negro women with the ability to sing and dance for a concert tour of Germany. Emma replied to the advert and was promptly accepted. Ms. Kohn-Wöllner, who had previously managed two theatrical troupes in the 1890s in Leipzig and Chemnitz, had made a trip to New York to visit her two married sisters, when she got the idea to organize a Negro theatrical troupe to tour across Europe. Soon the troupe comprised of Ollie Burgoyne (26 year-old singer from the Oriental America show), Fannie Wise (19 year-old singer from Brooklyn), Florence Collins (26 year-old pianist from Kentucky), Alverta Burley (19 year old from Baltimore), S.T. Jubrey (32 year-old housewife from Virginia) and of course Emma Harris. Another girl, 20 year-old Corette Hardy was also accepted, but it was suddenly decided that she was to be left behind as a replacement in case any of the women decided to quit the newly christened “Louisiana Amazon Guard” troupe. On April 10th, the six women were brought to the Passport Office to apply for their first passports. After two weeks, on April 17th, with Ms. Kohn-Wöllner, paying for all six of the women's travel expenses, gathered all of them up and boarded them on the S.S. Deutschland heading for Germany. Built by AG Vulcan in Stettin and launched in 1900, the brand new S.S. Deutschland won the Blue Riband from Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse of the North German Lloyd line, crossing the Atlantic Ocean in just a little over five days. She was the first and only four-stacker built for Hamburg America.

By April 21, the troupe arrived Germany, arriving soon in Leipzig, possibly debuting at the popular Central-Theater. Throughout June and July, the troupe made a series of successful performances at Kiel's Kaiserkrone and Carlsbad's Hotel Weber. In late August, the women intrigued Hungarian audiences at the Os-Budavara fortress. In September, the women fulfilled a month-long engagement at Vienna's Colosseum Theater. The following month was spent at Copenhagen's Cirkus Variete for the beginning of their brief Scandinavian tour.

In November, the troupe spent two successful weeks at Goteborg's Circus Madigan and two more weeks at Stockholm's Svensalen Variety Restaurant. Originally built in 1888 in an extension of the Sparreska Palace, the Moorish-style cabaret had recently re-opened in 1901 with electrical lighting and glass ceilings above that stage. In-between the their performances, on November 11th, Ms. Kohn-Wöllner conducted several interviews with the Svenska Dagbladet newspaper, frequently pushing forward Fannie Wise (fashionably dressed in a black and white dress). Ms. Kohn-Wöllner mentioned her plans to organize a band for the troupe, the contract she signed with the Folies-Bergere (for January 1902) and briefly mentioned her plans to bring over the standby girl still waiting in America. The troupe returned to Germany in December to entertain at Berlin's Circus Schumann where they ended the year, preparing for another year of extensive touring.



The new year of 1902, the group opened in Magdeburg for a two week engagement before moving on to France, where the women intended to perform at Paris' famous Folie-Bergere cabaret. Unfortunately it doesn't seem as if that ever came into fruition and the troupe returned to Germany to appear in Braunswich's Bruning Theater and Halle's Walhalla Theater.

The month of March was spent in Breslau's Liebich Etablissement, followed by performances at Danzig's Wilhelm Theater and Poznan's Kaisergarten in April.

Leipzig (September 1902)

In May, the group disappears briefly from the limelight as Fannie Wise and S.T. Jubrey suddenly quit the group and returns home to the United States. During this time their replacements, standby performers, Corette Hardy and Fannie Smith (20 year-old from Philadelphia) were promptly brought over to Europe. Throughout June, the troupe toured across Switzerland, performing in Zurich and St. Gallen before returning north to Germany. The month of July was spent at Munich's Deutsches Theater, followed by a month at Leipzig's Central Theater (September) and Dresden (October).

After twenty-one months of touring across Europe, in October 1902, during their Dresden engagement, the entire troupe walked out on their German impresario. Ms. Kohn-Wöllner was taken to court and accused of exploiting them financially. Lead performer, Ollie Burgoyne was elected as their new manager and now as the, "Five Louisianas", the women left for Berlin, where they entertained at the Orpheum Theater and Harmonie Circus. After a brief engagement in Trier and Aachen, the group suddenly disappeared.

In March 1903, Ollie Burgoyne and Florence Collins renewed their American passports and departed for London to join the cast of Hurtig & Seamon’s "In Dahomey", which opened on March 16th at the Shaftesbury Theatre. The four remaining women, now managed by American variety artist, William Crado, performed around Germany (and possibly other countries) for eight more months before departing for the vast Russian Empire.

Moscow - Aumont Theater (also known as the Aquarium Theater)

Arriving in Russia around January 1904, the troupe appeared in Moscow at Aumont's French Theater. The focal point of Moscow’s lively nightlife, located at 16 Bolshaya Sadovaya Street just west of Triumphal Square, the Aumont Theater was an entertainment garden occupying several park like acres that drew clientele from the more genteel and prosperous classes of society, who weren't put off by the frivolous nature of the establishment's entertainment. A giant white colonnade entrance and a staircase bathed in electric light led into the gardens. In the center was a beautiful Moorish palace where bands played fashionable music, to the left was an elegant restaurant and to the right people strolled along gravel walkways past vendors booths selling snacks and souvenirs into the depths towards a spacious outdoor café chantant where gypsy Romanian orchestras performed. That evening, as the crowds made their way from the theater towards the open-air café chantant, the “Louisiana troupe” joined twenty or thirty variety acts onstage varying from trained animals, acrobats to operatic singers. The theater director, Charles Aumont, was a successful yet ruthless French-Algerian businessman that renovated the gardens in 1898 to make visitors feel like they've visited a magical world. Unfortunately, he rather well-known for exploiting the chorus girls and female performers to allure the largely male audience. After their turn onstage, the head Maître d’ (surprisingly a black man from Mississippi named Frederick Thomas) informed the women that as singers, they would be called upon after their performance to entertain the private parties.
St. Petersburg - Theater Garden Aquarium

Shortly afterwards, the women traveled northwest to Saint Petersburg, to appear at the popular Aquarium Gardens. On February 8th, the Imperial Japanese navy launched a surprise attack on the Russian Pacific Fleet at Port Arthur in China. The two countries’ imperialistic ambitions in Manchuria had come into conflict. As the Russo-Japanese War raged in the Pacific Ocean and the Russian Far East territories, the troupe strutted across the stage and gardens of the Aquarium Theater, joining in the patriotic jubilation before the group without warning finally dissolved due to internal issues. Later that month, Emma convinced Coretté to remain in Russia with her and together they formed the “Kristy Creole Duet”, while they continued to perform at the Aquarium. In March, the duo suddenly became the “Harris Trio” with the addition of Fannie Smith, and together they departed for Helsinki with an engagement at the illustrious Hotell Fennia, where Finnish high society enjoyed to mingle.
Helsinki - Hotell Fennia (March 1904)


On January 22, 1905, while attending a party, hosted by popular American jockey, William Caton, in central Saint-Petersburg, the women witnessed the Bloody Sunday protest outside the Tsar's palace and riots across the city. The trio immediately packed up and returned to Moscow, where they resumed working at the Aumont Theater. In February, while performing in the city of Vyatka, the trio decided to dissolve and Corette and Fannie departed for Poland.



