Alexis Carmel Alexander

Alexis in Monte Dolack’s 1977 Aber Day Poster


 

 

 

 

 

 

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On almost any given night during the 1970s, Alexis could be seen holding court at the Top Hat or the Flamingo Lounge at the Park Hotel.  Her regal bearing, ample figure and original style of dress were unmistakable and unique.  We understand she left the Missoula area some years ago, but hope she is still alive and kicking.

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3 thoughts on “Alexis Carmel Alexander

  1. Around 1979, some friends over from Couer d’Alene and I dropped in at the old Flamingo. There was Alexis leaning languidly against the bar, in a white may-as-well-have-been invisible top with a chain around her waste, performing an impromptu and sultry rendition of “I’m Just a Prisoner of Love.” My friends said one reason they loved Missoula is because of people like Alexis, people who had been “run out of” Couer d’Alene.

    I think she and her sister moved to California some years ago.

  2. Sadly, Alexis passed away this year.

    ALEXIS CARMEL ALEXANDER

    SAN FRANCISCO, Calif. – It is with deep sadness that we announce the death of Alexis Carmel Alexander in San Francisco, Calif., on Thursday, March 28, 2013.

    Alexis was born in San Francisco on Dec. 13, 1943. She was a fourth generation San Franciscan. Alexis was part of the ’60s movement in San Francisco before she moved to Missoula in the early 1970s. She brought with her the free spirit of the Haight Ashbury and the Flower Power Movement. Alexis truly lived by the 1960s mantra “Make Love, Not War.” She was a true artist in every sense of the word and created beauty in all the projects she took on, from great big colorful earrings to the fabulous cowboy shirts with sequins…Continue reading The Missoulian

  3. WESTERN MONTANA LIVES: On canvas and in person, Alexis Carmel Alexander embodied a free spirit

    The Missoulian
    Alexis Carmel Alexander
    June 24, 2013 7:00 am • By Gwen Florio(0) Comments
    A poet rhapsodized about her. Artists painted her. But Alexis Carmel Alexander found true immortality in the fierce and loving memories of her friends.

    “She was the world’s best friend for women, always,” said Kathleen Kimble, who was playing with Front Street bands at the time she met Alexander and went on to become the Missoulian’s librarian and, later, a copy editor. “She really set the bar for being a best friend” to women.

    Alexander died in March at the age of 69 in her native San Francisco. But for decades she made Missoula her home, arriving amid a 1960s-tinged wave that changed the character of the community… Continue reading at the Missoulian.com

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