Polly Adler#Autobiography
{{short description|American madam and author (1900–1962)}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2022}}
{{Infobox person
| name = Polly Adler
| image = Polly Adler 1953.jpg
| caption = Adler c. 1953
| birth_name =
| birth_date = April 16, 1900
| birth_place = Yanow, Belarus
| death_date = {{death date and age|1962|6|9|1900|4|16}}
| death_place = Hollywood, California, U.S.
| nationality = American
| other_names =
| occupation = madam, author
| known_for =
}}
Pearl "Polly" Adler (April 16, 1900 – June 9, 1962){{Cite web|url=https://www.proquest.com/docview/141594930|title=Polly Adler Dead|website=pqasb.pqarchiver.com|access-date=October 22, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160310062046/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/washingtonpost_historical/doc/141594930.html?FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&type=historic&date=JUN%2011,%201962&author=&pub=The%20Washington%20Post&edition=&startpage=&desc=Polly%20Adler%20Dead;%20Wrote%20'A%20House%20Is%20Not%20a%20Home'|archive-date=March 10, 2016|id={{ProQuest|141594930}} |url-status=live}} was an American madam and author, best known for her work A House Is Not a Home, which was adapted into a film of the same name. In 2021, Pulitzer Prize–winning historian Debby Applegate published a comprehensive account of Adler's life and times entitled Madam: The Biography of Polly Adler, Icon of the Jazz Age with Doubleday.
Early life
Of Russian-Jewish origin, Pearl Adler was the eldest of nine children of Gertrude Koval and Morris Adler, a tailor who travelled throughout Europe on business. Her early education was from the village rabbi.{{cite book |last1= Sicherman |first1= Barbara |last2=Green |first2= Carol Hurd |title= Notable American Women: The Modern Period |year= 1980 |publisher= Harvard University Press |isbn=9780674627338 |page= [https://archive.org/details/notableamericanw00sich_0/page/7 7] |url= https://archive.org/details/notableamericanw00sich_0/page/7 }}{{cite encyclopedia |url=https://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0001_0_00459.html |title=Polly Adler |encyclopedia=Jewish Virtual Library |access-date=April 18, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150419115242/http://www.jewishvirtuallibrary.org/jsource/judaica/ejud_0002_0001_0_00459.html |archive-date=April 19, 2015 |url-status=live }}{{cite book |author=J. B. Litoff |author2=J. McDonnell |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=1ZyYa0cAPbkC&q=isadore+sarah&pg=PA3 |title=European Immigrant Women in the United States |pages=2–3|isbn=9780824053062 |year=1994 |publisher=Taylor & Francis }}
The family lived at Yanow, a city of Imperial Russia, (later in western Belarus) near the Polish border. When Adler was thirteen, her parents sent her with a cousin to the United States to avoid the gathering wave of pogroms. Halfway through the journey, her cousin decided to turn back home, leaving Adler on her own.{{cite web |last=Bren |first=Paulina |author-link=Paulina Bren |date=November 2, 2021 |title=The Manhattan 'Madam' Who Hobnobbed With the City's Elite |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2021/11/02/books/review/madam-polly-adler-debby-applegate.html |accessdate=November 3, 2021 |work=The New York Times}}
World War I prevented the rest of her family from immigrating to the U.S. until after the end of the war. The war also prevented her from receiving the monthly allowance sent by her father. In the U.S., she lived for a time with friends of her family in Springfield, Massachusetts, where she cleaned house and attended school and, at age 14, began working in the local paper mill. The following year she moved to Brooklyn, where she lived for a time with cousins. Adler worked as a seamstress and at clothing factories, and attended school sporadically. At the age of 17, while working in a corset factory for $5 a week, she was raped by her foreman and became pregnant. She found a doctor who charged $150 for abortions. The doctor took pity on her when she said she only had $35; he accepted only $25 and told her to "take the rest and buy some shoes and stockings."{{cite web |last= Abbott |first= Karen |title= The House that Polly Adler Built |website= Smithsonian |date= April 12, 2012|url= http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history/the-house-that-polly-adler-built-65080310/ |access-date= March 25, 2017}} Ostracized by her cousins, she moved to Manhattan and continued working in a factory.
