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<ref name="Stripper Loses Touching Plea">{{cite news |title=Stripper Loses Touching Plea|work=Galveston Daily News (Galveston, Texas)|publisher=Southern Newspapers Inc. (Associated Press)|page=15|date=December 20, 1983}}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Tyngsboro Drive-In">{{cite news |title=Tyngsboro Drive-In Deadly Weapons ad|work=Nashua Telegraph (Nashua, New Hampshire)|publisher= |page=46|date=April 10, 1974}}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Lorain and Aut-O-Rama">{{cite news |title=Lorain Drive In Theater and Aut-O-Rama Twin Drive-In Theater ads|work=Chronicle Telegram (Elyria, Ohio)|publisher= |page=16|date=April 25, 1975}}</ref> | |||
<ref name="Athens Messenger - Double Agent 73">{{cite news |title=Double Agent 73 ad|work=The Athens Messenger (Athens, Ohio)|publisher= |page=16|date=May 28, 1975}}</ref> | |||
<!-- | <!-- | ||
Portsmouth Herald | Portsmouth, New Hampshire | Monday, August 26, 1974 | Page 23 | Portsmouth Herald | Portsmouth, New Hampshire | Monday, August 26, 1974 | Page 23 | ||
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Morgan's jealousy finds vent during the race. The horses are poised for the first jump. Morgan tugs at the saddle on Ross' horse. The horse falls on Ross and he is believed to be permanently crippled. He reuses to notify his Irish friends and the day they arrive Benny and Puss take Ross to the dock in a wheel chair... Ross insists he be strapped into the saddle in spite of his crippled condidtion. He rides and sins on Rosaleen, beating his old enemy, Morgan... --> | Morgan's jealousy finds vent during the race. The horses are poised for the first jump. Morgan tugs at the saddle on Ross' horse. The horse falls on Ross and he is believed to be permanently crippled. He reuses to notify his Irish friends and the day they arrive Benny and Puss take Ross to the dock in a wheel chair... Ross insists he be strapped into the saddle in spite of his crippled condidtion. He rides and sins on Rosaleen, beating his old enemy, Morgan... --> | ||
<!-- Syracuse Herald Journal | Syracuse, New York | Saturday, May 23, 1992 | Page 28 | <!-- Syracuse Herald Journal | Syracuse, New York | Saturday, May 23, 1992 | Page 28 | ||
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Those residents had previously objected to the showing of R-rated movies at the drive-in, he observed, questioning whether the incident might have been a deliberate slap in the face. The flyers were addressed to residents by name, not merely to "occupant," he said. | Those residents had previously objected to the showing of R-rated movies at the drive-in, he observed, questioning whether the incident might have been a deliberate slap in the face. The flyers were addressed to residents by name, not merely to "occupant," he said. | ||
LaPointe also voiced his disapproval of a near-violation of the theater's amusement license with the town. The theater had advertised a second R-rated movie to be shown with "Deadly Weapons," although the town had stipulated only one R-rated film on any bill and that it be shown last. When LaPointe learned of the R-rated twin bill, he called the owners in Boston and managed to get a PG (parental guidance) picture substituted prior to its opening Friday night. | LaPointe also voiced his disapproval of a near-violation of the theater's amusement license with the town. The theater had advertised a second R-rated movie to be shown with "Deadly Weapons," although the town had stipulated only one R-rated film on any bill and that it be shown last. When LaPointe learned of the R-rated twin bill, he called the owners in Boston and managed to get a PG (parental guidance) picture substituted prior to its opening Friday night. | ||
Stephen R. Minasian, president of Esquire Theaters of America, owner of the drive-in theater and the Esquire Twin Cinemas on West Main Road, apologized to the Council for the offensive flyers, which he assured the Council were sent out at random, not to any specific area of the town. He | Stephen R. Minasian, president of Esquire Theaters of America, owner of the drive-in theater and the Esquire Twin Cinemas on West Main Road, apologized to the Council for the offensive flyers, which he assured the Council were sent out at random, not to any specific area of the town. He agreed that they were "in poor taste." They were sent without his knowledge, he explained. He told the Council he would make sure the Newport area is omitted from future saturation advertising campaigns of this nature. | ||
