Candy Barr

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This article is about a deceased Burlesque performer

CandyBarr.jpg

Candy Barr (✦July 6, 1935 - December 30, 2005) was an American stripper, burlesque [[exotic dancer|exotic dancer]], actress in one pornographic movie, and model in men's magazines of the mid-20th century.

During the 1950s, she received nationwide attention for her stripping career in Dallas, Texas, Los Angeles, California, and Las Vegas, Nevada; her troubles with the law; shooting her estranged second husband; and being arrested and sentenced to a prison term for drug possession, as well as her relationships with Mickey Cohen and Jack Ruby.

After serving three years in prison, Barr began a new life in South Texas. She briefly returned to stripping in the late 1960s, posed for Oui magazine in the 1970s, and then retired.

In the early 1980s, Barr was acknowledged in the magazine Texas Monthly as one of history's "perfect Texans," along with such luminaries as Lady Bird Johnson.

Early life

She was born Juanita Dale Slusher in Edna, Texas, the youngest of five children born to Elvin Forest "Doc" Slusher (August 19, 1909-May 2, 1969) and Sadie Mae Sumner (October 1, 1908-March 11, 1945). Her siblings were Leota Slusher (born 1927); Keleta Pauline "Kay" Slusher (born 1928); Gary Slusher (1931-72); and Forest Slusher (1933-2003).

After her mother's tragic death by falling from a moving car on the highway in nearby Victoria County, Texas when Juanita was age 9, her father married Etta Agnes Holden (June 18, 1908-January 19, 1988). Etta was divorced from Guy Goggans (1905-78]]) and had four children, Solon Goggans (born 1927); Nila Fae Goggans (1929-2003); Ruby Yvonne Goggans (1933-2005); and Charles Edward Goggans (1937-2003).

Doc and Etta Slusher then had two children together, Travis Leroy Slusher (born 1946) and Katherine Pauline "Kathy" Slusher (born 1948).

Juanita's early years were reportedly scarred by the Psychological trauma of sexual abuse from a neighbor and baby-sitter. At 13 years of age, she ran away from home and went to Dallas, where she landed in a den of prostitution and white slavery. At age 14, she reportedly married her first husband, Billy Joe Debbs (or Dabbs), an alleged safecracker, but the marriage lasted only briefly. She also worked as a cocktail waitress and cigarette girl.

Blue movie and stripping career

At age 16, though she appeared much older, she appeared in one of the most famous and widely circulated of the early underground pornographic movies, Smart Alec (1951). Because of this short blue movie, which is no more than 20 minutes in length, she has been called "the first porn star." She later insisted that she was drugged and coerced into appearing in the movie.

Shortly after the release of Smart Alec, and while still underage, she was hired as a stripper at the Theater Lounge in Dallas by Barney Weinstein for $85 a week. She acquired the stage name Candy Barr at this time — given her by Weinstein, reportedly because of her fondness for Snickers bars — bleached her hair platinum blonde, and quickly became a headliner. She also worked at Weinstein's Colony Club, with a large placard of her prominently displayed out front.

Barr established herself in burlesque and striptease with her trademark costume — cowboy hat, pasties, scant panties, a pair of pearl handled cap gun six-shooters in a holster (strapped low on her shapely hips) and cowboy boots.

When the Theater Lounge would close, she would often patronize the after-hours Vegas Club, where she became acquainted with the owner and operator, Jack Ruby, in about 1952. Their friendship was very casual, however, as she never worked for him and never associated with him outside the Vegas Club and the Silver Spur Inn, which he also operated.

She reportedly married her second husband, Troy B. Phillips, in about 1953 and had a daughter in about 1954. In January 1956, Barr shot her estranged and violent husband when he kicked in the door of her apartment in Dallas. She was charged with assault with a deadly weapon, but the charges were later dropped. Phillips was not fatally wounded.

