A.R. McVintage
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- Messages
- 223
- Location
- SoCal
Ellroy goes on a little about Zooter in his L.A. quartet...almost gleefully descibing the razor-laden sticks people would use to hack at and tear/destroy the suits.
Benny Holiday said:'A number of contemporary accounts traced the origins of the zoot suit to the African American community, although Chester Himes would have none of that and passed it off as a white invention*. Renowned sociologist Emory Bogardus offered a theory that the zoot suit was an American adaptation of a native costume in Pachuca, Mexico, but there is no evidence that the Mixtec or any neighbouring tribes wore clothing that even remotely resembled a Western-style suit. The New York Times places the birth of the zoot suit with Clyde Duncan, an African American busboy who ordered a customized suit at Freirson-McEvere's department store in Gainesville, Georgia, in February 1940. The measurements were then sent to the Globe Tailoring Company in Chicago, and the "killer-diller" style, as it was called in Georgia, caught on in Mississippi, Alabama, and Louisiana. From there the fashion found life in Harlem and spread throughout the rest of the country. Duncan was reportedly inspired by Clark Gable's wardrobe in Gone With the Wind, according to the Negro Digest.
'Newsweek, however, placed the origin of the zoot suit in Harlem a decade earlier, in the 1930s. Evidence from the Autobiography of Malcolm X corroborates this dating because it was a fashion already popular and readily available in retail stores in the Roxbury section of Boston when Malcolm X moved there in the summer of 1940. Likewise, jazz musician Art Pepper recalled in his autobiography, Straight Life, that the zoot suit was popular on Central Avenue when he arrived in Los Angeles in 1940. Given that, before 1943, the fashion elicited no media attention, which would have certainly facilitated the migration of the style from coast to coast, it is likely that jazz artists popularized the style in the cities they annually toured. Since the zoot suit was already popular and in production on both coasts by the summer of 1940, it likely originated not with Clyde Duncan in 1940 but elswehere in the mid-to-late 1930s.'
* Himes, "Zoot Suit Riots Are Race Riots".
cookie said:
Dig these crazy watercolours by famous African-American artist Charles Alston, inspired by New York street scenes in 1938-39:
"Zoot Suit":
And "Pool Hustler":