agreed that they were "in poor taste." They were sent without his knowledge, he explained. He | |||
told the Council he would make sure the Newport area is omitted from future saturation advertising campaigns of this nature. | |||
Minasian explained the two R-rated movies were on the same bill, because they are playing that way in 84 theaters throughout New England. The theater can't help but play R-rated movies, he explained. "It would please me to play Walt Disney every week. 'Huckleberry Finn,' 'The Sting,' | Minasian explained the two R-rated movies were on the same bill, because they are playing that way in 84 theaters throughout New England. The theater can't help but play R-rated movies, he explained. "It would please me to play Walt Disney every week. 'Huckleberry Finn,' 'The Sting,' | ||
or 'The Great Gatsby.' But, there just aren't enough of these good pictures to go around." About 60 per cent of the movies produced today are R-rated, he observed. Council President Robert M. | or 'The Great Gatsby.' But, there just aren't enough of these good pictures to go around." About 60 per cent of the movies produced today are R-rated, he observed. Council President Robert M. Silva observed that the firm's timing in releasing the Chesty Morgan movie on Holy Week wasn't the best. "But, the Lord oversees everything," he added slyly. "I noticed you were | ||
Silva observed that the firm's timing in releasing the Chesty Morgan movie on Holy Week | |||
wasn't the best. "But, the Lord oversees everything," he added slyly. "I noticed you were | |||
fogged out two nights in a row." | fogged out two nights in a row." | ||
--> | --> | ||
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[[Image:Chesty Morgan.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Chesty Morgan striptease publicity photo.]] | [[Image:Chesty Morgan.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Chesty Morgan striptease publicity photo.]] | ||
Chesty Morgan's regular performance began with a walk | Chesty Morgan's regular performance began with a walk to the stage through the audience in which she would interact with her patrons. She would talk with members of the audience and allow them to feel and fondle her breasts, encouraging them to test that they were real.<ref name="Chesty Morgan belongs to world"/> Once on stage, she would strip to the waist.<ref name="Stripper Loses Touching Plea"/> Her stripping performances were accompanied by popular songs such as "Delilah" (1968).<ref name="Chesty Morgan belongs to world"/> She would then don a negligee.<ref name="Stripper Loses Touching Plea"/> A courtroom description of Morgan's act states that in this part of her act, she would, "occasionally [invite] a patron to come up to the edge of the stage, but not on the stage, and [permit] him or her to touch the top portion of breasts above the neckline of the negligee, or to put his or her face into the top portion of her breasts while she [shook] them in a kootchy-kootchy fashion."<ref name="Massachusetts Cases"/> | ||
During her act, Morgan employed much humor directed at her physical attributes. Her walk to the stage would sometimes include two midgets. They would march in front of Morgan, each supporting one of her mammaries.<ref name="Eric Gregg"/> Her speech while on stage included such jokes as, "You know why my feet so small? Because things don't grow in the shade, that's why."<ref name="Chesty Morgan belongs to world"/> She claimed to be opposed to Women's Liberation because, "they want to go braless and I can't do it."<ref name="Chesty was really flat"/> | During her act, Morgan employed much humor directed at her physical attributes. Her walk to the stage would sometimes include two midgets. They would march in front of Morgan, each supporting one of her mammaries.<ref name="Eric Gregg"/> Her speech while on stage included such jokes as, "You know why my feet so small? Because things don't grow in the shade, that's why."<ref name="Chesty Morgan belongs to world"/> She claimed to be opposed to Women's Liberation because, "they want to go braless and I can't do it."<ref name="Chesty was really flat"/> | ||