Now as a solo artist, Emma returned to Helsinki in March, performing for two weeks at the popular Princess Restaurant followed by two more weeks in the Finnish city of Tampere at the Seurahuoneen Sali. Shortly afterwards she returned to St. Petersburg and Moscow, where she met a handsome, English-speaking scientist and museum curator named Baranov. The two quickly became lovers.

Despite the '05 Revolution raging across the Russian Empire and the chaos increasing daily, immediately Emma embarked on an extended Siberian tour that coincided with Baranov's own personal lecture tour across Russia's expansive Volga region. Baranov accompanied her everywhere acting as her manager and promised to accompany her on a trip to the United States the following year. Since trains hardly reached many parts of Russia during that period, so much of the journey was using 'troikas' and were often followed by hungry wolves. Unfortunately, Emma discovered that her 'Grand Duke' was a charlatan. Baranov had been presenting her onstage as a singing African savage, manipulating and stealing her money after the show. Eventually the couple arrived in the city Kazan. Located on the left bank of the mighty Volga and Kazanka river and 520 miles east of Moscow, the former capital of the ancient Qazan Khanate was ravaged annually by bitter winters and scorching summers and was also surprisingly modern compared to the numerous Germanic villages and towns that lined the Volga. As the educational and cultural center of Russia’s vast Volga region, the city featured electric lighting, electric trams, telegraphs, telephones and Kazan Imperial University. Desperate to escape, Emma attempted to flee from her abusive lover only to be seized by several Tsarist gendarmes who dragged her away to jail. As the Russo-Japanese conflict was still raging, Baranov reported Emma to the authorities as a spy for the Japanese that was traversing across Russia under the guise of a performer. Eventually an intervention from Moscow's American Consulate allowed her to be released.

On September 2nd, the Russo-Japanese War ended tragically on September 2nd as the Russian Empire was forced to surrender to the Japanese. Scraping enough money teaching English around Kazan, Emma boarded a train to Moscow, where she sought out American Consul, Samuel Smith, who orchestrated her release from prison. The deeply racist, Consul Smith was shocked to discover that he had aided Negro woman from prison. Realizing she couldn't count on America for further help, Emma decided to scrape her plans to return the United States the following year and remain in Russia.

Emma Harris (on the Right)



Early 1906, a Baltimore businessman, Harry Leans, visited Russia and offered to fund Emma's first solo tour across the Russian Empire. Strangely, Emma decided to keep the African persona that Baranov had created for her becoming, "Galima Oriedo: The Black Nightingale". She performed songs in German, French, Polish and Russian. Her specialty was Russian Romance songs, which were extremely popular in all of the major cabarets and theaters across the empire. In-between her songs, Emma demonstrated her ability to play the flute and ocarina, as well as her ability to imitate the sounds with her voice. It wasn't long before she became a popular operatic singer and classical dancer in Moscow and St. Petersburg.
Helsinki (September 1908)


On June 6, 1907, the 1905 Revolution was finally extinguished with brutal force. Although order was established, the issues that sparked the violence remained and fueled the peasants' desire for revenge. A tense atmosphere gripped the country. There was the constant presence of the strongly emerging left-wing movement which was bent on purging the decadence of Tsarist Russia. This was, of course, the infant Bolshevik movement, but despite this business was booming again. After the revolution, a small suffragette movement swelled across Russia. The emancipation of women brought a shift in Russian society, billowing Victorian gowns were thrown aside and replaced by fashionable unimpeded svelte dresses designed by designer Lamanova. Divorced laws were eased in response to feminine demands for freedom of choice in marriage. Throughout the summer, theaters and cabarets reopened, foreigners returned and entertainers resumed their tours through the major cities. Throughout the year, Black entertainers traveled to Russia in droves. With the exception of random artists touring Europe, very few black people have ever been to Russia, and very few of them have remained in it to live. In the years that Coretté spent there, there seemed to be no more than a dozen other blacks in Russia — permanent residents among more than a million people. All across the Russia, Black performers such as Belle Davis, Abie Mitchell, Josephine Morcashani, the Black Troubadours, and the popular duo Johnson & Dean filled the music halls with excitement every night. They treated each other cordially and invited each new fellow Negro performer into their hotel rooms for breakfasts consisting of neckbones and beans to feel more at home. In St. Petersburg, a confectioner exploited the popularity of Ragtime by issuing the latest Negro minstrel hits on records pressed into discs of hard baker’s chocolate. Briefly between 1907-1908, Emma partnered with another American, forming the "William and Emma" duo that toured across Russia. The duo briefly traveled with Ollie Burgoyne and later popular African-American entertainer, Edgar H. Jones.

The year 1908 was full of success for nearly every African-American expatriate across the Russian Empire. In St. Petersburg, former leader of the old Louisiana Amazon Guards, Ollie Burgoyne was a popular headliner, mistress to a Russian noble named Sasha who provided her with a beautiful mansion on the outskirts of the capital and was preparing to a open French lingerie boutique. Corette Alefred had married a Russian theater director and become Coretti de-Utina, a popular concert singer. In Moscow, Miss Pearl Hobson (from the Florida Creole Girls) was a popular headliner at the illustrious Yar Restaurant. Also backstage at the Yar, was waiter Frederick Thomas, back in Moscow after the terrible 1905 Revolution and employed at the restaurant as the new artistic director and Miss Hobson’s manager. Around 1908, Emma had also settled in Moscow, becoming a popular fixture there.

During the summer of 1910, Emma was appearing in the strange and exotic city of Constantinople, a start to a lengthy Turkish tour. She found herself being chauffeured down Grand Rue de Péra, lined with many European-styled six story high ornately carved buildings. Everywhere, signs were written in Arabic and French. The fashionable Péra district was filled with businesses, restaurants, bars, shops and numerous café chantants to entertain the visiting Greeks, Armenians, Jews and Levantines. The exotic city reminded Emma of Moscow’s oriental nature.

She became such a sought after entertainer, that she was invited to Yildız Sarayı, the abandoned palace of Sultan Abdul Hamid II, to perform at the Imperial Seraglio (harem). Performing at all the popular hotels and music halls, she mastered the exotic belly dances, known as Raqs Sharqi which she soon showcased every night. She was eventually became so popular, that she was even invited to perform for the 12-year old Shah of Persia, Ahmad Shah Qajar (also known as ) and his elderly uncle, Ali Reza Khan Azod Al-Molk, who later died that September.

