Recalling Darcelle

Portland icon Walter Cole, who performed as Darcelle XV, passed away last week at the age of 92. Six years ago, Sue Stringer profiled our longtime neighbor in Eliot News feature Just Call Me Darcelle, and we are reposting from that article today.


“Just call me Darcelle,” says the new Guinness Book of World Records holder as we get started with our interview. Darcelle, born Walter Cole, has brought fame to our Eliot neighborhood and the city of Portland in the form of a world record for being the world’s oldest, still performing Drag Queen. However, before he was Darcelle XV, Cole was an entrepreneur. His business ventures survived urban renewal multiple times in rapidly changing city.

If you haven’t been to the show at Darcelle XV Showcase it should be on your list of things to do in Portland especially after learning about the evolution of the business and the story behind the couple that created it . On Sunday, November 13 I attended a birthday bash at the showcase to celebrate Darcelle’s 86th birthday and it was quite an entertaining and uplifting evening. As the drag queens lip synced and danced, I witnessed what an impact Darcelle has had on her community! Equally enjoyable was the time I was able to spend interviewing Walter Cole and Roxy LeRoy. We talked about their lives, the many changes in Portland over the last 86 years, and the creation of Darcelle XV , the showcase venue and the drag show.

Walter Cole was born in November 1930 in Linnton, Oregon, a little mill town north of St John’s. Linnton was inhabited by Italians who owned many of the businesses in town and also many Czechoslovakians who worked at the three sawmills. Cole’s father worked at a sawmill and made about a dollar a day. Some things don’t change, like Highway 30, which was the only paved street in Linnton and still runs from Portland to Astoria, or Linnton Feed and Grain, which is still in the original building today. However many things in the Portland area have changed drastically.

Cole enjoyed life in the late nineteen thirties and forties. He remembers taking the streetcar to Portland with his mother to get pork noodles and to visit the almost dozen movie theaters on Broadway, Stark, and Park. One theater would play only Westerns while another would play only newsreels. Ironically, their favorite place to get pork noodles was the Mandarin Café, which is right across the street from where Darcelle XV Showcase is today. The Café’s sign is still on the building.

Cole didn’t always have it easy, however. He went to Linnton Elementary School and was bullied as a kid since he was different. He was called sissy boy and four eyes which, he says, “was not very pleasant .” There was not really a word at that time for what we now call gay. “Back then gay meant happy,” says Cole. Kids from Linnton had a choice of Roosevelt or Lincoln high school. He chose Lincoln because it was only one streetcar stop to get there. Also, he didn’t like most of the kids that he knew from Linnton who were going to go to Roosevelt. He worked hard as a page at the Multnomah Athletic Club, along with several other jobs. After graduating from Lincoln High School he married his high school sweetheart from Linnton, Jeanette Rossini. They married after high school because, as Cole said, “that’s what they did back then. You stayed in your family home until you got married. You either got married or went to college and, since we didn’t have 2 nickels to rub together, we got married.” After getting married in May 1951, Cole joined the Army and by September he was in boot camp and off to Italy. The Korean conflict was going on and he was stationed in Livorno, Italy at the army headquarters.

After returning from Italy he went back to work for Fred Meyer and then they had two children – a son in 1955 and a daughter in 1958. Working in management, he handed checks to clerks that were for more than he was making and thought, “I don’t want to do this and work for someone else.” So he took his $5000 he had in savings and bought a café, Caffe Espresso Coffee House, which had the first espresso machine north of San Francisco. It was located on SW 12th and Harrison in Portland. He had never run a business by himself before. Cole says, “I asked my uncle, who was a CPA, if I should do this and he said, ‘Well, it sounds simple to me. You buy a pound of coffee, you make it and you sell it. Then you can buy another pound the next day’ and trust me that was about the way it was. We had entertainment–a jazz band which was a one man jump band with washboard, harmonica, and guitar. We passed the hat for him. It was a wonderful beginning for me because I was just a little crew cut boy from the army and southeast Portland, almost Gresham.”

