Little Africa Village
My crochet Petite Josephine Baker is part of a pop up gallery in Paris! If you’re in town, visit the Little Africa Village Gallery & Shop to see all of the gorgeous art and wonderful products from Africa, most of them handmade! It’s such a privilege for me to be included in this fun pop up for dolls from around the world, with a focus of Africa of course.
Visit my shop to buy your own handmade Petite Josephine Baker.
Who is Josephine Baker?
Freda Josephine McDonald was born on June 3, 1906, in St. Louis, Missouri. “Her mother, Carrie McDonald, was a washerwoman who had given up her dreams of becoming a music-hall dancer. Her father, Eddie Carson, was a vaudeville drummer. He abandoned Carrie and Josephine shortly after her birth. Carrie remarried soon thereafter and would have several more children in the coming years.
To help support her growing family, at age eight Josephine cleaned houses and babysat for wealthy white families, often being poorly treated. She briefly returned to school two years later before running away from home at age 13 and finding work as a waitress at a club. While working there, she married a man named Willie Wells, from whom she divorced only weeks later.
It was also around this time that Josephine first took up dancing, honing her skills both in clubs and in street performances, and by 1919 she was touring the United States with the Jones Family Band and the Dixie Steppers performing comedic skits. In 1921, Josephine married a man named Willie Baker, whose name she would keep for the rest of her life despite their divorce years later. In 1923, Baker landed a role in the musical Shuffle Along as a member of the chorus, and the comic touch that she brought to the part made her popular with audiences. Looking to parlay these early successes, Baker moved to New York City and was soon performing in Chocolate Dandies and, along with Ethel Waters, in the floor show of the Plantation Club, where again she quickly became a crowd favorite.”
In the summer of 1925, Paris had a newfound obsession with jazz and anything exotic. People flocked to see Josephine Baker perform at the Théâtre des Champs-Elysées. As she descended from a palm tree wearing her now famous banana skirt, she became the biggest black female star in the world over night.
Josephine Baker was so popular in France, she sold her own beauty products including Bakerfix hair pomade for that slick down look and even Bakeroil skin-darkening lotion all over Europe. Yes, indeed. European women were darkening their skin to look like their idol.
Read more about Josephine Baker’s incredible life:
• Evolution of Crochet Josephine Baker
• Black Paris Tours (if you’re in Paris, take this fascinating tour highlighting the black experience in France)
• “90 Years Later, the Radical Power of Josephine Baker’s Banana Skirt” from Vogue
• “Josephine Baker, The Activist Entertainer” from Biography
• “Josephine Baker” from Black History Now
• “5 Things You Didn’t Know About Josephine Baker” from Mental Floss
• “Josephine Baker: Vive la Révolution” from Visionary Artist Magazine
• “Exploring the France That Josephine Baker Loved” from The New York Times
• “Josephine Baker Biography” from Biography.com
• Joséphine Baker, la résistante
• “A Dinner in France, 1973: Josephine Baker, James Baldwin, and a Very Young Henry Louis Gates, Jr”
• “Grace Kelly – Friendship With Josephine Baker”
• Josephine Baker: her close friendship with Monaco
• Josephine Baker (wikipedia)