Jimmy Daniels

Carl Van Vechten, “Jimmy Daniels”, July 11th 1940, Gelatin Silver Print, Library of Congress

Born in Laredo, Texas in November of 1907, James Lesley Daniels was an actor, cabaret singer and nightclub host during the Harlem Renaissance that spanned the 1920s and 1930s. He spent his early years in Little Rock, Arkansas, before moving to New York City in the 1920s. Daniels studied at Bird’s Business College in the Bronx and became acquainted with many members of the Harlem Renaissance, particularly jazz and blues singer Alberta Hunter, whom he assisted in her elder years.

After graduating, Jimmy Daniels returned to Little Rock where he became the secretarial assistant to Aldridge E. Bush, the founder and president of Little Rock’s Century Life Insurance Company. Desiring a career in acting, he returned to New York in 1928. Through noted stage actress Katherine Cornell’s stage manager, Daniels was able to get a part in Cornell’s 1930 Broadway hit “Dishonored Lady”. Following this role, Daniels performed in the 1931 ”Savage Rhythm” at Broadway’s Elysee Theater and in productions staged by the Chamberlain-Brown Stock Company in Mount Vernon, New York.

Leaving Broadway theater, Daniels found his first professional singing position at Hot Cha, a Harlem nightclub on 7th Avenue where Billie Holiday often performed. He quickly achieved recognition and soon became part of the European music scene. By the summer of 1933, Daniels was performing in Monaco at Monte Carlo’s Summer Sporting Club. At the end of 1933 and into 1934, he accompanied British jazz pianist Reginald Foresythe at the Ciro’s nightclub in London. 

Jimmy Daniels, upon his return to New York, became the premier entertainer at Marian Cooley’s Sunday night suppers at Le Ruban Bleu, a Parisian-styled nightclub on 56th and Fifth Avenue. In 1935, he sponsored, for three seasons, a series of parties at the Bronze Studio Catering Hall on Lenox Avenue in Harlem. During these parties, Daniels met Herbert Jacoby who convinced him to perform in his Paris nightclub, Reuban Bleu, in 1936 and 1937. Daniels later performed at Jacoby’s newly opened New York City nightclub and, in 1938, sang for a second time at the Parisian club

Established as a singer in both New York and Europe, Daniels opened the Jimmy Daniels’ Nightclub in 1939 at 114 West 116th Street in Harlem. An instant hit, the nightclub attracted a long list of both black and white, gay and straight, notables, including European royals and aristocrats. Among the clientele were British society photographer Olivia Wyndham; actors Burgess Meredith and Diana Barrymore; British art patron Harold Jackman; photographer Carl Van Vechten; sculptor Richmond Barthé; poet Claude McKay; and heavyweight champion Joe Louis. Daniels owned and operated the nightclub until 1942 when he entered military service for World War II. 

Returning to New York, Jimmy Daniels became the host in 1950 at the chic supper club Bon Soir on West 8th Street. Known as a place where everyone was welcome regardless of race or sexual orientation, Bon Soir was a balance of elegant, intimate, risqué and respectable ambiance. As host, singer and emcee, Daniels was a popular figure at Bon Soir for ten years. The club hosted a variety of rising entertainment stars, including Phyllis Diller, Kaye Ballard and Barbara Streisand; the Bon Soir was Streisand’s first New York engagement. Bon Soir actually lost business when Daniels left in 1960 after his ten year stay.

Beginning in 1960, Daniels hosted a series of “supper soirees” at Lower Manhattan’s L’Etang Supper Club. Real estate owner Jimmy Merry hired Daniels at this time to manage the Tiffany Room, now the Ice Palace, in Cherry Grove, Fire Island. He also performed briefly at the Blue Whale Bar in Fire Island Pines. Daniels continued to perform at various New York City parties, festivals and clubs until his death. After suffering a stroke, James Lesley “Jimmy” Daniels died at the age of seventy-six in June of 1984 just a few days after performing at the Kool Jazz Festival’s “Evening of the Music of Harold Arlen” at Carnegie Hall.