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On December 11, 1979, after five years of marriage, Morgan and her husband were divorced.<ref>{{cite book |title=Florida Divorce Index, 1927-2001 (Florida Department of Health: database on-line)|year=2006|accessdate=December 20, 2008|publisher=[http://www.ancestry.com/ Ancestry.com]|location=Provo, UT}}</ref> | On December 11, 1979, after five years of marriage, Morgan and her husband were divorced.<ref>{{cite book |title=Florida Divorce Index, 1927-2001 (Florida Department of Health: database on-line)|year=2006|accessdate=December 20, 2008|publisher=[http://www.ancestry.com/ Ancestry.com]|location=Provo, UT}}</ref> | ||
In October 1983, while performing in Stoughton, Massachussetts-- 15 miles south of Boston<ref name="Stripper Loses Touching Plea"/>-- Morgan again came to the attention of law enforcement officials. A policeman was in attendance during one of her performances.<ref name="Stripper Loses Touching Plea"/> Her long-time practise of allowing audience members to touch her was against the town's laws. Alex's Lounge, the establishment at which she had been performing, had their entertainment license suspended for one day and their liquor license suspended for five days due to Morgan's act.<ref name="Chesty Morgan belongs to world"/> Justice William J. Brennan denied a request to issue a temporary injunction preventing the town from taking action against the establishment was denied.<ref name="Stripper Loses Touching Plea"/><ref name="Massachusetts Cases"/> Morgan returned to perform at the lounge in December,<ref name="Stripper Loses Touching Plea"/> but did not interact with her audience in her preliminary stroll to the stage. She claimed that the ban on touching infringed on her right to freedom of expression, and filed an appeal.<ref name="Chesty Morgan belongs to world"/> The appeal was argued on September 19, 1984,<ref>{{cite book|chapter=App. 977 Chesty MORGAN et al.1 TOWN OF STOUGHTON et al.2 Appeals Court of Massachusetts, Suffolk.|year=1985|title=North eastern reporter. second series|publisher= |location= |isbn= |pages=p.139}}</ref> claiming that Morgan's performance was "protected expression." On November 2 the decision was made against Morgan and George F. Alexopoulos, the owner of Alex's Lounge.<ref name="Massachusetts Cases"/> | |||
==Film career== | ==Film career== | ||
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[[Image:Chestymorgan001.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Chesty in ''[[Double Agent 73]]'' (1974)]] | [[Image:Chestymorgan001.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Chesty in ''[[Double Agent 73]]'' (1974)]] | ||
==Calendar== | |||
in Athens Ohio, the calendars were given with a showing of ''Double Agent 73'' in May 1975.<ref name="Athens Messenger - Double Agent 73"/> | |||
Drive-in goers in Elyria, Ohio could choose from two screens showing ''Deadly Weapons'' in April 1975, one of them offering 1,000 calendars, one per car.<ref name="Lorain and Aut-O-Rama"/> | |||
The first 200 cars in Nashua, New Hampshire's Tyngsboro Drive-In's showing of ''Deadly Weapons'' got the calendar.<ref name="Tyngsboro Drive-In"/> | |||
==''Fellini's Casanova''== | ==''Fellini's Casanova''== | ||
Revision as of 16:21, 24 December 2008
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Dekkappai/Article in Progress |
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|---|---|
| Personal | |
| Also known as | Zsa Zsa Chesty Gabor[7] Zsa Zsa "Chesty" Gabborr[5] |
| Born | [[:Category:1941[16] or 1928 births|1941[16] or 1928]] Poland |
| Ethnicity | Caucasian |
| Nationality | American |
| Body | |
| Measurements | 73-32-36[18] |
| Bra/cup size | G (same as FF cup) |
| Boobs | Natural |
| Height | 5 ft 8 in (1.73 m)[5] |
| Weight | 118 lb (54 kg)[5] |
| Body type | Average |
| Hair | Blonde |
| Performances | |
| Shown | Topless |
| Databases | |
| IMDb | |
Chesty Morgan was an exotic dancer and film actress, notably in two films directed by Doris Wishman.
