Introducing: Charlie’s Place
Charlie’s Place was revolutionary, and that meant it was dangerous.
Beloved. Notorious. Defiant. Folk hero. These are just a few ways to describe Charlie Fitzgerald, the entrepreneur who owned an integrated nightclub during the Jim Crow era in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina.
Charlie broke down racial barriers through the power of music and dance, hosting some of the greatest musicians of our time: Little Richard, Count Basie, Ray Charles, