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LINK Darcelle XV, Iconic Drag Queen, Dies at 92 -- The Advocate

Legendary drag queen Darcelle XV has died at age 92.

Darcelle — offstage, Walter W. Cole Sr. — died Thursday of natural causes, according to the Facebook page of Darcelle's nightclub.

"The family of Darcelle XV along with her cast and crew are heartbroken to announce that our beloved Darcelle (Walter W. Cole, Sr.) has died at age 92 from natural causes. We ask for privacy and patience as everyone processes and grieves in their own way and at their own pace," the venue wrote.

For more than 50 years, Darcelle ran a Portland nightclub called Darcelle XV Showplace, “where the entertainer told bawdy jokes in elaborate makeup and beaded gowns, while acting as master of ceremonies to a parade of other drag queens and dancers,” The Oregonian reports.

It's the longest-running drag club west of the Mississippi.

Darcelle was embraced warmly by Portlanders, appearing at many events around the city and receiving numerous awards. The queen received a place in Guinness World Records in 2016 as the world’s oldest drag performer.

Before creating Darcelle, Cole was a manager in the Fred Meyer retail chain, then ran a beatnik-style café called Caffe Espresso and a variety of bars. He bought Demas Tavern in 1967 in what was then a rough neighborhood of Portland. That was where he started performing in drag — the first time was when he was 37 — creating the Darcelle persona with help from his life partner, fellow entertainer Roxy Le Roy Neuhardt. The name was based on French actress Denise Darcel, with whom Neuhardt had appeared in Las Vegas. The performances helped business take off, and the bar was renamed Darcelle XV Showplace in 1974.

Cole and Neuhardt maintained their long gay relationship even while Cole remained married to his wife, Jeannette. Cole and his wife had two children; one, Walter Jr., has worked at the drag club for three decades and will keep it running. Neuhardt died in 2017 at age 82. The home the two men shared is on the National Register of Historic Places, as is Darcelle XV Showplace.

Cole said becoming Darcelle enhanced and perhaps even saved his life. “If I hadn’t admitted who I was, I’d probably be dead now,” he said in 2010, according to The Oregonian. “I’d be sitting on a couch retiring from Fred Meyer management. Not for me.”

As Darcelle, Cole raised money for a variety of charities, including many LGBTQ+ and AIDS organizations. The Darcelle XV AIDS Memorial stands at a cemetery in Portland, and in recognition of his work, Cole received the Spirit of Portland Award in 2003. The club also hosted Christmas Eve dinners for people who had nowhere else to go.

Cole’s life and work were chronicled in a 2019 exhibit at the Oregon Historical Society, “The Many Shades of Being Darcelle: 52 Years of Fashion,” and a musical that premiered that year, Darcelle: That’s No Lady.

While drag has been targeted by the right wing in recent years, Cole had pointed out that the art has been around for many years and will survive. “You’ve got to remember that Milton Berle and the movie Mrs. Doubtfire and these other people brought it to mainstream attention,” Cole said in 2017, The Oregonian notes. “I don’t think it can go back in the closet again, no matter what. Same-sex marriage, it broke that horrible barrier.”

Portland mayor Ted Wheeler wrote on Twitter, "Darcelle is a Portland icon who gave us more than great performances. Their legacy will live on through their philanthropy, legendary show venue, and the countless lives they've impacted for good."

snytiger6 9 Mar 26
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oh, look, a productive and entertaining member of society....contrast with any Dumpster........

hopefully you can see this reply, if you can it should have fixed the problem

@glennlab I have No problem opening some of your posts, but when i try to read others i get the dreaded "sorry'' screen, which is what makes me think someone has blocked me that reads AND replies to your posts
PS will def try the block/unblock thing but it is not an all-or-nothing thing happening

@AnneWimsey If it's my post, you should be able to read it no matter who has replied to it.

@glennlab Ah Ha, i see the misunderstanding here...i usually go directly to the list of posts under the little 'bell' icon @ upper right, not scroll through all the original posts, and that's where the 'sorry' messge pops up, when i click on things there.

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