1 00:00:04,120 --> 00:00:07,480 Speaker 1: Welcome to Aaron Menke's Cabinet of Curiosities, a production of 2 00:00:07,520 --> 00:00:14,480 Speaker 1: iHeartRadio and Grimm and Mild. Our world is full of 3 00:00:14,520 --> 00:00:18,480 Speaker 1: the unexplainable, and if history is an open book, all 4 00:00:18,520 --> 00:00:22,639 Speaker 1: of these amazing tales right there on display, just waiting 5 00:00:22,680 --> 00:00:28,880 Speaker 1: for us to explore. Welcome to the Cabinet of Curiosities. 6 00:00:36,680 --> 00:00:39,879 Speaker 1: Clara Gazoul was a person of many interests. She was 7 00:00:39,880 --> 00:00:42,920 Speaker 1: born in September of eighteen oh three in France. Although 8 00:00:42,960 --> 00:00:46,040 Speaker 1: she was of Spanish descent, her parents were both painters, 9 00:00:46,080 --> 00:00:48,239 Speaker 1: and her father was also a prominent teacher at a 10 00:00:48,280 --> 00:00:52,160 Speaker 1: local polytechnic school until he became secretary of the Academy 11 00:00:52,159 --> 00:00:56,120 Speaker 1: of Painting and Sculpture. The family was successful and Clara 12 00:00:56,200 --> 00:00:59,360 Speaker 1: grew up quite comfortable. When she wasn't learning new languages 13 00:00:59,440 --> 00:01:03,760 Speaker 1: or travel in England, she was digging into more eccentric topics, 14 00:01:03,800 --> 00:01:08,240 Speaker 1: such as magic. Clara eventually graduated from secondary school, having 15 00:01:08,319 --> 00:01:12,080 Speaker 1: focused mostly on classical languages, but once she entered university 16 00:01:12,319 --> 00:01:15,240 Speaker 1: she pivoted to law. Her goal was to secure a 17 00:01:15,240 --> 00:01:18,920 Speaker 1: position within the royal administration, and in eighteen twenty two 18 00:01:18,959 --> 00:01:22,039 Speaker 1: she got one step closer by passing her exams and 19 00:01:22,120 --> 00:01:24,760 Speaker 1: earning her law license, but there was still one thing 20 00:01:24,840 --> 00:01:27,080 Speaker 1: bothering her at the back of her mind. It was 21 00:01:27,120 --> 00:01:31,800 Speaker 1: her other passion, literature. Clara loved to read both local 22 00:01:31,880 --> 00:01:34,080 Speaker 1: and foreign authors, and even went as far as to 23 00:01:34,120 --> 00:01:37,720 Speaker 1: begin translating certain works into her native tongue. Pretty soon, 24 00:01:37,880 --> 00:01:41,800 Speaker 1: Clara found herself inside prominent literary circles, rubbing elbows with 25 00:01:41,840 --> 00:01:46,080 Speaker 1: the likes of writer and politician Chateaubriand and Henrie Bail 26 00:01:46,240 --> 00:01:49,840 Speaker 1: otherwise known as Stendahl. By eighteen twenty three, she moved 27 00:01:49,880 --> 00:01:52,960 Speaker 1: on from translating other people's work to writing her own. 28 00:01:53,320 --> 00:01:56,880 Speaker 1: Her first pieces were plays, including a political show titled 29 00:01:56,920 --> 00:02:01,280 Speaker 1: Cromwell and a six part compendium called teyech de Clara gazoul. 30 00:02:01,560 --> 00:02:03,880 Speaker 1: It was a biding satire on the state of the 31 00:02:03,960 --> 00:02:07,160 Speaker 1: current socio political climate in the country, and became a 32 00:02:07,280 --> 00:02:10,000 Speaker 1: hit among her fellow writers, so much so that they 33 00:02:10,000 --> 00:02:13,680 Speaker 1: sang its praises publicly. Clara was now a big deal 34 00:02:13,720 --> 00:02:16,640 Speaker 1: in the literary world and continued to publish all kinds 35 00:02:16,639 --> 00:02:20,400 Speaker 1: of pieces, including short stories, novels, and novellas, many of 36 00:02:20,440 --> 00:02:23,800 Speaker 1: which were based on her extensive travels throughout Europe. One 37 00:02:23,840 --> 00:02:27,079 Speaker 1: of these stories involved a new character, a young Romani 38 00:02:27,120 --> 00:02:30,440 Speaker 1: woman who charms a Spanish cavalry officer after robbing him. 39 00:02:30,760 --> 00:02:32,440 Speaker 1: This tale had been told to her one of her 40 00:02:32,520 --> 00:02:35,480 Speaker 1: visits with the