In 1955, after his son was born, he bought a house near Jean’s parents for $11,500. “I signed shaking. I thought I’d never see that kind of money in my life. Payments were $99 a month and that included insurance. I cleared $175 a week so there was not much left over,” says Cole.

By the late fifties, Urban renewal starts to have an impact on businesses throughout the city. Caffe Espresso’s first location was a victim of this urban renewal with notifications of 30 days to vacate and a check for $5000. So Caffe Espresso relocated to SW 3rd and Clay behind what is now the Keller [Auditorium]. In addition to the coffee house they added a basement after hours jazz club, Studio A, and famous jazz musicians like Buddy Rich and Cal Tjader would come by after their concerts and after the bars closed and jam all night. Unfortunately, urban renewal took that too.

To make some extra money, Cole had opened an ice cream shop on SW 12th and Montgomery called Café Trieste. He hired a manager but when urban renewal closed Caffe Espresso, Cole laid off the manager and started working at the ice cream shop. For the third time, urban renewal struck. Café Trieste closed and Cole bought the Dimas tavern at NW 3rd and Davis right in the middle of skid row. “Trust me, it wasn’t Old Town then, it was skid row… winos and you name it,” Cole says.

Bill Naito, businessman and developer, owned the building so Cole leased the space as well as the space next door both for $200 a month. The idea was to open a gay bar but no one would come north of Burnside so Cole hired a lesbian friend who convinced her friends to come to the tavern. Cole explained that the show was originally meant to distract the customers and keep them from fighting. Live performances were only allowed in night clubs at the time, but the tavern was able to host this show because it was technically lip syncing. The police didn’t know what to do with these lip syncing acts so they pretty much left Cole and his drag queens alone. Only once were they written a ticket for having a live performance but by the time the court date came around the law had changed so the ticket was dismissed.

In 1973, Cole was elected the Empress of Portland for the Imperial Sovereign Rose Court of Oregon which raises tens of thousands of dollars every year for charities. Cole was the 15th Empress and now they have 56, so with his drag queen name being Darcelle coupled with the year of the Empress title they changed the name of the tavern to Darcelle XV. The club continued its successful run and, as of September, has been operating nonstop for 49 years.

In addition to the Old Town area of Portland where Darcelle XV Showcase lies, the Eliot neighborhood has played a big part in Cole’s life too. In 1969, Walter met Roc Neuhardt, aka Roxy LeRoy, when he was a choreographer for the Hoyt Hotel and subsequently asked him to choreograph the Darcelle XV Showcase shows. That was 47 years ago and Roxy still choreographs the shows today.

Cole and Neuhardt bought their Victorian house in Eliot on NE Rodney and Thompson in 1976 for $45,000. A lot has changed in the neighborhood but they both say that back in the seventies there were more African-American families who owned the homes while now there are more renters of all ages, economic status, and races. Neuhardt remembers, “When we were first here there were several crack houses down the street and cars coming and going all day long. We fell in love with this house and didn’t care about the neighborhood.”

Cole explained that “at that point there were not a lot of rentals [and] more home ownership. It was very neighborly,” adding, “it was more neighborly than now.” However, they love the neighborhood and have met so many nice people in the years they have lived here. They were never bothered for being gay and say that there are now quite a few gay families living in the blocks surrounding their house. They also own a couple of other houses on the block, so they have a vested interest in staying connected with the neighborhood. They think that Eliot is a great neighborhood to live in, given its proximity to the city and the diversity it offers.

Cole says he can’t believe that life has gone by so fast. “The Scary part of being 85 is having kids that are almost ready for social security!” He has two lovely grandchildren now. Jeanette still lives in the same house in Southeast Portland where she and Walter started out back in the 1950’s. “None of this life was planned,” says Cole, “but it has turned out pretty well and I wouldn’t change a thing .” Cole’s life is an example of what dedication, believing in yourself, and expressing yourself can result in.

Eliot News Looking for articles for Spring Edition by April 1st

The next issue of the Eliot News is going to press in a few weeks, and we are looking for your stories!

