Last little madam in Texas dies, in AZ
HOUSTON - Edna Milton Chadwell, the last madam of the infamous Texas brothel that inspired the movie and Broadway show, "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas," has died in Phoenix. She was 84.
HOUSTON
- Edna Milton Chadwell, the last madam of the infamous Texas brothel that inspired the movie and Broadway show, "The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas," has died in Phoenix. She was 84.
Chadwell's nephew, Robert Kleffman, said Wednesday that his aunt, the last owner of the Chicken Ranch brothel, in La Grange, Texas, died Saturday. She had been hospitalized since a car accident in October.
Chadwell began working at the Chicken Ranch in 1952, Kleffman said. Within three years, she had become the manager. In 1962, she bought the establishment and ran it until it was shut down in 1973.
After a TV story, Texas' governor ordered police to shut down the Chicken Ranch, and shortly after, Chadwell moved to Arizona, where she got married and remained until she died.
Chadwell didn't often talk about her years at the brothel, Kleffman said. She wasn't ashamed of the work she did there, he said, but also didn't want the notoriety that came with being the madam of a famous brothel.
"She was a hard-nosed lady. She was very straightforward, didn't put up with no monkey business, no nonsense," Kleffman said. "Hard-nosed. But with a spine of steel and a heart of gold."
Kleffman, whose mother was one of Chadwell's 10 siblings, said his aunt dreamed of ghost-writing a book about her years at the Chicken Ranch but intended to do so only after the death of everyone else involved.
Kleffman believes that she did in the end outlive all the other women, but she never did get to write the book - something she wanted to do partly to set the record straight on the movie and the Broadway show that put her establishment on the map.
"The only thing in the movie, which starred Burt Reynolds and Dolly Parton, that was correct was that there was a whorehouse," Kleffman said his aunt would often say. "She said the sheriff and the madam, they don't have nothing going on. It was just a business."
At the same time, while there were people from that era that would bring a smile to Chadwell's face - some of the other girls and associates - there were many she described as unsavory and was happy to forget, Kleffman said.