At 19, she began to enjoy the company of theater people in Manhattan, and shared an apartment with an actress and showgirl on Riverside Drive in New York City. The street was known among Yiddish speakers as "Allrightnik’s Row", suggesting that its residents had "made it". Her new friends were involved in vaudeville, Broadway revues, Tin Pan Alley, burlesque, and the sleazy underbelly of show business. They gave her the nickname "Polly."
It was at this apartment in 1920 that Adler was introduced to Nicolas Montana, whose business was procuring women to work in brothels. Montana set her up in a furnished, two-room apartment across from Columbia University, where she soon began to procure prostitutes for Montana and his friends, earning $100 a week. One evening, Adler was arrested and charged with procuring, but the case was dismissed for lack of evidence. After a brief attempt to run a lingerie shop, she returned to prostitution, determined this time to succeed in it. She made a point of befriending the police, slipping a $100 bill into a cop's palm whenever she shook his hand.
Bordello owner
As Adler's business grew, she invested in a series of improvements, moving to grander accommodations and updating the interiors where necessary.
One building in which she plied her trade was the Majestic Tower, at 215 West 75th street, designed by architects Schwartz and Gross and completed in 1931. It included a bar styled to resemble the recently excavated Tutankhamun's tomb, a Chinese Room where visitors could play mahjong, a Gobelin tapestry, hidden stairways and secret doorways.{{cite web | url=http://www.215w75.com/html/1920s_history.html |last= Jacobs |first= Lisa |title= Majestic Towers' Dirty Little Secret |work= 215 West 75 Street building newsletter |date=Winter 2002 |access-date= September 17, 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110707061531/http://www.215w75.com/html/1920s_history.html |archive-date= July 7, 2011 | url-status=live }}
Her brothel's patrons included Peter Arno, Harold Ross, George S. Kaufman (who had an account and paid for services rendered at the end of each month),{{cite web |last= Applegate |first= Debby |title= The Literary Adventures of Polly Adler, the Algonquin Round Table's Favorite Madam |publisher= Lit Hub |date= November 2, 2021|url= https://lithub.com/the-literary-adventures-of-polly-adler-the-algonquin-round-tables-favorite-madam/|accessdate= November 4, 2021}}{{cite book |last= Baxter |first= John |title= Carnal Knowledge: Baxter's Concise Encyclopedia of Modern Sex |url= https://archive.org/details/carnalknowledgeb00baxt|url-access=registration |access-date= December 24, 2011 |date= February 10, 2009|publisher= HarperCollins |isbn= 978-0-06-087434-6|page=[https://archive.org/details/carnalknowledgeb00baxt/page/3 3]}} Robert Benchley, Donald Ogden Stewart, Dorothy Parker (who would chat with Adler while her male friends partook of the girls' services), Milton Berle, John Garfield, New York City mayor Jimmy Walker, gossip columnist Walter Winchell, and mobster Dutch Schultz.[http://dorothyparker.com/dot32.htm Dorothy Parker Society, "Polly Adler's Brothel"] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081012231025/http://www.dorothyparker.com/dot32.htm |date=October 12, 2008 }}, Dorothy Parker Society There has been speculation that New York State Supreme Court justice Joseph Force Crater, who vanished on August 6, 1930, died in Adler's brothel.{{Cite web|title=7 decades later, judge's vanishing still a mystery|url=https://www.baltimoresun.com/news/bs-xpm-2008-01-05-0801050055-story.html|last=Rasmussen|first=Frederick N.|website= The Baltimore Sun |date=January 5, 2008 |language=en-US|access-date= May 14, 2020}}{{cite book|author=Richard J. Tofel|title= Vanishing Point: The Disappearance of Judge Crater and the New York He Left Behind |url=https://archive.org/details/vanishingpointdi00rich|url-access=registration|access-date=February 19, 2013|date=October 2004|publisher=Ivan R. Dee|isbn=978-1566636056}}
Adler was a shrewd businesswoman with a mind for marketing. She determined that gaining publicity would be to her advantage, and she cultivated newspaper coverage by dressing flamboyantly, making grand appearances at nightclubs, and drawing attention to her beautiful employees. She also paid large bribes to city and law enforcement officials to keep her business open. Adler's brothels were distinguished by drink from the best bootleggers, food from her own private cooks, good hygiene, and well-selected, mostly working-class girls. It was reported that during the early days of the Great Depression, Adler had to turn away as many as forty young women for every one she hired.
