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Unveiling the Prophet: The Misadventure of a Reluctant Debutante
Paperback

Unveiling the Prophet: The Misadventure of a Reluctant Debutante

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In the autumn of 1972, Lucy Ferriss, then a young coed from a prominent St Louis family, was preparing for the Veiled Prophet Ball at which she was to be presented to society. Once the largest cotillion in the country, the invitation-only ball was unique among society events not only for the legend and mystery surrounding its namesake but also for its setting in a public, taxpayer-funded arena and for its accompanying parade. In the late sixties and early seventies, with racial tensions at a boiling point and urban renewal failing, the exclusively white male Christian membership of the Veiled Prophet Society and the Veiled Prophet’s costume - eerily reminiscent of a Klansman’s - attracted the ire of ACTION, a militant civil rights group. Before the 1972 ball, ACTION founder Percy Green, himself a native St Louisan, sent letters inviting all of the debutantes to join in the protest:
ACTION understands that you hate being part of this upcoming white racist Veiled Prophet Ball as we hate you being forced to participate by your parents.
The letter didn’t persuade Ferriss, who felt she owed it to her father to participate. She wrote back:
Don’t you have bigger fish to fry? This is just a stupid party. We are slaughtering people in Southeast Asia. Let this one go. It will fall of its own weight.
But ACTION did not let this one go. On the night of the ball, as Ferriss bowed in obeisance to the crowd and took her place on the stage, a woman swooped down onto the stage and knocked off the Veiled Prophet’s hat and veil, revealing his identity. In the era of monumental Vietnam War protests, unmasking a wealthy and powerful old man might have seemed a feeble act of revolution, but this act forever changed the Veiled Prophet Ball in St Louis. Ferriss’s memoirs blends regional history, national history, and her own personal history to create a fast-paced narrative that follows two time lines. One is the dramatic and often funny story of her attending the exclusive ball, having eaten half a pan of marijuana brownies beforehand, with a Jewish hippie who smelled of
unwashed beard.
The other story takes place thirty years later as Ferriss returns to St Louis from her home on the East Coast to track down some of ACTION’s principal activists as well as key figures in the Veiled Prophet Society. Over the course of this engaging story, Ferriss undergoes her own unveiling, as she discusses and comes to terms with her family; the past, present, and future of St Louis; and the cultural politics that frame young women’: entrance into society.

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
University of Missouri Press
Country
United States
Date
6 October 2005
Pages
168
ISBN
9780826216014

In the autumn of 1972, Lucy Ferriss, then a young coed from a prominent St Louis family, was preparing for the Veiled Prophet Ball at which she was to be presented to society. Once the largest cotillion in the country, the invitation-only ball was unique among society events not only for the legend and mystery surrounding its namesake but also for its setting in a public, taxpayer-funded arena and for its accompanying parade. In the late sixties and early seventies, with racial tensions at a boiling point and urban renewal failing, the exclusively white male Christian membership of the Veiled Prophet Society and the Veiled Prophet’s costume - eerily reminiscent of a Klansman’s - attracted the ire of ACTION, a militant civil rights group. Before the 1972 ball, ACTION founder Percy Green, himself a native St Louisan, sent letters inviting all of the debutantes to join in the protest:
ACTION understands that you hate being part of this upcoming white racist Veiled Prophet Ball as we hate you being forced to participate by your parents.
The letter didn’t persuade Ferriss, who felt she owed it to her father to participate. She wrote back:
Don’t you have bigger fish to fry? This is just a stupid party. We are slaughtering people in Southeast Asia. Let this one go. It will fall of its own weight.
But ACTION did not let this one go. On the night of the ball, as Ferriss bowed in obeisance to the crowd and took her place on the stage, a woman swooped down onto the stage and knocked off the Veiled Prophet’s hat and veil, revealing his identity. In the era of monumental Vietnam War protests, unmasking a wealthy and powerful old man might have seemed a feeble act of revolution, but this act forever changed the Veiled Prophet Ball in St Louis. Ferriss’s memoirs blends regional history, national history, and her own personal history to create a fast-paced narrative that follows two time lines. One is the dramatic and often funny story of her attending the exclusive ball, having eaten half a pan of marijuana brownies beforehand, with a Jewish hippie who smelled of
unwashed beard.
The other story takes place thirty years later as Ferriss returns to St Louis from her home on the East Coast to track down some of ACTION’s principal activists as well as key figures in the Veiled Prophet Society. Over the course of this engaging story, Ferriss undergoes her own unveiling, as she discusses and comes to terms with her family; the past, present, and future of St Louis; and the cultural politics that frame young women’: entrance into society.

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
University of Missouri Press
Country
United States
Date
6 October 2005
Pages
168
ISBN
9780826216014