Barr performed for the first and only time on the legitimate theater/stage in 1957, playing the role of Rita Marlowe in the Dallas Little Theater production of Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter. In late October of that year, in yet another notorious case, Dallas police raided her apartment and found four-fifths of an ounce of marijuana, which was said to be hidden in her bra. She was arrested for drug possession, subsequently convicted, and received a 15-year prison sentence, though, according to her, she was set up and was only holding the marijuana for a friend.

Candybarr.jpeg

The big-time

While the marijuana case devolved into a lengthy series of appeals, her fame spread nationwide and the curvaceous, green-eyed blonde became the toast of the strip club runways, reportedly earning $2000 a week in Las Vegas, Nevada and Los Angeles, California, as well as at the Sho-Bar Club on Bourbon Street in the French Quarter of New Orleans, Louisiana.

While stripping at Chuck Landis' Largo Club on the Sunset Strip in West Hollywood, she met gangster Mickey Cohen and became his girl. According to Cohen, in his autobiography, In My Own Words, he helped her make bail after Gary Crosby told him, "One thing about that broad, she can make ya feel like a real man."

Barr accompanied Cohen to the Saints and Sinners testimonial for Milton Berle in April 1959. The mobster, who insisted he wanted to marry her, eventually sent her and her four-year-old daughter to Mexico so she could evade arrest. He arranged for her hair to be dyed by hairdresser to the stars, Jack Sahakian, provided her with a fake birth certificate and social security card, and gave her $1,200 cash. He later sent her $500 after she was established in a Mexican hideaway. She became restless there, however, and returned to the U.S. During this time, her interest in Cohen floundered.

Also in 1959, she was hired by 20th Century Fox Studios as a choreographer for Seven Thieves (1960). She taught actress Joan Collins how to "dance" for her role as a stripper and was given a credit as technical advisor. Barr was quoted as saying, "Anytime Miss Collins wants to leave the movies, she has it made in burlesque."

"She taught me more about sensuality than I had learned in all my years under contract," Collins wrote in her autobiography, Past Imperfect. Collins went on to describe Barr as "a down-to-earth girl with an incredibly gorgeous body and an angelic face."

Barr won another chance at reversing her 15-year sentence that October, when the district attorney in Dallas said the Supreme Court of the United States had informed his office that her lawyers would be given 20 days to file a motion for a rehearing.

She and hairdresser Jack Sahakian were married November 25, 1959, in Las Vegas, while she was headlining at El Rancho Vegas Hotel. Days later, despite rumors that her arrest had been a setup designed to punish the stripper for her wantonness in conservative Dallas, Barr was arrested by the FBI when her appeal on the marijuana conviction was rejected by the Supreme Court.

Prison term and release

On December 4, Barr reportedly left her daughter with her third husband, Sahakian, and entered prison near Huntsville, Texas. While incarcerated, she was returned to Los Angeles in mid-1961 as a witness in the tax evasion trial of her former boyfriend, Mickey Cohen. She testified that he paid $15,000 to her attorneys and lavished gifts on her during their brief engagement in 1959. She said that among the other gifts she received from him were jewelry, luggage, and a poodle. It was her understanding, she said, that Cohen was to settle a clothing bill of hers for $1,001.95.

After being incarcerated for over three years, Barr was paroled from Goree women's unit on April 1, 1963. She left the prison without any fanfare or publicity, having requested that no pictures be taken and no interviews arranged. Barr had intended to return to Dallas, but parole stipulations were so strict that it was not permitted. Instead, she returned to her hometown of Edna, where her father and stepmother still lived.

At this time, she became closer to Dallas nightclub owner Jack Ruby in telephone conversations. As she was having health problems when she was released from prison, she decided the best way to earn a living was by raising animals for profit. Ruby went down to Edna and gave her a pair of dachshund breeding dogs from his prized litter to get her started.

