Johnny Hudgins Performs at Hillsgrove Country Club

Starting in March of 1938, the blackface pantomime and vaudeville veteran Johnny Hudgins performs at the Hillsgrove Country Club for a 16-week engagement after having performed at the Southern Club in Boston. During this four-month-long routine, Hudgins was accompanied by songstress Doris Rheubottom, the Slim Eddie Avery dance team, and the Joe Nevils swing band.

-written by Felicia Bevel

Johnny Hudgins

Blackface minstrelsy was not performed only by the type of working class white actors described by scholars of whiteness studies such as David Roediger. This profession was also inhabited by blacks as a means for economic upward mobility. One such individual was the African American vaudeville performer Johnny Hudgins. Born in Baltimore in 1896, he started as an amateur performer in local nightclubs and sang and danced on the burlesque circuit for nine years. He then developed into what he is most well known for: blackface pantomiming. During the 1920s he appeared in such productions as Noble Sissle and Eubie Blake’s “Chocolate Dandies”. Furthermore, he performed both domestically and internationally in major cities like New York City and London as part of the Lew Leslie Blackbirds. Known as the “Wah-Wah Man”, his popularity stemmed from his unique dance routine. This routine consisted of trumpet soloist playing a “wah-wah” sound that Hudgins would simultaneously lip synch while dancing. His personal life included an eighty year marriage to Mildred Martien and adoption of daughter Lisa Hudgins. He died in 1990. -written by Felicia Bevel

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Hillsgrove Country Club

Known as one of the largest and most exclusive of its kind in New England, the Hillsgrove Country Club was established sometime in the early 20th century. At one point owned by the Italian immigrant Pasquale Testa, its popularity in the 1920s and 1930s was due to the appearance of such performers as Johnny Hudgins for extended periods. It was purchased in 1938 by the Sholes family, who turned the club into a skating rink. Because of its close proximity to the T.F. Green Airport, the Sholes family decided to transform the skating rink into a 169-room Hampton Inn and Suites in 1999. This decision was not popular among many locals, for whom the rink had been a site of community development and belonging during their childhood and young adulthood. -written by Felicia Bevel

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