Background
Chesty Morgan was born Lillian Wajc[19] about 1941.[20]
Commenting on her development, Morgan said that she was "flat-chested until I was 17. I was like a boy. And then something happened."[6]
Before coming to the United States, she spent some time living and working in Israel. She later quipped that she left because she "couldn't make enough money to pay for [her] bras."[6]
Her unusual bust size gave her a mark of distinction in her career as an exotic dancer, and for her later leading roles in film, in which her bust size is a record.[21] There were problems associated with her large bust. "I have back problems," she said, "but that's not the main problem. It's when you go out you have so much audience. I always wanted to have a small bust. It's difficult to get clothes."[6]
Stripping career
Chesty Morgan was a popular live act by 1973, using variations of the names of Zsa Zsa, Chesty and Gabor.[7] She appeared at the Knight Lounge in Warren, Pennsylvania under the name Zsa Zsa "Chesty" Gabborr during the week of November 19-24, 1973. The performances were promoted as her final appearance at the lounge.[5] By 1974, she was using the name "Chesty Morgan". Though apparently coincidental, "Chesty Morgan" was the name of a minor character in director John Ford's 1926 silent film, The Shamrock Handicap, which dealt with horse racing in the U.S. and Ireland.[22]

Chesty Morgan's regular performance began with a walk to the stage through the audience in which she would interact with her patrons. She would talk with members of the audience and allow them to feel and fondle her breasts, encouraging them to test that they were real.[17] Once on stage, she would strip to the waist.[1] Her stripping performances were accompanied by popular songs such as "Delilah" (1968).[17] She would then don a negligee.[1] A courtroom description of Morgan's act states that in this part of her act, she would, "occasionally [invite] a patron to come up to the edge of the stage, but not on the stage, and [permit] him or her to touch the top portion of breasts above the neckline of the negligee, or to put his or her face into the top portion of her breasts while she [shook] them in a kootchy-kootchy fashion."[12]
During her act, Morgan employed much humor directed at her physical attributes. Her walk to the stage would sometimes include two midgets. They would march in front of Morgan, each supporting one of her mammaries.[11] Her speech while on stage included such jokes as, "You know why my feet so small? Because things don't grow in the shade, that's why."[17] She claimed to be opposed to Women's Liberation because, "they want to go braless and I can't do it."[6]
Chesty Morgan's daily wardrobe consisted of bras made by the Texas company Command Performance. A 1979 article reported that they cost $50 each.[14] On stage she wore an elaborate costume which included an ostrich plume shawl and a black, silver-sequined gown which she had purchased for over $5,000.[17]
Morgan's philosophy about her career was that she was sharing her natural endowment with her audience. "My boobs belong to the world," she said, "They're attached to my body, but they belong to the public."[17]
Marriage

When Morgan met National League umpire Dick Stello (July 20, 1934 - November 18, 1987),[23] his first words to her were, "My, my. 73 inches- why, that's over 6 feet!"[9] A talented singer who grew up with show business connections himself,[11] for some time Stello spent his winters as a nightclub MC in New York and New Jersey.[9]
They were married on March 24, 1974 in Pinellas County, Florida.[8] It was Stello's first marriage.[9] During the baseball off-season Morgan and Stello lived together in St. Petersburg, Florida.[9] Morgan worked as a real estate agent when she was not performing, explaining, "When I'm home I have to do something. I can't rely only on this," referring to her career as a stripper.[6]
Stello took a good deal of kidding from his sports colleagues after his marriage. Syracuse (New York) Herald-Journal sports editor and writer Arnie Burdick[24] described Stello's new wife as "an exotic dancer with a front that's about as imposing as the Fenway Wall", a reference to the 37 foot wall in Boston's Fenway Park, home to the Boston Red Sox baseball team. [25] Columnist Joe Falls mis-identified the groom as umpire Ed Sudol, but, noting "Chesty"'s nickname, wrote, "The bride's measurements were listed as 76-26-36, which will require no further comment."[7]
