As a teenager in Saint Louis in the Sixties,
Iād gawk at the ads in the Post-Dispatch and the Globe-Democrat
for Evelyn āChest Sensationā West, the stripper
who headlined at the Stardust Club, her bust
famously insured for $50,000 with Lloyds of London ā
and those were 1960 dollars she had on those puppies ā
her 39-1/2ā bust contained in 42-D cups,
at least when they werenāt on display.
Her name was up there
with Lou Brock and Stan Musial.
Everybody knew about her.
When I read about her sad death in Florida,
I almost felt like weeping.
A cop climbed through the window of her Hollywood duplex;
she hadnāt been seen for several days.
Friends had called police when Amy Charles,
as she called herself, no longer using the stage name,
hadnāt responded to emails and phone calls.
Sheād died in her sleep, thyroid and heart drugs
on a bedside table.
The officer ignored the piles of publicity photographs,
the boxes of costumes and memorabilia filling three bedrooms.
He didnāt realize heād found the body of a St. Louis legend;
the old woman had been a star.Ā She was 83.
I was in my mid-fifties when I read the news.
Oh, how I wished Iād gone to see her, a teenage fantasy.
The Stardust was just north of Forest Park,
on the old DeBaliviere Strip, along with
the Tic-Toc and Little Las Vegas, a couple others,
not so far from us on Kingsbury Ave., just off Skinker.
āI know youāre looking at my shoes,ā sheād quip,
her signature line, and the audience would roar.