Notes: In 1934, Jimmy Daniels met prominent architect Philip Johnson and began a relationship, his first serious one, that lasted from 1934 to 1936. He later met filmmaker Kenneth Macpherson who at that time was married to English heiress and novelist Annie Winifred Ellerman, known by her pen name Bryher. She commissioned sculptor Richmond Barthé, a regular patron of the Jimmy Daniels’ Nightclub, to create a marble bust of Daniels. In the 1950s, Daniels shared a home with award-winning fashion designer Rex Madsen.

The NYC LGBT Historic Sites Project has an 2023 article written by project manager Amanda Davis on the Jimmy Daniels’ Nightclub. The article is located at: https://www.nyclgbtsites.org/site/jimmie-daniels/

On the “Medium” story site, writer Michael Henry Adams has an article on the lives of historic, gay African-American artists and performers, a section of which discusses Jimmy Daniels. The  article also covers the intolerance shown to LBGTQ people despite the apparent advancement in legislation. Michael Adams’s article is located at: https://medium.com/@michaelhenryadams/raising-the-questions-who-is-gay-who-cares-why-it-still-matters-4166a5442ec8

Top Insert Image: Carl Van Vechten, “Jimmy Daniels”, 1933, Color Print, Van Vechten Trust

Second Insert Image: George Platt Lynes, “James Leslie Daniels”, 1937, Duotone Photo Engraving, 22.9 x 27.9 cm, Private Collection

Third Insert Image: Carl Van Vechten, “Jimmy Daniels with Bust by Richmond Barthé”, December 21st 1938, Gelatin Silver Print, Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, Yale University

Bottom Insert Image: Carl Van Vechten, “Jimmy Daniels”, circa 1933, Color Print, Van Vechten Trust

Calendar: April 1

A Year: Day to Day Men: 1st of April

Sea Adventure

April 1, 1895 is the birthdate of the American jazz singer and songwriter Alberta Hunter.

In her early teens Alberta Hunter began her singing career in small clubs in Chicago, Illinois. By 1914 she was receiving lessons from the prominent jazz pianist Tony Jackson who helped her expand her repertoire and compose her own songs. One of Hunter’s first notable experiences was singing at the Panama Club, a white-owned club with a white-only clientele. Her act was in the upstairs room where she began her development as an artist in front of a cabaret crowd of patrons. Her big break came when she was booked at Dreamland Cafe, singing with the cornet jazz musician King Oliver and his band.

Alberta Hunter first toured Europe in 1917, performing in Paris and London. Her career as a singer and songwriter flourished in the 1920s and 30s; she appeared in clubs and on stage in musicals both in London and New York. At this time she wrote the critically acclaimed song “Downhearted Blues” (1922). Alberta Hunter recorded prolifically during the 1920s, starting with sessions for Black Swan in 1921, Paramount in 1922-24, Gennett in 1924, Okeh in 1925-26, Victor in 1927 and Columbia in 1929.

In 1928, Hunter played the role of Queenie opposite Paul Robeson in the first London production of “Show Boat” at Drury Lane. She later performed in nightclubs throughout Europe and appeared in 1934 with Jack Jackson’s society orchestra in London. One of Hunter’s most known recordings with Jackson is the famous song “Miss Otis Regrets”. She later moved to New York City, performing with Bricktop, the American female dancer and jazz singer, and recording with Louis Armstrong and Sidney Bechet.

In the summer of 1976 , Alberta Hunter was connected with Barney Josephson, the legendary owner of the Greenwich Village club, The Cookery. He offered her a limited engagement at the club, which turned into a six year engagement and a revival of her music career after a fifteen year absence from the profession. Impressed by her press reviews, John Hammond signed Hunter to Columbia Records, where she made three albums.

Alberta Hunter was inducted to the Blues hall of Fame in 2011 and the Memphis Music Hall fo Fame in 2015. Her comeback album produced by Columbia Records, “Amtrack Blues”, was honored by the Blues Hall of Fame in 2009.