Proud of his wife's career, Morgan's husband sometimes took his sports colleagues to her performances. In his autobiography, fellow Major League Baseball umpire Eric Gregg recalled seeing one of Morgan's performances with Stello. He called the experience, "one of the strangest nights of my life." Gregg remembered Stello as "a class act", generous and a teacher to him. He wrote that seeing Morgan's show was, "a riot", but that his thoughts on the situation were, "here we were sitting with her husband. What were you supposed to say under the circumstances? Hey, nice boobs?"[11]
Another sports related figure to attend Morgan's show was Bart Starr, Jr., the son of the Green Bay Packers' head coach. In 1976, while under the Wisconsin legal drinking age, Starr and some other underage friends were enjoying alcoholic beverages before Morgan's performance. Bruce Van Dyke, a Green Bay Packer guard, happened to be at the show too and noticed the young Starr at the nightclub. Van Dyke approached Starr and said, laughing, "I won't tell if you won't."[26]
Legal battles
In connection with her occupation, Chesty Morgan had several encounters with the law. Morgan attributed these troubles to politics. While in the midst of one of these incidents, she told a newspaper reporter, "The reason I get in trouble, you know, is because of these people that run for politics. These politicians don't like the hoochy-koochy."[17]
In early 1975, while performing at the 79th Street Burlesque in Miami, Morgan was arrested with two other strippers. Morgan was charged with "exposing parts of her body in a manner intended to arouse the sexual desire of onlookers."[16] In mid-November 1975, Morgan was performing at a nightclub in Boston. She was photographed with her husband before one of the shows, and the picture ran in the Syracuse, New York Herald-Journal.[27]

When Morgan performed at the Winnepeg Playhouse in Winnepeg, Manitoba, Canada from October 26th to October 30, 1979, The Manitoban, the campus newspaper for The University of Manitoba, refused to carry the advertisement for Morgan's appearance, claiming that it was sexist.[14] Morgan held a press conference on October 25, 1979, the day before her performances, in which she answered questions from representatives of print media, radio and television.[6]
On December 11, 1979, after five years of marriage, Morgan and her husband were divorced.[28]
In October 1983, while performing in Stoughton, Massachussetts-- 15 miles south of Boston[1]-- Morgan again came to the attention of law enforcement officials. A policeman was in attendance during one of her performances.[1] Her long-time practise of allowing audience members to touch her was against the town's laws. Alex's Lounge, the establishment at which she had been performing, had their entertainment license suspended for one day and their liquor license suspended for five days due to Morgan's act.[17] Justice William J. Brennan denied a request to issue a temporary injunction preventing the town from taking action against the establishment was denied.[1][12] Morgan returned to perform at the lounge in December,[1] but did not interact with her audience in her preliminary stroll to the stage. She claimed that the ban on touching infringed on her right to freedom of expression, and filed an appeal.[17] The appeal was argued on September 19, 1984,[29] claiming that Morgan's performance was "protected expression." On November 2 the decision was made against Morgan and George F. Alexopoulos, the owner of Alex's Lounge.[12]
Film career
Though Morgan's stripping career was quite successful, her film performances are often the subject of ridicule from critics. Due to the transient nature of live performance, it is her film roles for which she is best remembered.
Deadly Weapons

A contemporary Boston reviewer criticized Morgan's "lethargic" performance and characterized her as "pretty close to a zombie." The review continued, "It's obvious that Chesty... can't act," and summarized her performance techniques as, "she makes contortions with her mouth, she talks in 3 word sentences, and she fondles herself a lot."
The reviewer was also critical of Morgan's physical appearance, writing, "The skin on her chest was translucent and she had a bulging vein on the inside of her left breast. Her derriere was flabby and saggy." Nor did the reviewer find the costumes used in the film to his approval. "All she wore was frilly scoop neck shirts and frilly v-neck shirts that did not enhance the lure of her chest."
