Tag: Jazz Age book
Diamond Jim Part II: The Night the Underworld Exploded
Last time in Rebecca's SPOTLIGHT, we followed Silver Dollar Tabor as she landed a performing job on the grandest, most dangerous stage in Prohibition Chicago: Colosimo’s Café. She was performing for the vice king, Diamond Jim Colosimo, and witnessing the brewing power struggle with his protégé, Johnny Torrio, over the fortune to be made from bootlegging. We also explored the warning sign embodied by fellow singer, Dale Winter, whose marriage to Colosimo helped seal his fate. Now, we shine the searchlight on the moment the underworld exploded, and how Silver Dollar survived the violence that gave rise to the legendary Chicago Outfit.
Meet the SILVER ECHOES characters: Diamond Jim Colosimo
The roar of the twenties echoes through the smoky backrooms and glittering ballrooms of Chicago, and at the heart of it all stands a figure of immense power and undeniable charisma: Diamond Jim Colosimo. Meet one of the most compelling characters in SILVER ECHOES, a man whose life was a whirlwind of wealth, violence, and a paradoxical charm that captivated even the most refined social circles.
Diamond Jim wasn't born with a silver spoon. He clawed his way up from the streets, building an empire on the foundations of vice and ambition. He wasn't just a gangster; he was a businessman, albeit one who operated outside the bounds of the law.
Echoes from the Roar: When Silent Serials Met Silver Dollar Tabor at Selig Polyscope
The flickering magic of early cinema was a world unto itself—a nascent art form bursting with innovation, daring feats, and a raw, untamed energy that captivated audiences worldwide. For those of us drawn to the untold stories of the past, like the one I explore in my historical novel, Silver Echoes, looking back at this era isn’t just a historical curiosity; it’s a profound connection to the grit and determination of my protagonist, Silver Dollar Tabor.
From Corset to Freedom—The Making of Silver Dollar’s Flapper Persona 🕊️
The rise of the Flapper in the 1920s wasn't a sudden cultural explosion; it was the inevitable, magnificent climax of deep-seated changes that had been building since the suffocating days of the Victorian Age.
For a performer like Silver Dollar Tabor, this transformation was deeply personal. She moved from the long skirts and strict morals of her mother Baby Doe's Leadville world—a world of pious, Victorian restraint—to the bobbed hair and jazz of the speakeasy. The Flapper didn't just appear; she was pushed out of the Victorian era by war, technology, and sheer exhaustion with the old rules, and she was pulled into the underground by the ultimate American folly: Prohibition