Fashion

Men Weren’t the Only Dandies

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Stormé DeLarverié, 1956
Vincente

The Jazz Age introduced more women who embraced masculine dressing, many of them in the queer community. In the thick of the Harlem Renaissance, blues singers like Gladys Bentley and Ma Rainey exemplified dandyism. Bentley eschewed feminine clothing from a young age and adopted her signature suiting when she took a job as a pianist at Harry Hansberry’s Clam House, a gay Harlem speakeasy. She was particularly well known for her dapper white suit, finished with coattails and a bowtie, slicked-back hair, and a top hat. And while Rainey was often pictured in more feminine dress, her lyrics directly referenced queerness, with fashion as the conduit. “It s true I wear a collar and a tie,” she sang in “Prove It on Me Blues.” “Wear my clothes just like a fan / Talk to the gals just like any old man.”

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Radclyffe Hall with Lady Una Trowbridge

Photo: Getty Images

Across the pond, the writer Radclyffe Hall was also embracing dandyism. Thanks to a substantial inheritance, Hall was afforded greater independence than many other women of the time. She chose not to marry or wear feminine clothing, often pictured in a suit and a necktie.

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Gluck

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Radclyffe Hall

Photo: Getty Images