Countess of Montejo in Spain. In the 41 00:02:35,520 --> 00:02:38,520 Speaker 1: original story, the woman is not Romani, but Clara had 42 00:02:38,520 --> 00:02:41,240 Speaker 1: been studying their language in culture while in Spain and 43 00:02:41,280 --> 00:02:44,640 Speaker 1: felt the change made it more interesting. Around the same time, 44 00:02:44,720 --> 00:02:47,400 Speaker 1: she took a series of jobs within the government, much 45 00:02:47,520 --> 00:02:50,840 Speaker 1: like her literary contemporaries. This eventually led her to the 46 00:02:50,880 --> 00:02:55,200 Speaker 1: appointment as Inspector General of Historical Monuments in eighteen thirty three, 47 00:02:55,560 --> 00:02:59,119 Speaker 1: a position she held for over twenty years. But even 48 00:02:59,160 --> 00:03:02,440 Speaker 1: though she was it work preserving and restoring old structures 49 00:03:02,440 --> 00:03:06,480 Speaker 1: of historical importance, she never stopped writing. During this period, 50 00:03:06,560 --> 00:03:09,839 Speaker 1: Clara wrote three of her best known novellas, Lavenus Deal 51 00:03:10,120 --> 00:03:13,600 Speaker 1: in eighteen thirty seven, Columbia in eighteen forty, and a 52 00:03:13,639 --> 00:03:17,160 Speaker 1: third story based on the character first introduced years earlier, 53 00:03:17,400 --> 00:03:20,560 Speaker 1: the one about the Spanish soldier and Romani woman whose 54 00:03:20,639 --> 00:03:24,760 Speaker 1: name was Carmen now Carmen, was not a huge success 55 00:03:24,840 --> 00:03:28,200 Speaker 1: upon its publication, not when compared with the other two novellas. 56 00:03:28,360 --> 00:03:31,280 Speaker 1: In fact, Clara didn't get to experience its success at all, 57 00:03:31,480 --> 00:03:34,280 Speaker 1: as she died several years before it found a new audience. 58 00:03:34,680 --> 00:03:37,520 Speaker 1: But the world wouldn't know Clara Gazool, at least not 59 00:03:37,680 --> 00:03:41,200 Speaker 1: as the story's true author. You see, Clara, a Spanish actress, 60 00:03:41,520 --> 00:03:45,040 Speaker 1: was actually the main character of Tiatra de Clara Gazool, 61 00:03:45,320 --> 00:03:47,600 Speaker 1: the six part play that had put its real author 62 00:03:47,680 --> 00:03:50,280 Speaker 1: on the map. In reality, it had been written by 63 00:03:50,320 --> 00:03:53,920 Speaker 1: a french Man named Prosper Marrimi, who had been born 64 00:03:54,000 --> 00:03:57,080 Speaker 1: to artist parents, had learned a number of languages in school, 65 00:03:57,320 --> 00:04:00,000 Speaker 1: and had worked as France's Inspector General of his life 66 00:04:00,000 --> 00:04:03,680 Speaker 1: historical monuments for over two decades. In a way, Marrimi 67 00:04:03,800 --> 00:04:06,560 Speaker 1: had perpetuated a kind of hoax on the public by 68 00:04:06,560 --> 00:04:10,760 Speaker 1: listing the character Clara as the playwright. His novella Carmen 69 00:04:10,800 --> 00:04:14,400 Speaker 1: wouldn't gain popularity until eighteen seventy five, when a new 70 00:04:14,400 --> 00:04:18,240 Speaker 1: opera by a French composer, George Bizet debuted based on 71 00:04:18,360 --> 00:04:22,480 Speaker 1: Marrami's work. Even today, Bezay's Carmen tends to overshadow its 72 00:04:22,480 --> 00:04:26,320 Speaker 1: source material, But without Marram's captivating story, we wouldn't have 73 00:04:26,360 --> 00:04:30,159 Speaker 1: one of the greatest operas ever composed. One aspect of 74 00:04:30,200 --> 00:04:33,960 Speaker 1: the book, however, still leaves some readers perplexed. Today. The 75 00:04:34,040 --> 00:04:37,440 Speaker 1: original edition of the story features an illustration of the 76 00:04:37,480 --> 00:04:41,560 Speaker 1: purported author, Clara Gazoul, opposite the title page. But if 77 00:04:41,600 --> 00:04:45,560 Speaker 1: Prosper Marrami a man wrote the book, then whose picture 78 00:04:45,800 --> 00:04:50,400 Speaker 1: is that? As it turns out, it's Prosper Marrimi dressed 79 00:04:51,040 --> 00:05:08,480 Speaker 1: in drag. There's some of our favorite movies. One's about 80 00:05:08,560 --> 00:05:12,960 Speaker 1: daring criminals, elaborate schemes, and of course, mind bending heists. 