Twelve hours after Lee Harvey Oswald was murdered by Ruby, the FBI arrived in Edna to interview Barr. She made a statement, as Juanita Dale Phillips, regarding her knowledge of Ruby prior to the John F. Kennedy assassination and Ruby's subsequent murder of Oswald. It was rumored that she knew more than she told them, but she later said, "They thought Ruby had told me names and places and people, which he didn't."

The Governor of Texas, John Connally, pardoned her for the marijuana conviction in late 1967. Barr said, "I really don't know why, unless he studied the case and knew it was an injustice whether I was a victim or not."

Comeback and later life

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Barr returned to the stripping circuit in early 1968, including appearances at the Largo Club in Los Angeles and the Bonanza Hotel in Las Vegas. She also returned to the Colony Club in Dallas.

She then moved to Brownwood, Texas, as her father was ill in nearby Kerrville, Texas. She was arrested and charged with marijuana possession again in 1969 in Brownwood. Barr later said, "While my father was in the process of dying, they decided to take advantage of my situation there and busted me. I knew the marijuana wasn't there, I hadn't had any around me for three years."

The district attorney in Brown County, Texas eventually dismissed the case against her for lack of evidence. In 1972, 56 poems that she wrote while in prison were published with the title A Gentle Mind . . . Confused.

At the beginning of the book, she wrote:

"Loneliness is like an early frost. Let us be among the seedlings that survive . . ."

The title poem further set the tone:

"Hate the world that strikes you down,
A warped lesson quickly learned.
Rebellion, a universal sound,
Nobody cares, no one's concerned.
Fatigued by unyielding strife,
Self-pity consoles the abused,
And the bludgeoning of daily life,
Leaves a gentle mind . . . confused."

At age 41, the shapely and seductive grandmother was featured in a 1976 issue of Oui magazine. She also did an interview in Playboy soon afterward.

The movie rights to Barr's early life story was purchased by film producer Mardi Rustam in 1982. In 1984, Texas Monthly listed Barr among such luminaries as Lady Bird Johnson as one of history's "perfect Texans." In March 1988, it was announced that Ryan O'Neal would direct Farrah Fawcett in a biographical film about Barr based on a screenplay/script by George Axelrod, who wrote the Broadway theatre play Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter, but the movie was never produced.

Final years

In 1992, Barr moved from Brownwood back to Edna. Living in quiet retirement with her animals at her rural home, she was content not to exploit or relive her legendary past. She said she was never interested in arousing men, she just wanted to dance. As Greta Garbo had, Barr said she just wanted to be left alone.

She died at age 70 from complications of pneumonia at a hospital in Victoria, Texas. Her Dallas Morning News obituary said no funeral was planned. Her Los Angeles Times obituary contained a reference to her 1972 book of poetry and the title poem, A Gentle Mind . . . Confused.

Candy Barr is among the inductees in the Hall of Fame of Exotic World Burlesque Museum, Helendale, California halfway between Los Angeles and Las Vegas. Her lip prints are part of the museum's display.

Archive footage

  • My Tale Is Hot (1964) includes a four-minute clip of an exotic dance routine by Candy Barr (ca. 1956).

Books and articles

  • Barr, Candy (1972). A Gentle Mind . . . Confused [poems] Dulce Press, Inc. asin: B00072P95C
  • The New Hip Bachelor, December 1973, pp. 4 - 8, Candy Barr Today
  • Hollywood's Celebrity Gangster. The Incredible Life and Times of Mickey Cohen by Brad Lewis. (Enigma Books: New York, 2007. isbn 978-1-929631-65-0)

Documentaries

  • A History of the Blue Movie (1970) (clip segment from Smart Alec)
  • Changes (1971) aka All About Sex and/or Sex USA
  • Playboy: The Story of X (1998)


Burlesque Hall of Fame
Inductees


The "Exotic World Burlesque Museum" has changed its name to the Burlesque Hall of Fame" and is now in Las Vegas

External links

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