In the early 1930s, Adler was a star witness of the Seabury Commission investigations and spent a few months in hiding in Florida to avoid testifying. She refused to give up the names of any mobsters when apprehended by the police.
Adler retired in 1945. She attended high school and earned an associate degree at Los Angeles City College. In 1953, she and ghost writer Virginia Faulkner published her memoir, A House Is Not a Home; it was issued by Rinehart and Co. and sold two million copies in both hard cover and mass-market paperback. Her notoriety led her to be included in Cleveland Amory's 1959 Celebrity Register.{{cite news | url=https://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/13/weekinreview/13tanenhaus.html?ref=weekinreview | work=The New York Times | first=Sam |last= Tanenhaus | title=Tiger Woods and the Perils of Modern Celebrity | date=December 12, 2009 | access-date=February 12, 2017 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190126035121/https://www.nytimes.com/2009/12/13/weekinreview/13tanenhaus.html?ref=weekinreview | archive-date=January 26, 2019 | url-status=live }} In 1964, two years after her death, A House Is Not a Home was made into a movie starring Shelley Winters as Adler.
Trials
= Spring 1935 =
During Fiorello La Guardia's time as a mayor, Polly Adler and three of her girls were brought to court. She pleaded guilty and was sentenced to 30 days in jail and fined $500. She served her sentence in May and June 1935, scrubbing the jail floors, and was released after 24 days.
"A plea of guilty was entered for Polly Adler in Special Sessions yesterday to a charge of possessing a 'motion picture machine with objectionable pictures' in her East Fifty-fifth Street apartment when it was raided by the police last March 5."{{cite news |title= Polly Adler Enters a Plea of Guilty |newspaper= The New York Times |date= April 16, 1935 |page= 9 |url= https://www.nytimes.com/1935/04/16/archives/polly-adler-enters-a-plea-of-guilty-but-lawyer-after-dispute-with.html |access-date=April 19, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180722214524/https://www.nytimes.com/1935/04/16/archives/polly-adler-enters-a-plea-of-guilty-but-lawyer-after-dispute-with.html |archive-date=July 22, 2018 |url-status=live }}
"Another unexpected plea of guilty to maintaining an objectionable apartment at 30 East Fifty-fifth Street blocked in Special Sessions yesterday the trial of Polly Adlerhttp://www.corbisimages.com/stock-photo/rights-managed/U727642INP/police-escorting-vice-queen March 5, 1935 {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120913045816/http://www.corbisimages.com/stock-photo/rights-managed/U727642INP/police-escorting-vice-queen |date=September 13, 2012 }}http://www.jamd.com/image/g/80634152 March 14, 1935 on that and another charge that she kept an 'obscene motion picture film' in the suite last March when it was raided."{{cite news |newspaper=The New York Times |title= Polly Adler Makes a New Guilty Plea |url= https://www.nytimes.com/1935/05/07/archives/polly-adler-makes-a-new-guilty-plea-she-admits-maintaining-an.html |date=May 7, 1935 |page=10 |access-date= April 19, 2015 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180722214047/https://www.nytimes.com/1935/05/07/archives/polly-adler-makes-a-new-guilty-plea-she-admits-maintaining-an.html |archive-date=July 22, 2018 |url-status=live }}
= January 1943 =
In 1943, Adler was imprisoned at the Bellevue Hospital, while under her seventeenth charge for prostitution.{{cite news |newspaper=The New York Times |title=Polly Adler Seized Again; III in Bellevue Hospital Awaiting Hearing for 17th Time |date=January 16, 1943 |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9F03E7DE1139E33BBC4E52DFB7668388659EDE |page=28}} The case was later dismissed by Thomas H. Cullen.{{cite news |newspaper=The New York Times |title= Polly Adler Is Freed; Court Holds Police Failed to Establish a Case |date=January 27, 1943 |page=23 |url=https://query.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=9902EFDD173CEE3BBC4F51DFB7668388659EDE}}
Television and film portrayals
Shelley Winters portrayed Adler in the 1964 film version of Adler's book. The 1989 Perry Mason TV-movie Musical Murder revolved around a faux-musical based on Adler.{{citation needed|date=December 2011}} Adler was portrayed by the actress Gisèle Rousseau in the 1994 film Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle.{{cite web |url=https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0110588/fullcredits |publisher=IMDb |title=Mrs. Parker and the Vicious Circle (1994) |access-date= July 1, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160421122725/http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0110588/fullcredits/ |archive-date=April 21, 2016 |url-status=live }}
The television show M*A*S*H episode "Bulletin Board" features a party/picnic called the "First Annual Polly Adler Birthday Cook-out Picnic and Bar-B-Que", with all proceeds going to Sr. Teresa's Orphanage. The picnic scene climaxes with a tug of war between the officers and enlisted men. In the episode "Goodbye, Cruel World", Colonel Potter asks "Why does my company clerk's office look like Polly Adler's parlor?" after Corporal Klinger does some redecorating with items sent from home.
