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PHOTO PROMPT © Dale Rogerson
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Another tribute for Black History Month. 😀
Genre: Historical Fiction
Word Count: 100
LA VAILLANCE
Pride filled Deborah as she put the finishing touches on her fifteen-year-old granddaughter’s costume. “You’ll be the spittin’ image of the courageous lady you’re named for. She was about your age when she danced her way out of St. Louis.”
Josie slipped into the sparkly garment. “Was she pretty?”
“Gorgeous. Mama saw her in the Ziegfeld follies in 1936. I got to see her in Miami in 1951. First time I ever sat next to a white lady. Miss Josephine Baker was my idol—black, rich and spoke French.”
“Tell me more, Grandma.”
“Sorry, sugar, Rochelle’s run out of words.”
***
Josephine Baker was a woman who defied being summed up in 100 words. At the age of 20 she took Paris by storm and starred in three French motion pictures. She spied for the French resistance and performed for the Allied troops in WWII. In 1963 she marched on Washington with Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Denied natural offspring, she adopted twelve children of different nationalities and races, calling them her rainbow tribe.
CLICK HERE to watch a short video of her life.