The review ended by noting that Morgan's genitalia are never exposed in the film, "a fact that has led to some nasty rumors that, perhaps. Chesty is really a man... I mean, you gotta have a strong back to carry around all that excess weight!"[15]
Double Agent 73

Calendar
in Athens Ohio, the calendars were given with a showing of Double Agent 73 in May 1975.[4]
Drive-in goers in Elyria, Ohio could choose from two screens showing Deadly Weapons in April 1975, one of them offering 1,000 calendars, one per car.[3]
The first 200 cars in Nashua, New Hampshire's Tyngsboro Drive-In's showing of Deadly Weapons got the calendar.[2]
Fellini's Casanova

The celebrated Italian director Federico Fellini and his wife were in New York in late August 1974 in conjunction with the U.S. release of his most recent film, Amarcord (1973). During the visit, Fellini became aware of Chesty Morgan and her prodigious physique, and decided to include her in his next film, Fellini's Casanova.[10] Morgan's role was that of Barbarina, a maid. Morgan described the role simply as "a woman with big boobs."[6] Her scene with Donald Sutherland was filmed, and can be seen in an Italian documentary on the film.[30] During the cutting of the film, however, Morgan's entire scene was removed.[31]
Legacy
Memorabilia related to Chesty Morgan is preserved at Exotic World Burlesque Museum & Striptease Hall of Fame in Helendale, California, under the supervision of Dixie Evans.[32]
Filmography
| Title | Released | Company | Director | Starring | Notes | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deadly Weapons | April 1974 | Juri Productions Hallmark Releasing Corp. |
Doris Wishman | Chesty Morgan | ||
| Double Agent 73 | 1974 | Juri Productions International Film Distributors Tigon Film Distributors |
Doris Wishman | Chesty Morgan | ||
| Fellini's Casanova | 1976 | Produzioni Europee Associati Titanus Distribuzione Universal Pictures |
Federico Fellini | Donald Sutherland | Chesty Morgan's scenes deleted | |
| Third Hand | 1981 |
Magazine appearances
- The Best of Score (1993), "The Legend of Chesty Morgan", p. 38-39.[33]
- Celebrity Sleuth (1997, vol. 11 #1), p.61.[33]
- Fling (July 1979), "Chesty Morgan: Life on Top", pp.48-51.[33]
- Gent (December 1974)
- Gent (May 1980), p.38-43. "Chesty Morgan and Her Magnificent Bazooms" (interview).[33]
- Hustler (September 1979), "Udder Nonsense", p.15.[33]
- Playboy (December 1976), p. 128. (image from Fellini's Casanova)[33]
- Scoop (Denmark) (1982, issue #8), "Chesty Morgan - bystflickornas Muhammad Ali!" p. 38-39.[33]
- Score (August 1992)
- Score Holiday (1999)
- Voluptuous (August 1998)
External links
- Chesty Morgan Worship Page archived from the original on February 2, 2008
- The Chesty Morgan Shrine archived from [pages.ripco.net/~brian/chesty_morgan.html the original] on June 21, 2000
- Chesty Morgan at The Big Breast Archive
- Chesty Morgan at the Pinup Tributes site
- Retrocrush
- NNDB Profile/Bio
- Rotten Tomatoes Profile
- Chesty Morgan Films Descriptions
- Vintage Boob
- Chesty Morgan In Fellini Casanova Videos. www.truveo.com/. Retrieved on December 21, 2008.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.4 1.5 1.6 "Stripper Loses Touching Plea", Galveston Daily News (Galveston, Texas), Southern Newspapers Inc. (Associated Press), December 20, 1983, p. 15.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 "Tyngsboro Drive-In Deadly Weapons ad", Nashua Telegraph (Nashua, New Hampshire), April 10, 1974, p. 46.
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 "Lorain Drive In Theater and Aut-O-Rama Twin Drive-In Theater ads", Chronicle Telegram (Elyria, Ohio), April 25, 1975, p. 16.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 "Double Agent 73 ad", The Athens Messenger (Athens, Ohio), May 28, 1975, p. 16.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 "Now Appearing; Knight Lounge", Warren Times Observer (Warren, Pennsylvania), November 19, 1973, p. B-16.
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 6.3 6.4 6.5 6.6 6.7 Kamin, Hope. "Chesty was really flat at 17; Now her 73-in bust draws the crowds", Winnipeg Free Press (Winnipeg, Manitoba), October 26, 1979, p. 36.
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 7.2 7.3 Falls, Joe. "Joe Falls Column: Ding Dong! It's Montreal Ace", Salt Lake Tribune (Salt Lake City, Utah), April 21, 1974, p. 72.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 8.2 (2006) Florida Marriage Collection, 1822-1875 and 1927-2001 (Florida Department of Health: database on-line). Provo, UT: Ancestry.com.
- ↑ 9.0 9.1 9.2 9.3 9.4 Herskowitz, Mickey. "Hot Line", Chronicle Telegram (Elyria, Ohio), October 05, 1975, p. C-7.
