Born in misery in the United States, the "Ebony Venus" became a beloved diva, entered counter-espionage during World War II and then led an international fight against racism by becoming the mother of 12 children adopted in four corners of the world.

Without feather or sequins, it is in the uniform of Free France that she spoke after Martin Luther King and his famous "I have a dream" in 1963, in Washington.

The march for civil rights was the "happiest day of her life".

"I never knew if this job satisfied her completely and if she did not rather want to be a political character", declared Bruno Coquatrix, her friend and big manitou of the French variety.

Josephine Baker and her adopted children, October 25, 1957 in Paris - AFP / Archives

"She wanted nothing less than the reconciliation of all men (...). She continued her job as a magazine leader to earn money, to win this battle".

Black woman

Freda Josephine McDonald was born on June 3, 1906 in Saint Louis (Missouri) to a black Native American and a short-lived father of Spanish origin.

She grows up in vermin and segregation.

Placed as a servant, she stopped school to get married at 13.

A failure.

She joined a troupe of street dancers and married Willie Baker in 1921.

The young girl leaves her husband to try her luck in New York, but will keep her name.

She had difficulty integrating two troupes on Broadway then was convinced by a producer to join Paris with Sidney Bechet.

Josephine Baker AFP / Archives

On October 2, 1925, the African-American dancer became the star of "La Revue Nègre" at the Champs-Elysées theater and reluctantly agreed to appear topless.

That evening, she delighted the whole of Paris with her "wild dance": in a savannah setting, the artist performs a strange Charleston in an unleashing of jazz drums while squinting, a huge smile on her lips.

"Driven by dark forces that I did not know, I improvised, intoxicated by music, the theater overheated and packed under the heat of the projectors," she said.

The public discovers, blissfully, this black woman who plays with colonial fantasies.

In 1927, at the Folies Bergères, it is dressed in a simple belt of bananas and accompanied by a living panther that the burlesque artist radiates on stage.

"Outrageous star"

"She is aware of embodying + the savage + but she is going to invent a way of her own to occupy this disturbing place", explains director Ilana Navaro in her documentary "Baker, first black icon".

"Around his loins, bananas, racist symbols par excellence, are transformed into phalic trophies".

The first song she performed, "J'ai deux amours, mon pays et Paris", in 1930 at the Casino de Paris, established her as a diva.

"If I want to be a star, I have to be scandalous," she proclaims with her American accent.

She walks with a snake around her neck, a goat on a leash and creates scandals according to her whims.

His ardor on stage and his exoticism maddened Picabia, Desnos.

A free woman, she is credited with adventures with men and women.

Josephine Baker at the Folies Bergères in February 1949 in Paris - AFP / Archives

Her impresario Giuseppe Abatino, a Sicilian with whom she lived for ten years, organized a world tour for her.

In the United States, the reception is mixed.

In 1937, "Princesse Tam-Tam" married the businessman Jean Lion and became French.

"It is France which made me what I am, I will keep him an eternal gratitude", she affirms.

"Have I not become the darling of the Parisians? They gave me everything, especially their hearts. I gave them mine. I am ready to give them my life today."

"A human race"

Black woman, married to a Jewish man, Josephine Baker is a target for the Nazis.

From then on, its political commitment will become central.

She sang for the soldiers at the front and became a propaganda agent for General de Gaulle, obtaining among other things, thanks to her interpersonal skills, information on Mussolini's intentions.

Joséphine Baker decorated with the Legion of Honor and the Croix de Guerre, June 19, 1961 at the Château des Milandes, in Castelnaud-la-Chapelle - AFP / Archives

Second Lieutenant Joséphine Baker transmitted to London hidden reports in sympathetic ink in her scores, which earned her the Croix de Guerre.

A civil rights activist for black Americans, she joined the International League Against Racism.

Alongside Castro, she participated in Cuba in 1966 in the Tricontinentale, the Third World conference.

To prove that "there is only one human race", she adopts, with her new husband the conductor Jo Bouillon, twelve children of different origins.

She settled her "rainbow tribe" in a castle in the Dordogne, the Milandes, where she founded the "capital of fraternity".

The phalanstery becomes an amusement park to the glory of a reconciled world.

The project is disproportionate: ruined, she goes back on stage to save her domain.

In vain.

Josephine Baker's funeral procession arrives at the Madeleine church on April 15, 1975 in Paris - AFP / Archives

She died on April 12, 1975, three days after celebrating her golden wedding anniversary with the stage.

© 2021 AFP