Three Group Biographies Explore American Women as Exiles, Divas, and Fame Machine Products
Artists, misfits, and superstars come to life in a triad of new books featuring extraordinary American women.

âBrilliant Exiles: American Women in Paris, 1900-1939â
By Robyn Asleson, Zakiya R. Adair, Denean Sharpley-Whiting, Samuel N. Dorf, Tirz True Latimer
Yale University Press, 288 pages
âWarholâs Muses: The Artists, Misfits, and Superstars Destroyed by the Factory Fame Machineâ
By Laurence Leamer
G. P. Putnamâs, 336 pages
âAmerican Diva: Extraordinary, Unruly, Fabulousâ
By Deborah Paredez
W. W. Norton, 256 pages
Prosopographers â aka practitioners of group biography â have several options: Organize a narrative around like-minded figures (women exiles); choose a megastar (Andy Warhol) around whom a constellation of personalities revolve; or focus on a concept (the diva) which can incorporate an extraordinary range of personalities that, in Deborah Paredezâs case, constitute the core of her own sensibility.
Contributors to âBrilliant Exilesâ explore the irony that for several women in the first four decades of the 20th century, Paris was the place where they could feel most American, which is to say they were accepted and honored precisely because they were American.
So it is that painter LoĂŻs Marilou Jones is shown in a photograph watched by six men in rapt attention as she works at her easel outside a cafĂ©. Such a scene âbetween a Black woman and a group of white menâ would have been hard to imagine in the United States, comments Robyn Asleson.
Of course black men experienced a similar liberation in Paris, but as Jones noted: âTo be both black and a woman has caused me to create in absolute frustration ⊠forced to go abroad to achieve the recognition [my] own society was not willing to give.â
Figuring in this exploration of exile are women like Zelda Fitzgerald, an artist whose own life was claimed by her husband as his literary property, and who sought her own liberation in Paris as a dancer, novelist, and painter. She was unable to sustain a demanding regime of creativity that ended in a mental collapse poorly treated, but she sought refuge, one of her friends said, in âreveriesâ that often âturned to Paris, which she loved.â
Laurence Leamer, a great prosopographer, begins with a riveting account of sexually abused Valerie Solanas, showing up in front of the home of a female producer, Margo Feiden, demanding that she produce her play, âUp Your Ass.â Solanas spends more than three hours explaining her idea of how men should be treated in a feminist paradise, including putting them in âbullpensâ selected by women for their pleasure.
When the patient producer said she could not produce the play, Solanas pulled out a gun saying she would shoot Andy Warhol and become famous and then Feiden would produce the play. In 1968, Solanas carried out her threat, nearly killing Warhol in a shooting at his studio.
As demented as Solanas might seem, her target, in Mr. Leamerâs telling, makes a certain sense; she picks on the creator of an art factory that replaced the âartist in a garretâ trope with the âartist as celebrityâ in both high and popular culture that few women could attain.
The exiled women of Paris did not conceive of an act as extreme as Solanasâs, but perhaps they would have understood the demands of a diva whom society does not recognize as such.
âIâve long been training to be a feminist performance critic whoâs enthralled by the relationship between divas and feminism and other freedom movements,â declares Deborah Paredez: âI want to know why and how exactly divas have sustained me and so many like me â the brown, the freaks, the feminists, the thespians rarely cast in the lead, the awkward and crooked-teethed, the otherwise shy, the poets â that Gloria AnzaldĂșa described as the atravesados, the squint-eyed, the perverse, the queer, the troublesome, the mongrel, the mulatto, the half-breed, the half-dead.â
In Ms. Paredezâs book, diva definitions (she has a chapter called that) range way beyond Paris and art and politics, to encompass figures ranging from Aretha Franklin to Tina Turner, to Venus and Serena Williams, and to actresses like Rita Moreno, whose performance in âWest Side Storyâ became an obsession for Ms. Paredez and her mother.
Divas have often been thought of as isolated figures, one-offs you might say, but in fact, they constitute a community of performance that becomes a liberating element in many peoplesâ lives. That kind of catholicity, uniting the diva to her following, largely unavailable to those women in Paris, and so elusive to those like the frustrated Valerie Solanas, is accorded a rousing reception in Ms. Paredezâs original prosopography.
Mr. Rollyson is the author of âAmy Lowell Among Her Contemporaries.â
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Correction: Valerie Solanas is the feminist playwright who shot Andy Warhol. An earlier version misstated her first name.

