In 1920, heavyweight boxing champion Jack Johnson opened a club called Club DeLuxe on the corner of 142nd and Lenox Avenue in Harlem, New York.
He is said to have gone broke. A prominent gangster called Owney Madden took over the club in 1923, re-opening it after a year. Madden, an immigrant lad from Leeds in England, had risen through the New York underworld with a reputation for violence.
Madden and business partners Big Bill Dwyer and Big Frenchy De Mange (below)
also became owners in the exclusive Stork Club, where influential gossip columnist Walter Winchell (below) held court.
An owner in more than twenty clubs, Madden was known for his Prohibition-era business activities. He was also known for his revenge tactics and his pay-offs of City Hall.
From these origins sprang the musical culture which was to conquer the world, to nurture the aristocratic Edward Kennedy Ellington, and to make the name of the Cotton Club an international by-word for exotic sophistication. We should not be surprised that U.S. rappers glorify gangsta culture, or that funk in Rio is associated with organised crime. Whether they will produce another Duke remains to be seen.
To put Club DeLuxe in its setting, here’s a thumbnail sketch of the Harlem nightlife of that time, from The Harlem Renaissance by Steven Watson http://xroads.virginia.edu/~ug97/blues/watson.html
One of my grandmother’s friends, “Aunt” Loretta Gittleman, as my father called her, was Big Frenchy De Magne’s girlfriend. I have a couple picture of her dated 1929. One of them shows her in Cuba with her mother. She was a flapper. I heard many stories about them while growing up