Caucasus Viceroyalty


In January 1911, Emma returned triumphantly from the Ottoman Empire for the beginning of a lengthy tour across the Caucasus Viceroyalty. In the Georgian city of Tiflis (now Tbilisi) where she debuted at the Modern Theater. The following month, she was engaged at the Illusion Theater alongside a young black boy named Bomburo. Throughout the spring and summer, she was also possibly engaged in the Kars Governate, Azerbaijan and Russia's Kuban, Dagestan, Tersk and Batum Oblasts.
Tiflis - Illusion Theater (February 1911)

During the course of the tour, Emma became acquainted with a 28-year old Russian peasant, Alexander Ivanovich Mizinkin, who originated from Moscow. After a brief courtship, the couple immediately married and now with Alexander also employed as her impresario, Emma continued her tour throughout the vast Russian Empire. Around this time, Emma became a Russian citizen and Russified her name becoming, Emmy Richardsovna Mizinkina (Эммы Ричардовна Мизикина).
Galima Oriedo - Rostov (January 1912)

On January 6th, the famous Algerian Arab performer, Galima appeared in Rostov-on-Don for a two week engagement at the Pel-Mel Cabaret (within the Maly Theater). By the spring as the Titanic sunk into the Atlantic, she was engaged in the Belarussian city of Braslav on April 15th, demonstrating her musical abilities and exotic dances at the Theater Uvarova.

That summer, the couple returned south, arriving the massive southern region known as the Ukraine, where they established a residence in Kharkov, the quiet provincial merchant city of 250,000 before a lucrative engagement at Odessa's North Hotel. The Kharkov Governorate, with a population of two million was filled with various small cities and villages where the Russian merchants and peasantry conversed in Ukrainian, Russian, German, Yiddish, Belarussian, Polish and Tatar. Kharkov county, which housed the Governorate capital of Kharkov, had a population of over 500,000 (Ukrainian - 55% Russian - 40% Jews - 3% Poles - 1%).

Settled in her country dacha in the surrounding rich agricultural areas, Emma strived to immerse herself into the aristocratic lifestyle that she'd witnessed across the Russian Empire, employing six servants and footman. In most households of Russian high society, there was an invisible glass barrier. Distinguishing the aristocracy from the workers was terribly important, but not always easy. The nobles walked on one side of the street, and the servants and peasants on the other. Although everyone attended the same churches, there was a separate entrance for the noblemen and their families, which led to a raised enclosure reserved for them. From the comfort of her home, she witnessed the miserable conditions of the peasantry, living in poverty, ignorance and filth from the cradle to the grave under the interlocking power of the landlords, the orthodox church and the Tsar. They lived upon small strips of land which was insufficient to support them. They often were forced to work an allotted number of days on the vast estates of the wealthy landowners or for Kulaks (rich peasants). If they were unable to pay their taxes, the gendarmerie payed them a visit, seizing their horses, hogs, cows and anything else of value. She felt for the peasants, but maybe it was alright for her to be a little selfish after three hundred years of American slavery and oppression.

In August, she was visited by her old acquaintance, 49-year old Negro comedian Edgar Jones, who was in the middle of one of his usual Ukrainian tours. He had been touring around Europe for 21 years, having arrived in 1891 with the "Afro-American Specialty Company". In 1904, as his European career began to falter, Edgar began frequently appearing across the Russian Empire, spending little time home in Berlin, where his wife Amelia Jones and four children lived at Kleine Hamburgerstrasse 2. After a brief visit and settling in a Kharkov hotel, Edgar departed to the city of Lebedin (now Lebedyn) for a performance. Unfortunately, on August 29th, he died of heart paralysis and was hastily buried in the Troitskaya Cemetery. Emma aided the governor of Kharkov and Odessa's American Cosulate in burying Edgar Jones and sending his possesions of clothing and musical instruments to his family in Germany.

The following month, as anti-government protests raged across Russia, a double agent shot and killed Prime Minister Pyotr Stolypin while he attended a performance at the Kiev Opera House. The Tsar was so near the Prime Minister, that he heard the shots himself. A sense of doom settled over Russia, many felt apocalypse was fast approaching and no one and nothing could stop it.

Voronezh - Yacht Club (July 1912)


The country-wide celebration, known as the Romanov Tercentenary, started 1913 off with a bang. This celebration marked the 300th anniversary of the Romanov dynasty beginning with a week of receptions at the Winter Palace in February before the Imperial family took a pilgrimage in May to Moscow and the numerous cities that once occupied the ancient territory of the Grand Duchy of Muscovy. Emma spent the year touring across the various Ukrainian governorates.

During the summer, she arrived in the Voronezh Governorate arriving in the governorate seat, Voronezh in July. Upon her arrival, the Black Nightingale took the city by storm. She thrilled audiences for two days at the Fantasy Gardens and another successful engagement at the Petrovsky Yacht Club. Newspapers printed positive reviews of the way she would open her act playing a flute and ocarina, before imitating those instruments with her ethereal voice. Then after performing a series of Russian romances in fluently, she began vigorously dancing her exotic snake-like Algerian dances which sent audiences into a frenzy. Early October, Emma was in Odessa performing at the popular North Hotel, which had been renovated the previous year, adding a permanent music hall in the gardens behind the hotel. Odessa was a polyglot city and a cosmopolitan city, and theatrical life there was in full swing. Its population numbered 630 thousand people, a third of whom were Jews and 30 thousand of whom were foreigners - Greeks, Armenians, Germans, Romanians, Italians and many others. With its wide, straight, shady streets and elegant stone houses, it would not be out of place anywhere in the Mediterranean. The city was an important trading center and, despite its distance from two capitals, it was never a quiet or provincial city. Trendy restaurants and hotels, gourmet shops, popular cafes and several theaters enjoyed the attention of many wealthy citizens. Sailors from exotic ports mixed up with the city robbers in noisy taverns next to the commercial port. On the outskirts of the city, the coast of the estuaries was littered with villas, looking at the sparkling sea surface.

During her engagement, Ophelia Gindra, daughter of an Austrian millionaire, fled to Odessa's North Hotel with to elope with boyfriend who quickly her abandoned upon arrival. During this time, Ophelia witnessed the Black Nightingale perform her exotic routine in the garden café-chantant. Emma took the girl under her wing and attempted to help her employment as a singer at the hotel. Unfortunately, the director refused to hire her and the Black Nightingale’s contract was coming to an end soon. On October 10th, Emma offered to take the girl back to Kharkov with her, but while at the at the Odessa train station, she attempted to persuade Ophelia to return to Austria. Instead, Ophelia committed suicide by consuming potassium cyanide, dying within seconds. Emma was promptly arrested and sent to Odessa’s American Consulate, where she was soon released and sent immediately home to Kharkov. On October 17th, in between her performances in Kharkov at the Michel Teatr and the Kommerchesky Club, she conducted several interviews about the incident with the New Odessa and Morning of Kharkov newspapers.

