The original hourglass: The model who changed the standards of beauty and power

With a name like Tempest Storm, fireworks were inevitable. Fiery red hair, commanding eyes, and unstoppable ambition turned a small-town runaway into one of burlesque’s brightest stars.

Born Annie Blanche Banks on Leap Day, 1928, in Eastman, Georgia, she escaped poverty and abuse by running away at fourteen. After two brief teenage marriages, she left for Hollywood, chasing dreams far bigger than her hometown.

A casting agent offered her two choices: Sunny Day or Tempest Storm. She chose lightning over sunshine. While working as a cocktail waitress, a customer asked if she did striptease. Curious, she tried—and discovered she could captivate a room with just a glance and a slow turn.

By the late 1940s, she was performing; by the mid-1950s, she was a headliner. Her style was elegant and hypnotic—more tease than strip, all artistry. Lloyd’s of London insured her curves for $1 million, and she reportedly earned $100,000 a year. The press dubbed her “Tempest in a D-Cup,” and she starred in cult classics like Teaserama and Buxom Beautease with Bettie Page.

Despite her daring image, she lived with discipline: no smoking, no alcohol stronger than 7-Up, and daily saunas. She refused plastic surgery, proud of her natural looks. Crowds sometimes turned wild—1,500 students once nearly stampeded to see her perform.

Her romances made headlines, too. She was linked to Elvis Presley and Mickey Rooney before marrying jazz singer Herb Jeffries in 1959. Their interracial marriage was controversial but defiant, and they had one daughter, Patricia Ann.

Tempest never faded. She performed into her eighties and was honored with “Tempest Storm Day” in San Francisco. A 2016 documentary celebrated her remarkable career and spirit.

When she died in Las Vegas in 2021 at ninety-three, she left behind more than sequins—she left a legacy of power, passion, and unapologetic confidence.

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