Share? You Quote and you Credit

Share?  You Quote and you Credit

True Libby Jones The Burlesque Legend


In search of higher cultural endeavors, this post is on author, dancer, advice columnist and recording artist Libby Jones. We can start with her real name. Adlyn Morris. An honor student from the University of Washington. Libby (according to dead, questionably murdered game show player and scandal columnist Dorothy Kilgallen) lectured on "the sociological and psychological aspects of strip-teasing."  

Her name pops up in all the crap columns of the 1950s. Earl Wilson (midget showbiz smut-hound and hanger-on) and Leonard Lyons, the "gentle gossip" and proprietor of "The Lyons Den" column both reported on her at least once...anywhere her presumably equally sleazy publicist could place her name in a daily sheet. Libby was a serious lecturer, and I'm not kidding. While stripping at a club in Anytown, USA at night, she would lecture during the day at local fraternal organization luncheons and such. At one lunchtime gig in Royal Oak Michigan, she struck a blow for woman's rights by proclaiming "Up to date it has never been suggested to me that a man could do my job better than I" and this was in 1959. Take THAT early feminists. She also tried to organize a union for strippers. This COULD be a joke, but it was to be called B.A.R.E for "Benevolent Association of Revealing Entertainers" 


 The entertainer's bust was reported as 36" in 1959 and 41" in 1967...so she never stopped growing as an entertainer. Libby wrote two books, "Striptease: The One How To Book No Woman Should Be Without" in 1967 and "How to Undress in Front of Your Husband" a year later. One of them was translated into French (!) as "Guide Du Strip-Tease Chez Sol" which almost pays them back for all the smut they sent us. I suppose her greatest accomplishment was playing a stripper (no stretch) in the landmark Lenny Burtman film "Satan in High Heels." At least she was consistent. She had other stirring film performances. "The Case of the Stripping Wives" (1966) "Key-Hole Varieties" (1954) and a documentary titled "Tijuana after Midnight" in which she played someone playing herself as someone else...or herself. In other words, a stripper. Her non-nominated Grammy long playing record is a masterpiece of purple cover. Appearing on the extra low-prestige STRAND label (for which the term "cut-out" could have been designed) the dead on arrival vinyl stiff included strip standards like "My Heart Belongs to Daddy" and "A Pretty Girl is Like A Melody" among others. A rare record indeed, you can buy it for less than ten dollars on Ebay. Of course, like all good strippers, Libby had a nickname or two. Like The Florida Hurricane and The Park Avenue Playgirl.
Jim Linderman, author of TIMES SQUARE SMUT now available from Blurb.com in ebook and paperback.

Bilbrew Deconstructs Bettie Page.



African-American vintage sleaze illustrator Gene Bilbrew draws Bettie Page without Bettie Page!  For fetishists, in this case, only the clothes matter.  Read about Bilbrew, Joe Shuster, Bettie Page, Leonard Burtman and Edward Mishkin helped make Times Square ground zero for smut in the 1950s.
250 page book TIMES SQUARE SMUT the book available in paperback or $8.99 instant download 

Eugene Bilbrew African-American vintage sleaze illustrator draws a Girl Gang



Eugene Bilbrew African-American vintage sleaze illustrator draws a Girl Gang
Times Square Smut the Book tells his sordid tale!  $8.99 for Ebook, paperback edition also available. 

Eugene Bilbrew cover illustration for High Heels in Heaven Science Fiction Bondage Thriller



Eugene Bilbrew cover illustration for High Heels in Heaven Science Fiction Bondage Thriller.  Erotic paperback vintage sleaze novel.  One of hundreds of illustrations in the book Times Square Smut the book. Order today in paperback or e-book.  FREE PREVIEW and ORDERING HERE.

Eric Stanton creates a Logo for Leonard Burtman the Fetish King




Forty Plus Digest was a Leonard Burtman product devoted to large breasted models.  The box inset logo of a woman with a tape measure was drawn by Eric Stanton.  The cover of Times Square Smut was drawn by Eugene Bilbrew.  250 pages! 

TIMES SQUARE SMUT is available in Paperback OR affordable instant PDF Down load from Blurb.com.  HUNDREDS of rare illustrations and true tales from the history of early New York City fetish pornography of the 1950's.http://www.blurb.com/b/6035290-times-square-smut

IN 1959, Edward Mishkin was arrested and 72 of the books he had published (or sold) were confiscated for obscenity. Mishkin sold the books in several Times Square bookstores he owned. The Supreme Court of the United States Upheld his conviction and the books disappeared into evidence boxes and attics. 50 years later collector Jim Linderman decides to find them. Eugene Bilbrew, an African-American artist drew many of the covers. He would overdose on 42nd Street. Other artists who worked in the same scene at the same time are Eric Stanton, who shared a studio with Steve Ditko, creator of Spiderman and Joe Shuster of Superman Fame. Along with Mishkin, there were two other smut producers in New York. Leonard Burtman, fetish publisher and Irving Klaw, who photographed Bettie Page. 250 pages with HUNDREDS of illustration not seen in over 50 years, and then not really seen at all. Available in Instant PDF Download, Paperback and Hardcover.