Kharkov - Zerkalo Zhizni Cinema

In the winter of 1913, with the earnings from Emma's frequent touring, Alexander purchased the popular Zerkalo Zhizni cinema from a Mr. G. Schmidt. The quaint newly renovated stone two-story 'Mirror of Life' cinema on 32 Moskalevskaya street was built in 1871 by the peasant M.T. Egorov (and designed by Ukrainian architect A.D. Rakov) and was among the first cinemas built in the Ukraine. By 1912, it was the most popular destinations in Kharkov. In the foyer, live music entertained movie goers as they helped themselves to a buffet of pies, cakes, ice cream and soda. In between the Russian and American films that were showcased to packed houses, pianists, violinists and singers offered brief performances, often the Black Nightingale herself gave concerts.


On February 4th, 1914, the electricity suddenly shut off at the Zerkalo Zhizni Cinema and chaos ensued. Outside an angry crowd gathered and Alexander calmed them, returning their money and promising everyone one film free of charge the following day.

On June 28, 1914, Gavrilo Princip assassinated Archduke Franz Ferdinand of Austria in Sarajevo, setting in motion the events leading to the outbreak of World War I.

Jack Johnson

On July 25th, according to later passport, Emma paid Moscow a visit. Possibly in preparation to relocate back north, or possibly taking an opportunity to visit Frederick Bruce Thomas. Thomas (now using the Russified version of his name Fyodor Tomas), had become the owner of the old Aumont Theater in 1911 and had converted it into Moscow's popular amusement park, the Aquarium Garden Theater. Besides its numerous various entertainment establishments, the park also held private residences, hotels, cafes and cinemas. The latest attraction at the Aquarium, was Jack Johnson, America’s Heavyweight Champion, who was preparing for a magnificent boxing tournament between Johnson and M.P. Tsarev that was initially to be held on July 28th. However the tournament was called off due to the news of chaos coming from other parts of Europe. Jack and Emma would've witnessed off-duty army officers spending time at the Aquarium, sipping champagne, staring at the chorus girls and some of them meeting and dining with the black American boxing champion. Unfortunately, August 1, Germany declared war on Russia and on August 3, on France. As the Russian Empire prepared for mobilization, Jack Johnson and his wife caught the next train to Paris. Emma herself promptly returned home to Kharkov and began liquidating her various properties.


On August 4, after Germany invaded Belgium, while simultaneously attacking France, Great Britain declared war on Germany. On August 23, Japan entered the war on the side of the Entente. Throughout the Russian Empire, the war was greeted with an eruption of patriotic fervor. Posters appeared everywhere, calling every able-bodied man to help defend their country. Men were seen standing in long lines to enlist (or to answer the draft), boys were boarded into trucks heading for their local regiment bases. On every street corner stood a soldier. It wasn't long before Alexander was drafted and sent off to the Front. Russia entered a period of unprecedented bloody savagery which would last for seven years and claim the lives of more than ten million people. No other country paid the price for the folly of 1914 as Russia did. Since the outbreak of the war, Russia's lack of arms and ammunition was quite apparent. The shortages became so severe that soldiers were sent to the front without guns and ordered to look for them amongst the dead. Many soldiers didn't even have boots. The officer corps, half of which were noblemen, suffered terrible losses in the first battles against the Germans. In the early months of war, many families began following the action closely on a large map of Europe. Most men were away fighting on the front lines, leaving the women and children behind alone in the villages and cities. Caring for the sick and wounded soldiers became a popular way for noblewomen to do their part for the war effort. Although most of their motives were honest and sincere, there was some elements of vanity and rivalry amongst the aristocratic women to see who could house, feed and care for the soldiers more splendidly than the rest. Other nobles, such as the Sheremetev family, converted several of their properties into hospitals, organized shipments of relief packages to Russian prisoners of war, helped bandage the wounded at private infirmaries and formed organizations dedicated to helping war orphans.

On September 1st, the Tsar declared that St. Petersburg would from then onwards be known as Petrograd. Russian high society began basking in what would be the Russian Empire's last spectacular year and to be Russian society's greatest season. There was a feverish desire to have a good time to combat the undercurrent of nervousness. It was possibly a large distraction upon newspapers reporting on October 29 that the Ottoman Empire attacked Russia. All of Petrograd indulged in wild partying, amusement and merrymaking before the Tsarist government initiated prohibition that November (alcohol was banned for the remainder of the war). One highlight of the year was Countess Shuvalov's black and white ball, with the uniformed Chevalier Gardes in attendance. Everyone spent their evenings out at the opera and attending parties. Emma entertained at the popular establishments, watching everyone dance the tango and downing champagne to the wailing of gypsy singers, red-clad Romanian violinists and clinking glasses. Everyone was spending money as quickly as they could because they weren't sure what was to happen next.

Kiev newspaper advertising "Satan's Woman" (Mar.29, 1916)


In January 1915, in the middle of a very cold winter, the attention of Russians was riveted to another terrible wave, reports of war in Galicia. Austro-Hungarian troops launched a counter-offensive against the Russian forces in the Carpathians. But this attack was a fiasco, and by March the advancing Russians had taken the great fortress of Przemysl, thus preparing for the march along the pass to Budapest and Vienna - the two capitals of the Habsburg monarchy. Dramatic events unfolded in the south and the Russian populace watched them, experiencing a mixture of anxiety and arousal. At this time, Russia opened a second front - in the Caucasus Mountains and the Black Sea. The Ottoman Empire was its longtime enemy, which is now united with the Central Powers. Two months after the start of the war, Turkish warships shelled cities on the southern coast of Russia, including Odessa. In response to this chaos, the Mizinkin household relocated to Moscow, where Emma had purchased comfortable apartment on 12 Bol'shoy Kozikhinskiy Pereulok in the center of the city. Also inhabiting in the apartment building was the popular Russian actor from the Maly Theatre, Alexander Ostuzhev, who was appearing successfully in the production of V. Sardu's "Graf de Rizoor". Less than ten minutes away on the Bolshaya Sadovaya, was Fyodor Tomas’ Aquarium Garden establishment.
1915 Passport Photo

Lonely in the middle of Moscow without her husband and unable to tour due to the war, Emma decided to embark on a film career. After writing a scenario together with directors Sigmund Veselovsky and Parkomenko, Emma traveled to the G.I. Libkin Studios in Yaroslavl to star in her debut film "Satan's Woman". Released May 15th by the Alians Film Office, the 5 hour, 1350 meter film was an interesting attempt on Russian soil to create an intricate American adventure-drama.

Film Scenario:

"Famous circus actress Gaia Assi (Ge-de-Gayam), a charming and beautiful woman, enjoys great success with men. Not loving anyone except her devoted Arab Emerita (Emma, credited as Galima Oriedo), she pursues one goal - to fall in love. However, no one touches her suffering and the cold laughter of celebration meets hot recognition of its victims. On a ride she meets a banker who is find of her, she also meets and soon conquers the heart of the engineer Lamanca, who saw her performance in a circus. Entertainer Yevgeniy Tolsky (Nikolai Saltykov), former lover of Miss Assi, was terribly jealous of her new banker lover. Gaia still possessed affection for Tolsky, much to the chagrin of Emerita who was deeply in love with him.

