Tiger Woman: A Wild Life
By (Author) Betty May
Duckworth Books
Duckworth
1st September 2014
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
942.082092
256
Width 129mm, Height 199mm
'I have often lived only for pleasure and excitement but you will see that I came to it by unexpected ways'
Dancer, singer, gang member, cocaine addict and sometime confectionist, Betty May's autobiography Tiger Woman thrilled and appalled the public when her story first appeared at the end of the roaring twenties.
Born into abject squalor in London's Limehouse area, May used her steely-eyed, striking looks and street nous to become an unlikely bohemian celebrity sensation, a fixture at the Cafe Royal, London, marrying four times along the way alongside numerous affairs.
She elbowed her way to the top of London's social scene in a series of outrageous and dramatic fights, flights, marriages and misadventures that also took her to France, Italy, Canada and the USA.
Her most fateful adversary was occultist and self-proclaimed 'Great Beast' Aleister Crowley, who intended her to be a sacrificial victim of his Thelemite cult in Sicily, but it was her husband - Oxford undergraduate Raoul Loveday - who died, after conducting a blood sacrifice ritual.
Betty May's vitality and ferocious charisma enchanted numerous artistic figures including Jacob Epstein and Jacob Kramer. A heroine like no other, this is her incredible story in her own words, as fresh and extraordinary as the day it was first told.
Betty May died in obscurity in the 1950s, and her outrageous life will be the subject of a forthcoming musical entitled Tiger Woman Versus The Beast. This remarkable account of her life was first published by Duckworth in 1929.