Please reach out to news@eliotneighborhood.org with any articles, pictures or advertisements you would like to make it into the next issue.

We publish this newsletter quarterly, so feel free to submit articles or other content on a rolling basis.

Thanks in advance

The Eliot News Team

Eliot Neighborhood Association Board Meeting Agenda Monday March 20 2023 at 7:00pm

DRAFT Eliot Neighborhood Association Board Meeting Agenda – Submitted by Laura Fay

Monday 3/20/2023 

7:00 – 8:30pm

Cascadia Garlington Health Center

3036 NE Martin Luther King, Jr. Blvd

Masks required, Enter from the parking lot side off of Morris St

Co-Chairs: Jimmy Wilson and Patricia Montgomery

This is an in-person meeting. To listen in, call: 206-207-1700

Meeting number (access code): 2488 322 0764

Meeting password: Community

Agenda (subject to changes):

  • Welcome and Introductions – 7:00pm
  • Agenda Additions (5 minutes)
  • Review Meeting Agreements [Link] (5 minutes)
  • Approve Minutes [Link] from February 27th meeting (5 minutes)
  • Vote to Elect Additional Board Member (1 minute)
  • Vote on Motion to Extend VOA Good Neighbor Agreement (5 minutes)
  • VOA Update on STEP (Tessa Fowler, 10 minutes)
  • Neighborhood Safety (15 minutes)
  • Kerby Offramp Project (15 minutes)
  • Neighborhood Updates
    • Eliot News (10 minutes)
    • Treasurer’s Report (5 minutes)
    • LUTC Update (10 minutes)
  • Public Comment (5 minutes)
  • Adjourn

Next meeting Monday, April 17, 2023

Connect to BEH Kindergarten event Thursday 5:30pm at the BEH library

Have a child and need to sign them up for school? Portland Public Schools has several events scheduled to see the schools in person. Most of the Eliot Neighborhood is in the Boise-Eliot/Humboldt (BEH) School area. More information on enrolling at BEH can be found here: https://www.pps.net/domain/6389

I am in year 4 of 10 with my eldest two daughters there and I could not recommend it more highly. The teachers and administration are top notch. Principal Kaveh’s goal is to have 3 classes per grade, which would require 65 kids per grade for grades 4-5 and slightly lower numbers for the lower grades. The way to achieving this is asking more neighbors to at least consider this great school and so I am asking you to take a look. Ask to take a tour or visit on one of the scheduled connect to kindergarten dates. Filling out the paperwork on the earlier side would be a great help to retain our existing teachers amid proposed cuts by the district.

There is an event this coming Thursday where you can tour the school and get a sense of what it is like this coming Thursday 3/15 at 5:30pm. You can also get a sense of the weekly highlights from the Principal’s Message page here: https://www.pps.net/boiseeliot

Principal Kaveh is happy to answer any questions can be reached at kpaksere@pps.net

March 13, 2023 LUTC Meeting Agenda

(February meeting cancelled)

Note the change of time to 6:30pm

Meeting will be online via google meet (full information at the bottom if this link doesn’t work)

(Old meeting minutes here)

Draft Agenda

  • 6:30pm: Welcome and Introductions
  • Discuss any additions to the agenda
  • Stanton Letter
  • Discussion of South Eliot & Lack of Development (Kris)
  • Permit discussions:
    • (none to discuss yet)
  • Parking committee update (Allan)
  • Fremont Bridgehead Reclamation Update (Allan)
  • Public Comment
    • Eliot News is looking for articles
  • Adjourn

Future Topics:

  • Emanuel Hospital Annual contact
  • April?: PBOT to discuss NE 7th Ave traffic

Eliot LUTC recurring meeting
Monday, January 9, 2023 · 6:30 – 8pm
Google Meet joining info
Video call link: https://meet.google.com/sie-kbrb-fpc
Or dial: ‪(US) +1 413-438-2335‬ PIN: ‪285 484 290‬#
More phone numbers: https://tel.meet/sie-kbrb-fpc?pin=5302750939203