81 00:05:13,279 --> 00:05:15,680 Speaker 1: These are films where every character is a piece on 82 00:05:15,720 --> 00:05:19,159 Speaker 1: a chessboard, moving across the spaces in a distinct and 83 00:05:19,279 --> 00:05:22,520 Speaker 1: predetermined way in order to keep hidden from the watchful 84 00:05:22,560 --> 00:05:26,040 Speaker 1: gaze of security cameras, and of course, to get into 85 00:05:26,080 --> 00:05:29,599 Speaker 1: the vault. Maybe it's money thereafter, like in Ocean's Eleven, 86 00:05:29,960 --> 00:05:32,600 Speaker 1: or perhaps they're after fine art, like in the Thomas 87 00:05:32,600 --> 00:05:35,600 Speaker 1: Crown Affair. But one woman many years ago had a 88 00:05:35,600 --> 00:05:38,440 Speaker 1: hankering for diamonds, and she didn't have a team of 89 00:05:38,480 --> 00:05:41,120 Speaker 1: trained experts to help her either. It was just her 90 00:05:41,600 --> 00:05:45,359 Speaker 1: and it wasn't a movie. Doris Payne, a black woman 91 00:05:45,400 --> 00:05:48,640 Speaker 1: from slab Fork, West Virginia, was born a coal miner's 92 00:05:48,720 --> 00:05:52,200 Speaker 1: daughter in nineteen thirty. Hers was a life fraught was struggle, 93 00:05:52,360 --> 00:05:54,800 Speaker 1: at least when it came to standing out. After all, 94 00:05:54,800 --> 00:05:57,080 Speaker 1: it's hard to be noticed when your four brothers and 95 00:05:57,160 --> 00:06:00,800 Speaker 1: one sister are hogging all the attention. But not to worry, 96 00:06:01,040 --> 00:06:04,279 Speaker 1: Doris eventually found a way to simultaneously stand apart from 97 00:06:04,279 --> 00:06:08,000 Speaker 1: the crowd and blend in unnoticed. You see, she never 98 00:06:08,040 --> 00:06:11,040 Speaker 1: really had a job, yet she traveled the globe, heading 99 00:06:11,120 --> 00:06:14,440 Speaker 1: to countless exotic locations, and she managed to make a 100 00:06:14,520 --> 00:06:17,760 Speaker 1: name for herself. You see, she became a thief, a 101 00:06:17,839 --> 00:06:20,920 Speaker 1: jewel thief, to be exact. And it all started when 102 00:06:20,920 --> 00:06:23,440 Speaker 1: she was a child. She'd gone into a store where 103 00:06:23,440 --> 00:06:25,359 Speaker 1: the owner was kind enough to let her try on 104 00:06:25,480 --> 00:06:27,560 Speaker 1: a gold watch while he went off to help a 105 00:06:27,600 --> 00:06:30,440 Speaker 1: white customer who had entered the store. Doris left with 106 00:06:30,520 --> 00:06:33,400 Speaker 1: the timepiece, but she knew right from wrong and later 107 00:06:33,480 --> 00:06:37,040 Speaker 1: came back to return what she had taken. Over time, 108 00:06:37,120 --> 00:06:40,400 Speaker 1: she developed a kind of charm to help ease people's suspicions, 109 00:06:40,680 --> 00:06:44,240 Speaker 1: aided by her expensive taste in fashion. And that's the key. 110 00:06:44,640 --> 00:06:47,400 Speaker 1: She didn't look like a jewel thief. She looked like 111 00:06:47,600 --> 00:06:51,440 Speaker 1: a socialite in the beginning, she would only steal temporarily 112 00:06:51,720 --> 00:06:54,320 Speaker 1: putting something in her purse and then handing it back 113 00:06:54,400 --> 00:06:57,719 Speaker 1: like a fisherman tossing back his catch. As she evolved 114 00:06:57,720 --> 00:06:59,640 Speaker 1: her Cohn, she would walk up to the counter of 115 00:06:59,640 --> 00:07:02,960 Speaker 1: a jewel or department store with a convoluted backstory in 116 00:07:03,000 --> 00:07:06,039 Speaker 1: her pocket, something about an inheritance or money she'd gotten 117 00:07:06,080 --> 00:07:09,760 Speaker 1: from an insurance company, and as she distracted the salesperson 118 00:07:09,840 --> 00:07:12,200 Speaker 1: with her tale of loss, she would sneak a ring 119 00:07:12,400 --> 00:07:15,320 Speaker 1: or a necklace into her pocketbook and then slip out 120 00:07:15,360 --> 00:07:18,280 Speaker 1: the shop. By the time