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Photographs of the Lido show at the Stardust Hotel, image 01

Date

1957 to 1959

Description

Handwritten on back of image: "(R to L in photo, L to R on back of photo) Penny, Velleda, Annette, 1958."

Image

Photographs of the Lido show at the Stardust Hotel, image 02

Date

1957 to 1959

Description

Handwritten on back of image: "Penny 1958."

Image

Photographs of the Lido show at the Stardust Hotel, image 03

Date

1957 to 1959

Description

Handwritten on back of image: "Annette 1958."

Image

Photographs of the Lido show at the Stardust Hotel, image 04

Date

1957 to 1959

Description

Image has "Annette 1958" handwritten on the back over the woman standing on the diving board.

Image

Transcript of interview with Judy Lee (Johnson) Jones by Claytee D. White, February 22, 2007

Date

2007-02-22

Description

In the 1950s and 1960s, the Copa Room at the Sands Hotel and Casino featured glamorous showgirls. For a few years, the Houston Chronicle sponsored a contest that added the Texas Copa Girls to the line. In 1958, one of the winners was 17-year-old Judith Lee Johnson. For the "wild" but "naive" Judy, the experience was a period of funfilled freedom, followed by relentless encouragement of others to attend college, which she reluctantly did. To her surprise, she embraced the college life, took her studies seriously, and received an education degree. She also became Miss Houston. Four years later she returned to Las Vegas and the Sands. As she stepped into her role as a showgirl this second time, she was no longer the newbie. She experiences the lifestyle with more maturity. She talks about the celebrities she met, the lasting friendships she formed, performing in the Elvis movie Viva Las Vegas, and her trip around the world, a trip that included her personal dream of going to Paris. Judy shares details of her family heritage and she wonders to what extent she might have been living her mother's dream. Though her love of performance and theatre is keen, Judy channeled her passions into a 29-year career as an educator. She married a Marine in 1965, raised their children, moved with his career. She and her husband, Walter F. Jones, live in Virginia.

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