Chris, originally from California, was four and a half years in the US Army,
and then was a merchant seaman. He lived a year in east Asia. He then settled in
New York.

In the mid 1960s, he took up female impersonation, and appeared with Frank
Bennet in the
Follies Mantisque. This led to work with the
Jewel Box
Revue, at first doing a comedy strip. However it was discovered that he
could impersonate Ethel Merman rather well, and started singing songs from
Gypsy. He then added Marlene Dietriche and Bette Davis to his repertoire.
He used a special heavy makeup to hide the tattoo on his upper arm. He was also
partially blind and required thick glasses.
He met
Lee Brewster and
Vicky
West in the Mattachine Society, and left with them to found the Queens
Liberation Front. In 1971 Chris won the Most Outstanding Performance at the
April in Paris Ball, and again at Lee's
Mardi Gras Ball.

Chris was a constant at QLF parties, but after a few years she was diagnosed
with cancer. She was able to fight it for over five years. Lee Brewster put on a
special ball for Chris so that she could perform and be the star, and Vicky drew
her for the cover of
Drag magazine.
-
Avery Willard. Female Impersonation. New York: Regiment Publications,
1971: 26-9. Online
-
“Six Foot Chris Moore”. Female Impersonators, 2, Summer 1969: 18-21.
Online
-
Cover. Drag, 3,11, 1973. Online
-
“Chris Moore Revue”. In Lee G Brewster's Mardi Gras Ball, 1974: 4-7.
Online
-
Veronica Vera interviews Bebe Scarpe about the late Vicky West. “Forever
Mardi Gras”. Transgender Tapestry, 111, Winter 2006/7: 32-43. Online
-
“The Kurt Mann Story”. Queer Music Heritage. http://www.queermusicheritage.com/fem-mann1.html.
- "The Glamorous Chris Moore Dead at 55". Drag, 5, 19, 1975. Online.
Thanks to researcher Kyle Phalen for confirming Chris' dates, and for Drag 5.19 which I had originally missed.
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