the clerk realized what had happened, 121 00:07:18,360 --> 00:07:22,080 Speaker 1: they would be too late she was gone. Eventually, her 122 00:07:22,200 --> 00:07:25,600 Speaker 1: United States excursions grew tiresome, so Doris decided to try 123 00:07:25,640 --> 00:07:28,880 Speaker 1: her luck overseas. On her first trip abroad, she traveled 124 00:07:28,880 --> 00:07:31,600 Speaker 1: to London, followed by a quick jaunt over to Paris 125 00:07:31,640 --> 00:07:35,000 Speaker 1: and then finally Rome. She credited her knowledge of Europe 126 00:07:35,000 --> 00:07:38,960 Speaker 1: to her public school education and extensive study of world maps, 127 00:07:39,200 --> 00:07:42,840 Speaker 1: but it was her informal education, specifically of gemstones and 128 00:07:42,880 --> 00:07:45,600 Speaker 1: their quality, that helped her gain an upper edge in 129 00:07:45,680 --> 00:07:49,480 Speaker 1: her exploits. Doris also knew to travel with a variety 130 00:07:49,480 --> 00:07:53,040 Speaker 1: of fake names and social security numbers to throw salespeople 131 00:07:53,120 --> 00:07:57,120 Speaker 1: and investigators off her trail. In nineteen fifty three, she 132 00:07:57,320 --> 00:07:59,880 Speaker 1: left a jewelry store in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, with a to 133 00:08:00,000 --> 00:08:03,280 Speaker 1: twenty two thousand dollars diamond, and in the nineteen seventies 134 00:08:03,280 --> 00:08:06,240 Speaker 1: in Monte Carlo, she swiped a ten carrot diamond ring 135 00:08:06,440 --> 00:08:10,360 Speaker 1: worth half a million dollars. Honestly, Doris never met a 136 00:08:10,400 --> 00:08:12,800 Speaker 1: band of gold or a diamond that she didn't like. 137 00:08:13,400 --> 00:08:16,440 Speaker 1: But she didn't always get away clean. Sometimes she found 138 00:08:16,480 --> 00:08:19,680 Speaker 1: herself being carted away in handcuffs, and once spent five 139 00:08:19,760 --> 00:08:22,680 Speaker 1: years in prison for getting nabbed in Colorado. Her wrap 140 00:08:22,720 --> 00:08:26,400 Speaker 1: sheet was at least twenty pages long and kept growing. 141 00:08:27,280 --> 00:08:30,200 Speaker 1: She was finally stopped for good after stealing an emerald 142 00:08:30,240 --> 00:08:34,199 Speaker 1: cut diamond ring from Macy's worth almost nine thousand dollars. 143 00:08:34,520 --> 00:08:36,760 Speaker 1: Or maybe it was after her theft of a twelve 144 00:08:36,800 --> 00:08:40,320 Speaker 1: carrot white gold ring in California. That item ran twenty 145 00:08:40,320 --> 00:08:43,000 Speaker 1: two thousand dollars. And it also could have been after 146 00:08:43,080 --> 00:08:45,920 Speaker 1: lifting a thirty three thousand dollars diamond ring from a 147 00:08:45,960 --> 00:08:49,080 Speaker 1: shop in North Carolina. You see, that's the problem. The 148 00:08:49,200 --> 00:08:52,959 Speaker 1: charges kept adding up. Doris Payne's career as a jewel 149 00:08:53,000 --> 00:08:56,560 Speaker 1: thief has spanned sixty years. She's now ninety one years 150 00:08:56,600 --> 00:09:00,600 Speaker 1: old and facing numerous criminal charges. But even she should 151 00:09:00,600 --> 00:09:04,840 Speaker 1: have retired years ago, she shows no signs of slowing down. 152 00:09:09,280 --> 00:09:12,000 Speaker 1: I hope you've enjoyed today's guided tour of the Cabinet 153 00:09:12,000 --> 00:09:15,880 Speaker 1: of Curiosities. Subscribe for free on Apple Podcasts, or learn 154 00:09:15,920 --> 00:09:20,400 Speaker 1: more about the show by visiting Curiosities podcast dot com. 155 00:09:20,520 --> 00:09:24,120 Speaker 1: This show was created by me Aaron Mankey in partnership 156 00:09:24,160 --> 00:09:27,439 Speaker 1: with how Stuff Works. I make another award winning show 157 00:09:27,559 --> 00:09:31,600 Speaker 1: called Lore, which is a podcast, book series, and television show, 158 00:09:31,880 --> 00:09:33,719 Speaker 1: and you can learn all about it over at the 159 00:09:33,920 --> 00:09:40,240 Speaker 1: Worldoflore dot com. And until next time, stay curious.