The banker walks in on Gaia kissing Tolsky, however Gaia recovers her relationship with him by inviting everyone to a party at her home. She also asks that Tolsky bring along his brother Andrei (Lihomsky), a popular sculpture artist. At the party, guests demand that Gaia dance and she performs the dance of fire much to the delight of everyone. While Gaia spent much of the evening snuggling up with her banker, the sculptor Andrei realizes she is the woman of his dreams and wants to sculpt statues of her. Tolsky overhears his brother and an argument ensues. Eventually the banker gets in involved and Tolsky challenges him to a duel. Tolsky injures the banker and returns to the party to search for Gaia, only to find her embracing Andrei. Rushing out from her bedroom, Emerita attempts to comfort Tolsky. Unfortunately he pushes her away, locks himself in the next room to commit suicide. Hearing Emerita’s cries, Gaia and Andrei discover the horrible tragedy that has occurred. Emerita embraces the cold body of her dead love interest, blaming his death on Gaia and Andrei.

Disgusted, Andrei loses interest in the beautiful dancer and immediately decides to seek revenge on his brother. Conspiring with a friend, Andrei kidnaps Gaia in a automobile to an abandoned cellar. They're unaware that Emerita had followed behind them in a taxi and finds a way to rescue her starving friend from the cellar. As the women escape, they're followed by the men until the pursuers get caught in a car accident. Later on, while Gaia is home entertaining a new potential lover, Andrei sneaks into her home and poisons the coffee right before she begins serving refreshments. Gaia, in agony from the effects of the poisoning, is approached by Andrei who declared that he was once in love with her but now was lost to him. During his speech, Gaia used the last of her energy to grab a dagger and murder Andrei before she also succumbed to death."

Naturally, Emma became an overnight sensation due to the success of the film.

That summer, Russian officers found themselves wasting scarce artillery shells on their own troops in a desperate attempt to get them to fight. So dreadful were the conditions at the front, that many soldiers shot off their own fingers to escape the carnage. Many began to desert and return to their villages, which had been nearly drained of men. That same summer at Moscow's Aquarium Garden, Fyodor Tomas sold tobacco, then sent the proceeds to the troops. Elsewhere, bazaars were organized to sell items to raise money for the troops. On June 12th, for the first time in five years, Emma bothered to renew her American passport. Although there are discrepancies, as she claimed to have been born in Washington D.C. in 1886.

In September, Tsar Nikolai II made the disastrous decision to replace Grand Duke Nikolai Nikolaevich and assume supreme command of Russia's armed forces. From that point onwards, the military's mounting failures were blamed solely on the tsar. With the tsar off at the front, Tsarina Alexandra, along with the mysterious holy man Grigory Rasputin, took command of the government. Rasputin's murky influence and the negative public perception of the German-born Tsarina as an enemy spy fed talk of dark forces at work that destroyed Russian society's waning trust in the Romanovs. Everywhere, pamphlets were distributed claiming: "To be for the Tsar is to be against Russia!" Everyone, even Imperial family members, begged Tsar Nikolai for change and reforms to allow society a greater voice in the government, although it was likely to late by then to halt the drift towards revolution. Society's lack of trust in the government was matched by the government's distrust of the people. Convinced that the people, particularly the bourgeoisie, presented a grave threat to the crown, the Okhrana kept surveillance on the wealthy. Private homes were being monitored for subversive activities. The government feared many aristocratic women were inviting military officers in their salons and encouraging seditious talk. Government agents believed the elite's alienation from the throne a more serious threat than the one posed by the poor and disenfranchised. Many aristocrats found life in the city burdensome and many retreated to their country estates. Before the year was over, the Kinolent Film Office released the comedy film, "Feet Up!", in which Emma starred alongside actor Tikhomirov. It was directed by Boris Kramskoy, whom also held the main role within the film. It was possibly an attempt to cheer up the glum Russian audiences and take their minds off the war.

Mizinkin Residence - 4 Kalanchevskaya (1916-1933)

In 1916, with Alexander back home from the Front, the couple purchased a 15 room house located at 4 Kalanchevskaya Pereulok in eastern Moscow's working class Krasnaya Vorota district. The five-story Art Nouveau style house, designed by the architect Alexander Nikiforov and built between 1875-1880, was located in the railroad infested Krasnoselsky district. As usual, the sumptuously decorated house was kept in order by a team of six servants and a footman. Besides Emma's cabaret performances and film appearances, in order to supplement an income, the Mizikin home also doubled as a high class brothel that serviced soldiers and aristocratic clientele.

By mid-1916, while the mood was falling in the country, the feverish atmosphere began to penetrate into the entertainment that civilians and military were looking for. On the eve of the war came from Argentina, flew to Paris and sped around the world a new dance fashion, the Tango. During the war years, the popularity of tango increased; however, some professional dancers and singers brought ominous notes to his elegant, stylized eroticism. One couple became famous for their "Tango of Death", in which a man, dressed in a flawless tail coat, was made up in such a way that his face looked like a skull. It was a melodramatic echo of the gloomy news coming from the front.

Throughout the year, with millions of peasants sent off to the front, food shortages loomed over Russia and the rapid increase in the price of goods fueled larger and more frequent strikes in the cities. The gendarmes were becoming reluctant to repel the masses of protesters, instead many policemen began joining the crowds, shouting: "Down with the War!" Once, while Grand Duchess Xenia's automobile drove through the streets of Petrograd, a group of street kids chased the car and pelted it with snowballs, yelling, "Down with the filthy bourgeoisie!" On the night of December 16th, a group of men led by Prince Felix Yusupov murdered Rasputin in an attempt to free Russia from his mysterious influence. Profoundly shaken by his death, the Tsar and his family retreated into seclusion. Petrograd became a massive lunatic asylum, discontent rising with each day. The dire food shortages, combined with the 300% inflation left Russia on the brink of revolution on the part of the lower classes.



By the beginning of 1917, Alexander was a full fledged member underground revolutionary movement, and Emma decided to follow in the footsteps of her husband and attempt Bolshevik rallies across Moscow. Unfortunately during a public demonstration held in Moscow sometime in January 1917, Emma witnessed armed gendarmes fire upon the crowds and was soaked in blood as a man beside her was murdered in cold blood. On February 6th, she renewed her American passport, expressing a wish to travel to neutral Scandinavia.

