Bonus Ep. 3—when Sally Stanford Kicked Humphrey Bogart Out of Her Flagship Pleasure Palace at 1144 PINE in 1941
TRANSCRIPT
Hi, this is Knox Bronson at The Secret History of Frisco podcast. This bonus episode is about legends: specifically the infamous San Francisco madam Sally Stanford, movie star Humphrey Bogart, and how she barred him from her infamous bordello, and swashbuckling scalawag and movie star Errol Flynn, who enchanted her and all her girls with all the considerable charm he possessed while hiding there for two weeks, weathering a storm of bad publicity for decking a United States Marine at Finnochio’s nightclub in North Beach, known around the world for its dazzling array of singing, dancing, and lip-synching female impersonators.
[intermezzo]
Born into poverty in Baker County, Oregon, in 1903, Mabel Busby’s wild spirit showed itself early. She eloped at the age of 16 and accidentally ran straight into a life of crime, landing herself in prison for cashing checks that her husband had stolen. She had professed her innocence, claiming that she didn’t know the checks were stolen and I believe her. She was, after all, only sixteen. The county prosecutor promised her probation if she pled guilty. He was lying and, after she entered her guilty plea, the judge put her away. During her two-year sentence, she learned the art of bootlegging.
She also decided to never be broke or dependent on a man again.
read more…Sign up for free and receive a free eBook: Secrets of Pisco Punch Revealed. And please tell your friends!
Click to view other platforms: Apple Podcasts, Spotify, et cetera!
The Secret History of Frisco
Elmer “Bones” Remmer
Jimmie Tarantino
Bill Wren
Managing Editor of the SF Examiner, Bill Wren ran the city, played the horses, and didn’t like to pay up when he lost a bet.
Bob Patterson
Shell Cooper
Sally Stanford
Frank Sinatra
Mickey Cohen
Thomas Lynch
Herb Caen
Louella Parsons
Estes Kefhauver
“Freddie Francisco, alias Bob Patterson, once posed as a member of royalty. He assumed the title of a Count, under the name of Maximilian B.H.M. Carlton as the son of Marquis of Gahnst and a subaltern in the Black Watch regiment, and as such was arrested in Tucson, Arizona and on Jan. 27, 1928, was arrested for grand larceny by the Chicago Police. (Can you picture columnist Francisco as a count?)”—Jimmie Tarantino, Hollywood Life Magazine.