Becoming White Elk: The Jazz Age’s Greatest Impostor

When:
September 3, 2018 @ 7:30 pm – 9:00 pm
2018-09-03T19:30:00+01:00
2018-09-03T21:00:00+01:00
Where:
Conway Hall
Conway Hall Ethical Society
25 Red Lion Square, London WC1R 4RL
UK
Cost:
£5

In the fall of 1917, Edgar Laplante, a real life cross between Tom Ripley and Jay Gatsby, reinvented himself as Chief White Elk: war hero, sports star, civil rights campaigner, Cherokee nation leader—and total fraud.

Edgar Laplante was a smalltime grifter, an erstwhile vaudeville performer, and an unabashed charmer. But after years of playing thankless gigs and traveling with medicine shows, he decided to undertake the most demanding and bravura performance of his life. In the fall of 1917, Laplante reinvented himself as Chief White Elk: war hero, sports star, civil rights campaigner, Cherokee nation leader—and total fraud.

Under the pretences of raising money for struggling Native American reservations, Laplante dressed in buckskins and a feathered headdress and traveled throughout the American West, narrowly escaping exposure and arrest each time he left town. When the heat became too much, he embarked upon a lucrative continent-hopping tour that attracted even more enormous crowds, his cons growing in proportion to the adulation of his audience. As he moved through Europe, he spied his biggest mark on the Riviera: a prodigiously rich Hungarian countess, who was instantly smitten with the con man.

The countess bankrolled a lavish trip through Italy that made Laplante a darling of the Mussolini regime and a worldwide celebrity, soaring to unimaginable heights on the wings of his lies. But then, at the pinnacle of his improbable success, Laplante’s overreaching threatened to destroy him…

Paul Willetts brings this previously untold story to life in all its surprising absurdity, showing us how our tremendous capacity for belief and our longstanding obsession with celebrity can make fools of us all—and proving that sometimes truth is stranger than fiction.

Paul’s biography of Laplante, King Con: The Bizarre Adventures of the Jazz Age’s Greatest Impostor, will be on sale on the night.