Two months later, on March 8th (O.S. February 23), 1917, over seven thousand female textile workers from St. Petersburg's Vyborg district, marched through the streets crying for bread. The shortages had left the lower class starving, cold and desperate. Banners were erected everywhere, denouncing both the war and the Tsar. The crowds began breaking shops windows and raiding bakeries. Before the day ended, as many as ninety thousand had marched through the streets before order was restored. The revolution, however, had just begun. Throughout the night, Bolshevik revolutionaries organized further strikes and marches into the city center. The following morning, more than three hundred thousand workers from the northern outlying neighborhoods, crossed the Neva river at Alexandrovsky Bridge where they pushed through several hundred Cossacks on their way towards Nevsky Prospect. The city's fine inner-city neighborhoods had not seen such chaos since the 1905 revolution. By March 11th, Cossacks patrolled the streets and machine guns were positioned everywhere. Street gatherings were banned and residents were warned that the authorities were ordered to confront any unrest with force. Despite these measures, protesters filled the streets only to be met by gunfire. All the blood spilling in the streets caused many soldiers to mutiny and join the mobs. On March 12th, half of the city's 160,000 man garrison had joined the revolutionaries. Prisoners across the city were released into the streets, gendarmes were murdered, courthouses, arsenals, shops, private homes and the Ministry of the Interior were looted and ransacked. Mobs killed any respectable looking men, causing many gendarmes to strip their uniforms and flee the city. At the Mariinsky Palace, government ministers met to resign from their positions before slipping out of Petrograd by nightfall. Towards the end of the day, a red flag was raised above the Winter Palace. The capital was now under Bolshevik control. On March 16th, Tsar Nikolai abdicated and as their world dissolved around them, many aristocrats fled to the countryside. The old order evaporated and anarchy spread. While the Duma met at Tauride Palace to consider how to address the chaos, a rival political power, the Petrograd Soviet of Workers & Soldiers Deputies, held a meeting in the palace's right wing. The new provincial government, in order to win the support of the Soviet and it's the leader, Vladimir Lenin, agreed to an amnesty for all political prisoners, freedom of speech, press, and assembly. They also agreed to the abolition of all restrictions based on race, class, religion, and nationality. The Okhrana and corps de Gendarmes was also to be abolished. The Bolsheviks began attacking the Burzhúi (bourgeoisie), or anyone classified as privileged. All it took was a starched white shirt, smooth hands, eyeglasses, a woman's hairstyle or even any evidence of bathing could classify a person as Burzhúi, causing an angry mob to set upon you. In Moscow, after the initial intense clashes between the troops and the rebellious crowd in front of the City Duma building near Red Square, the soldiers joined the rioters, tied red ribbons on bayonets. Crowds poured into the streets and squares in the city center, carrying red flags in support of the revolution in Petrograd and singing to Marseillaise. On Sunday, March 25, a huge “parade of freedom” consisting of hundreds of thousands of people passed through the heart of Moscow.

After the February Revolution and with Russia in a dire situation, Emma’s artistic career was suddenly interrupted and like the rest of the American expat community she pondered at the idea of returning to America. The war and revolution had abruptly ended Russia’s importance on the continental theatrical circuit. Extensive touring was impossible and many Russian establishments began shutting down. The vast majority of the African-American community in Russia were rushing to Petrograd’s American Embassy and Moscow's Consulate to apply for passports in order to sail across the Black Sea towards Turkey and Romania or board Trans-Siberian trains towards Manchuria and Japan in their journey back to America. However, letters she received from friends such as Ollie Burgoyne, Saidie Sellyna and Ida Forcyne who had returned home to America , she was able to learn about the changes in the American entertainment scene. The majority of Black establishments only wanted light-skinned Negro women, Harlem cabarets had women perform shake dances in between the tables and mingle with the audiences as Jazz wailed in the background. Such activities didn't happen in Russian cabarets and music halls. Most of the successful Negro performers returning to America from Europe, found themselves suddenly penniless and turning to domestic work. By May, Russia was already adapting to the country's new political reality, although most activities continued as before. Although it was noted at every prestigious venue, the 19th-century opera "A Life of the Tsar" was hastily dropped from the repertoire. Not everything was festive or peaceful. Moscow's police forces were disarmed and disbanded by the rebels. The Provisional Government declared broad civil liberties, it also pardoned all political prisoners, including terrorists; in addition, about two thousand thieves and murderers were released from prisons in Moscow. The city was flooded with a wave of crime - there were looting in the streets, attacks on houses and businesses. Even the Mizinkin residence was looted, the thieves getting away with many valuables, including Emma's American passport. The new city militia, which consisted mainly of volunteer students, was ineffective, and homeowners were forced to organize their own associations for mutual protection.

On November 7th, the Bolsheviks struck again in Petrograd. Two days earlier, having changed his appearance, Lenin left the temporary asylum in Finland and slipped into the capital; he managed to convince his comrades that it was time to take power. Red troops, coordinated by Leon Trotsky - a talented assistant of Lenin - occupied a number of strategic sites in the city. That night, the Bolshevik-led soldiers, sailors and factory workers attacked the Winter Palace, the former royal residence where the Provisional Government met. A small defense force in the palace, consisting of two or three junkers' mouths and a part of the women's battalion, was suppressed after several hours of confrontation. Bolsheviks arrested members of the government; Kerensky, who had become prime minister by that time, was able to escape by taking a car at the United States embassy. In Moscow, there was more serious resistance. The next morning after the fall of the Provisional Government, the Bolshevik troops surrounded the Kremlin and encountered the Cadets from the city military schools and a small number of Cossacks. Both sides accused each other of illegitimacy and refused to retreat. The first to open fire were the Bolsheviks. Over the next few days, fierce battles raged between the "red" and the few units that remained loyal to the Provisional Government in various parts of the city. The situation quickly became so chaotic that the city seemed to have fallen into schizophrenia: on one side of the square people were queuing for the daily bread rate, and on the other, at that very time, the Cadets and the “Red” squadrons exchanged fire. At the beginning, Moscow's railways, post offices and other government offices continued to work, while heavy fighting broke out throughout the city. However, By November 10, trams no longer ran and telephones did not work. Banks and businesses were closed. Out of fear of getting a bullet or shrapnel, people tried without need to leave the house. On the streets, patrols began to appear, consisting of aggressive Bolshevik soldiers and rude-looking workers with rifles on ropes. In apartment buildings, members of the house committees collected firearms, which they could find, and in turn guarded the entrances from marauding gangs of armed men, whose beliefs were questionable. The rest of the tenants were asleep at that time - dressed, in case someone tried to break in.

Throughout the course of the October Revolution, Emma and her brothel girls banded together and tended to the wounded Bolsheviks that they dragged inside from the daily street skirmishes. By the end of the week, dozens of buildings in the center of Moscow were damaged by shots from rifles and machine guns and artillery fire, including the most revered cathedrals in the Kremlin itself. On November 20, the Moscow Military Revolutionary Committee proclaimed its victory, declaring that the Cadets and its other opponents had surrendered or been killed. On November 29th, Emma used her connections to gather the ingredients to produce a large Thanksgiving feast for American Consul Maddin Summers and the remnants of Moscow's dwindling American Consulate staff.