Death
Adler died of cancer in Cedars of Lebanon Hospital in Los Angeles, California. She was survived by her mother and her six brothers. She is buried in the Maimonides section of Mt. Sinai Memorial Park in Los Angeles. There were rumors that she had left an unfinished sequel to her book.Resting Places: The Burial Sites of More than 14000 Famous Persons, Scott Wilson{{cite news |title= Polly Adler Dies of Cancer at 62: Madame of '20's and '30's Later Wrote Best Seller |newspaper= The New York Times |date=June 11, 1962|id={{ProQuest|115754692}}}}
Autobiography
=Editions=
- {{cite book |author=Polly Adler |url=https://openlibrary.org/b/OL6114335M |title=A house is not a home |publisher=Rinehart & Co. Inc. |location=New York, Toronto |year=1953 |ol=6114335M |lccn=52012105}}
- {{cite book |author=Polly Adler |author2=Rachel Rubin |url=https://archive.org/details/houseisnothome0000adle |url-access=registration |title=A House Is Not a Home |publisher=Univ. of Massachusetts Press |year=2006 |isbn=978-1-55849-559-3 |lccn=2006018584}}
=Translations=
- {{cite book |author=Polly Adler |title=Case chiuse |others=Marisa Bulgheroni, translator |publisher=A. Mondadori |location=Milano |year=1964}}
- Polly Adler: Madam P. und ihre Mädchen, Lichtenberg Verlag, München, 1965
References
{{reflist}}
- {{cite book |title= A House is Not a Home |year=1953 |publisher=Rinehart & Co. Inc. |location= New York |title-link=A House Is Not a Home (book) }}, {{LCCN|52012105}}
- {{cite news |url=https://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/washingtonpost_historical/access/178397572.html?dids=178397572:178397572&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=JUN+11%2C+1962&author=&pub=The+Washington+Post&desc=Polly+Adler+Dead%3B+Wrote+%27A+House+Is+Not+a+Home%27&pqatl=google |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130131230529/http://pqasb.pqarchiver.com/washingtonpost_historical/access/178397572.html?dids=178397572:178397572&FMT=ABS&FMTS=ABS:FT&date=JUN+11,+1962&author=&pub=The+Washington+Post&desc=Polly+Adler+Dead;+Wrote+'A+House+Is+Not+a+Home'&pqatl=google |url-status=dead |archive-date=January 31, 2013 |title=Polly Adler Dead; Wrote 'A House Is Not a Home' |newspaper=The Washington Post |date=June 11, 1962 |page=B4 |access-date=April 19, 2015 }}
- {{cite web |last= Millin |first= Ann |title= Polly Adler |url=http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/adler-polly |publisher=Jewish Women's Archive |access-date= April 19, 2015}}
- {{cite magazine |magazine=Time |url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,830615,00.html |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20100102061339/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,830615,00.html |url-status=dead |archive-date=January 2, 2010 |title= Queen of Tarts |date= September 4, 1964 |access-date=April 19, 2015}} {{subscription required}}
Further reading
- {{cite book |last= Applegate |first= Debby |title= Madam: The Biography of Polly Adler, Icon of the Jazz Age |location= New York |publisher= Knopf Doubleday |date= 2021 |type= Hardback |isbn= 978-0385534758}}
{{Prostitution in the United States|state=collapsed}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Adler, Polly}}
Category:People from Ivanava district
Category:People from Kobrinsky Uyezd
Category:20th-century Belarusian Jews
Category:Emigrants from the Russian Empire to the United States
Category:American autobiographers
Category:American brothel owners and madams
Category:American female gangsters
Category:Jewish American gangsters
Category:American women autobiographers
Category:20th-century American women writers
Category:20th-century American non-fiction writers
Category:20th-century American businesspeople
Category:20th-century American businesswomen
Category:American women non-fiction writers