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Baxter, John (1994). Fellini: The Biography. New York: St. Martin's Press, pp.174-175. ISBN 0-312-11273-4.
- ↑ 11.0 11.1 11.2 11.3 Gregg, Eric (1985). "My Colleagues", Working the Plate; The Eric Gregg Story, pp.174-175.
- ↑ 12.0 12.1 12.2 12.3 CHESTY MORGAN & others vs. TOWN OF STOUGHTON & others. 18 Mass. App. Ct. 977. Massachusetts Cases (November 2, 1984). Retrieved on December 20, 2008.
- ↑ Le jazz acidique. www.worldcat.org. Retrieved on December 20, 2008.
- ↑ 14.0 14.1 14.2 14.3 Cansino, Barbara. "Phoning the funnies; Trivia", Winnipeg Free Press (Winnipeg, Manitoba), October 25, 1979, p. 45.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 Half-Elf. "Hefty Cleavage Does More Than Fill Custom-Made Bra", The Mass Media (Boston, Massachussetts), April 25, 1974, p. 12.
- ↑ 16.0 16.1 16.2 16.3 "Chesty", The Independent (Long Beach, California), February 6, 1975, p. 2.
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 17.2 17.3 17.4 17.5 17.6 17.7 17.8 "Chesty Morgan Belongs to World", The Paris News (Paris, Texas), (Associated Press), December 28, 1983, p. 65.
- ↑ "Chesty Morgan is Coming Live on Stage: Playhouse Theatre ad", Winnipeg Free Press (Winnipeg, Manitoba), October 17, 1979, p. 43.
- ↑ Morgan's original name is often given as Lillian Wilczowski. However marriage records show that her name at the time of her marriage to Dick Stello in 1974 was Wilczowski, but that her maiden name was Wajc.
- ↑ Chesty Morgan is often reported to have been born in 1928, but according to a news report-- "Chesty", The Independent (Long Beach, California), February 6, 1975-- she was 34 years of age in February 1975, making her birth to be about 1941.
- ↑ Robertson, Patrick (1988). Guinness Movie Facts & Feats. New York: Guinness Books. ISBN 0-851-12899-8.
- ↑ Gallagher, Tag (1986). John Ford; The Man and His Films. University of California Press. ISBN 0520050975.
- ↑ (2006) Florida Death Index, 1877-1998 (Florida Department of Health: database on-line). Provo, UT: Ancestry.com.
- ↑ Arnie Burdick. www.syracusehalloffame.com. Retrieved on December 22, 2008.
- ↑ Burdick, Arnie. "Hot Line", Syracuse Herald-Journal (Syracuse, New York), October 23, 1975, p. 43.
- ↑ Claerbaut, David (2004). Bart Starr: When Leadership Mattered. Taylor Trade Publications. ISBN 1589791177.
- ↑ "Her Name Fits", Syracuse Herald-Journal (Syracuse, New York), November 13, 1975, p. 52.
- ↑ (2006) Florida Divorce Index, 1927-2001 (Florida Department of Health: database on-line). Provo, UT: Ancestry.com.
- ↑ (1985) "App. 977 Chesty MORGAN et al.1 TOWN OF STOUGHTON et al.2 Appeals Court of Massachusetts, Suffolk.", North eastern reporter. second series, p.139.
- ↑ Chesty Morgan In Fellini Casanova Videos. www.truveo.com/. Retrieved on December 21, 2008.
- ↑ Baxter (1994), p.313.
- ↑ Bishop, Greg; Joe Oesterle, Mike Marinacci, Mark Moran and Mark Sceurman (1982). "The Exotic World of Dixie Lee Evans", Weird California: Your Travel Guide to California's Local Legends and Best Kept Secrets. New York: Sterling Publishing Company, p.155. ISBN 1402733844.
- ↑ 33.0 33.1 33.2 33.3 33.4 33.5 33.6 Publicity for Chesty Morgan. Internet Movie Database. Retrieved on December 19, 2008. (Google translation)
[[Category:B movie actresses]] [[Category:Exotic dancers]] [[Category:Pin-up models]] [[Category:Score models]]