If Emma had any plans to leave, her time was running out. The Bolsheviks did not want people to slip out from under their power, and everyone who wanted to leave Moscow had to get a special permit. Train traffic throughout the country had deteriorated greatly: the schedule became irregular, tickets were in short supply, rolling stock deteriorated, delays became frequent due to engine failure. In addition, landing on a train in Moscow did not guarantee the achievement of the destination. At each station, so many people tried to get on the train that the passengers had to fight for their seats. Of course being an entertainer, she could've used the loophole that existed for actors and other performers stating that she was still on stage and had to go south to work on her profession. Instead, however, Emma enlisted with the Red Cross, serving as a nurse aboard armoured train no.1045 that traversed south into the Ukraine.

1917 Passport Photo

As soon as she returned home to Moscow, on March 3, 1918, the newly formed Soviet Union backed out of the war after the signing of the Brest-Litovsk Treaty. Ten days later, 30,000 German and Austrian troops marched into the Ukraine, by mid-March, the Germans were already in Odessa and the new puppet state became known as the Hetmanate. The region became terribly dangerous, besides the Red Army attempting to push out the Germans, the Ukraine's notorious criminal gangs (their brazen behavior comparable to Chicago's gangsters) began a reign of terror with nightly burglaries and murders in the streets.

On March 11th, as Moscow was declared the new capital of Soviet Russia, Vladimir Lenin and the Soviet government arrived from Petrograd, hastily settling themselves in the city. Emma attended a massive rally held in Red Square, where Lenin gave a powerful speech. Standing on Skull Place before the massive St. Basil’s Cathedral, Lenin was explaining the meaning of the Bolshevik cause when he spied a smiling, middle-aged black woman at the forefront of the crowds. Extending his right hand, he spoke directly to Emma, “The ideal communist is to open the road for all the downtrodden races of the world. For you, comrade, especially, as we regard your race the most downtrodden in the world. We want you to feel when you come to Russia that you are a human being. The Red Army is ready to give its life at any time for all the downtrodden races!” Immediately the crowds hoisted Emma up upon their shoulders and bore her triumphantly through the cheering audience.

Due to the deteriorating health conditions in the city, cholera and typhoid began to spread. Moscow was also on the verge of starvation, the main food products were issued on the cards, and prices on the black market were too high. It was then, in order to partially fill the gap, small businessmen appeared, which became known as the “bagmen”. Crowds of peasants began to arrive in the city from distant villages with bags of local foodstuffs — flour, bread, butter, cereals, eggs — which they exchanged for industrial goods still found in the city on the black market, such as women's headscarves, chintz , strings, sugar, soap and matches. Hungry citizens also made such trips - in the opposite direction. The Bolsheviks viewed this trade as a form of illegal speculation and tried to thwart it, but the need was great in the city, as was the divergence of prices in the city and the village, and this made the risk both necessary and profitable. Inevitably, the stations in Moscow became one of the main places where buyers and sellers met. Living between Moscow's three major railroad stations, Emma became a frequent black market shopper, having very little issues due to her numerous connections to Russia's criminal underground. Her connections also proved to be valuable when the Bolsheviks the new Cheka secret police began targeting private residences to confiscate, rob and extort the bourgeoisie. Across the city daily, homeowners and tenants were often simply thrown into the street as representatives of the new order drove into their houses and apartments. It was certainly interesting that throughout the course of this plundering, a popular African American actress was able to maintain control over her massive home in the heart of Moscow.

That summer, Emma would've found herself unemployed. No longer the wealthy aristocrat she once was, she now listed in the category of the declasse bourgeoisie. The Soviet government began liquidizing and nationalizing all theaters, cabarets and music-halls. Even, the once popular Aquarium establishment was being occupied by a local military garrison. Besides earning enough income from her successful brothel, she soon found employment with the Narkompros. Shortly after the October Revolution, the old system of education and culture management was destroyed and the new system, gradually with great difficulty was created. With the establishment of Soviet power, teachers, university professors and cultural figures were unable to find a common language for the development of education and culture in the new Soviet Union. Thus in response, the People's Commissariat of Education (Narkompros) was organized.

Lubyanka Prison


Much of 1919, Emma was sent east to Simbirsk with a delegation of the Narkompros to aid in the establishment of educational and cultural centers. Her primary job was that of an interpreter and English teacher to Soviet officials. Simbirsk (now Ulyanovsk), a bustling provincial city on the banks of the Volga and Sviyagi rivers with a population of nearly 64,000, was on the frontlines of the Russian Civil War's Eastern Front. Due to the Civil War, the city was practically in ruins, local industry was disrupted due to a lack of fuel, tools and raw materials. Street lighting disappeared, boulevards and parks were neglected, houses were destroyed and bazaars and shops were abandoned. Not far from the city, Commander Jan Blumberg and his 5th Army armed with 10,000 men, 42 guns and 142 machine guns held off the White Guardist's Western Army led by Mikhail Hanzhin. Since February 7th, the city had been the headquarters of the Revolutionary Military Council (headed by Commander Sergei Kamenev and Sergei Gusev), leaving the city swarming with military personnel.

Anti-revolutionary in sympathy, during her sojourn in the city, Emma became involved with various White Guard military officers, aiding them in their schemes against the new Soviet government. During the summer of 1919, after Simbirsk was briefly captured by the Czechoslovak Legion, she returned home to Moscow, continuing to work with the White Guardists, offering her Moscow home as hiding spot and meeting place for them.

On September 24th, the Cheka raided the Mizinkin residence where they discovered numerous White Guard soldiers holed up. The entire group (including Emma) were swiftly arrested and taken to the infamous Lubyanka Prison. Built sometime before 1772, the Neo-Baroque building, originally a luxurious residential building on the Malaya Lubyanka. In 1918, the Council of People's Commissars, the building was liquidated and nationalized. Around May 1919, the building was transferred to the Special Section of the Moscow Cheka. While Emma sat quietly in her cell, the White Guard soldiers were executed by firing squad.

On November 19th, after two months Emma was brought before an Cheka Official whom was looking into her case. She immediately denied any knowledge of the counterrevolutionaries, claiming she was simply running a legitimate business and didn't engage in politics with her clientele. The official replied, much to her surprise, “You know the only reason we didn't shoot you was because you’re a Negro. You’re free to go now. I advise you to find some useful work. Keep out of trouble.” Emma was promptly released.



On February 11th, 1921, the People's Commissariat of Education was dissolved. Shutting down her successful brothel, Emma converted her beautiful mansion into comfortable American Pension, where she housed Red Cross officials, journalists and other Westerners. Being located between three major railway stations, she soon managed to arrange for all the railway information bureaus to immediately direct every visiting Americans to her establishment.

