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Alice Key
March 18, 1911 -
Alice Key has made contributions to the state of Nevada as a journalist,
community activist, and political leader. She was the co-host of
the first all-black television talk show in Las Vegas and was active
in fighting for civil rights in Nevada and California.
Alice was born in Henderson Kentucky on March 18, 1911. As a young
child, she moved to Riverside, California with her mother and the
family of her uncle’s wife. She finished high school in Riverside
and then went to UCLA to pursue a degree in Journalism. Her mother
managed a coffee shop near the famous Club Alabam in central L.A.
Key met a girl there who worked at the Cotton Club who eventually
persuaded her to dance at the club, too. She left school and danced
for the next five years. Her career as a dancer took her to New York
where she worked at the Ubangi Club and later she spent six months
in Europe touring with the Cotton Club Show.
In 1943, Key ended her dancing career and started working as a writer
for a black newspaper, the Los Angeles Tribune. In 1954, she moved
to Las Vegas to take a job working for the Las Vegas Voice. Not long
after her arrival, she and Bob Bailey started the first all-black
television talk show in Las Vegas, “Talk of the Town”,
which lasted for several months.
In the 1960s, Key became the public relations manager for the Nevada
Committee for the Rights of Women, which promoted education about
birth control and fought for reforms to the abortion laws in Nevada.
After that position, she worked for the Economic Opportunity Board
until 1971. In 1983, Governor Richard Bryan named Key Deputy Commissioner
of Labor, a position she held for ten years. She also involved herself
in political campaigns, the NAACP, and founded the Barbara Jordan
Democratic Women’s Club. Since retiring from public services,
Key has worked to preserve the history of black Las Vegas through
the Moulin Rouge Preservation Association and the Black History Society,
Inc.
Alice Key continues to reside in Las Vegas. Her dedication to equality
and commitment to her community have helped to lower barriers faced
by women and African Americans in Nevada.
Source:
- Alice Key, “An Interview with Alice Key,” an interview
by Claytee D. White [transcript], Las Vegas Women Oral History
Project (1998), Special Collections Department, Library, University
of Nevada, Las Vegas.
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