That summer, after the Civil War finally drew to a close, a terrible Great Famine raging across the Volga region known as Russia’s breadbasket. If 49-year old Emma Harris-Mizinkin had any aspirations of resuming her concert tours, those plans would've immediately dissolved. In September, when the American Relief Association, Colonel Haskell, arrived in the Soviet Union to aid the Russians in their fight against famine, Emma organized a laundry service for the ARA relief workers based in Moscow, while Alexander delivered the wash and called for it.

During this time, Emma reunited with her old friend, Coretté Alefred (now Coretti Arle-Titz), whom had recently returned to Russia from the Ukraine with her new husband Boris Titz. The couple decided to reside in Moscow instead of Petrograd, which had once been Coretti’s stomping grounds. The two women most likely hadn't seen each other since the 1917 and Emma would've been extremely shocked upon hearing Coretti’s false tales she spun to Soviet newspapers, including one story that she originated from Mexico, among other tales.



In Late-1922, Ukrainian born American journalist of the New York World, Samuel Spewack and his wife Bella traveled to Germany and the Soviet Union, where they resided for the next four years. On September 9th, during their surjourn in Moscow, Samuel paid a visit to the Mizinkin residence only to shocked to discover that despite the Revolution, Nationalization, Civil War and the raging famine, Emma was able to maintain possession of her fine collection of rugs, massive jewelry, silks and silverware. In between cooking, Emma rambled on (in fluent Russian) about her days as a exotic dancer, performing for the Shah of Persia, her disappointment that she could no longer move nimbly as she once could since her waistline had increased and also expressed her desire to return to the United States. Her husband, Alexander, also chimed in expressing his desire to travel to America as well to write scenarios for Hollywood films.

Early 1926, marked the end of Emma’s career as a successful actress as she sought employment as a textile worker at the Proletarsky Trud Silk Mill. This new shift in her life also marked the end of her fifteen year marriage with Alexander Mizinkin, who moved out some time later. In the meantime, the Soviets finally seized control over her magnificent mansion , giving Emma two rooms on the first floor, converting the remarkable rooms into apartments where ten Russian families soon inhabited. With all six of her servants dismissed, Emma was frequently accompanied by a Lithuanian servant, one of her former prostitutes, who provided assistance whenever Emma built an improvised kitchen in the common corridor of the building, where she spent hours busy with pots and pans cooking up hash, pork and beans, beef stew, cabbage and ham hocks, fried chicken and cornbread.

Although her American boarding house was gone, Emma continued providing southern hospitality to every visiting American that she came across. “Just supply me the rubles, I’ll find the stuff.” she would say to any American that wanted a home cooked meal, although how she was able to obtain the ingredients in food-scarce Moscow is still a mystery. The early groups of African-Americans, such as Harry Haywood (who arrived in April 1926), quickly grew fearful spending time around Emma. Now classified by the Soviets as a declassé bourgeoisie, she was extremely bitter about her present situation and frequently criticized the Soviet regime, meanwhile praising the old Tsarist system. She was often recalled saying, “I'm like a cat with nine lives, honey. I always landed on my feet...been doing it all my life wherever I been. These Bolsheviks ain't gonna kill me.”

In late 1928, American communist from Idaho, James Pierce, arrived at the Soviet Union for five-year stay in Leningrad and Moscow. By September, he secured a room at Kalanchevskaya 4, eventually becoming very close with Emma. Her apartment had became regular Saturday evening meeting place of American expats. In between serving home cooked meals, Emma pounding out jazz numbers on her piano coupled with her melodious singing added a dash of color to the drab grey Russian winter.




During the 1930s, Emma became one of the lead speakers for the International Red Aid (MOPR), travelling Russia giving fiery speeches protesting against racism, singing Spirituals and writing poems for Soviet newspapers.

On June 26th, 1932, Emma Harris, Coretti Arle-Titz, Robert “Bob” Ross and Robert Robinson gathered at Nikolayevsky Station to welcome twenty two Afro-American artists that were invited the Soviet Union to produce a film depicting Negro laborers in their difficult working conditions in the American South. The film, was based off Vladimir Mayakovsky’s 1925 poem, Black & White, which protested American racism and imperialism. The film was sponsored by the Comintern and was to be produced by the Russo-German film company Meschrabpom. Emma pushed towards the front of the crowd of government officials, writers and actors while shouting, “Bless God! Lord! I’m sure glad to see some Negroes! Welcome! Welcome! Welcome!”. 

She spent the majority of her time, entertaining her new colleagues at the Hotel Metropol. Other times, the group travelled over to the Krasnaya Vorota district, where Emma entertained them from the comfort of her home. She washed their dirty laundry and prepared supper for them. Emma had some of the best food in Moscow and yet had only an ordinary workers’ ration card. But she knew all about black markets and speakeasies. In a city where almost nothing was open after midnight, Emma could always find a place to buy a drink. Her clientele was mostly American, however, because her Russian neighbors had no money to supply the ingredients. "Just supply me the rubles, I’ll find the stuff," Emma would say. During his visits, Langston Hughes, noticed the Krasnaya Vorota district was terribly a smoky, smelly, noisy area and he often complained about why she remained living there. “Man, you ain't seen no rooms for rent signs, have you?” she answered. But she added, “If anything busts loose against them Bolshies, I'm gonna highball out’a here on the first and fastest train out of one of them stations for anywhere on the down line.”

During the first week of July, a huge Anti-Scottsboro rally, organized by the International Red Aid, was held at the Park of Rest & Culture, where Emma, her face illuminated by the blazing floodlights and voice magnified by loud speakers, performed a number of spirituals and delivered a fiery speech in fluent Russian before the masses.

Not long after the disappointing reality that the Black and White film wasn't to be, Emma found herself employed as a saleswoman for one of Moscow’s Torgsin shops, where she was frequently seen leaving with a bulging bag filled with cooking ingredients and vodka, which she called “Russian corn whiskey.”




Early 1933, while employed as the chief correspondent for the Stankoimport State Trust, the long years of Russian exposure failed to remove much of Emma’s deeply-ingrained American values, which frequently caused her to become overcome with nostalgia. As she grew older, her desire to see America grew stronger and when the United States finally recognized the Soviet Union during the summer and the American Consulate helped to arrange for her return to New York. That August, after an interview mentioning a wish to visit the US, Emma was granted permission to travel to Latvia to receive an American passport before boarding the S.S Milwaukee from Hamburg, back to New York after 32 years.

She was invited to several functions across New York City speaking of her success and experiences in Russia throughout the up until February 1934, when she was suddenly hospitalized and placed in a nursing due to her failing health. In December 1937, during an interview with journalist, Theodore Poston, she mentioned that she was no longer interested in remaining in the United States, slowly saving funds to return home to the Soviet Union. Unfortunately, she was unable to return and by 1940, she had moved to Brooklyn, living with her nephew, Richard Matthews and his family, where she remained, hoping to return to Russia after the war, until her death.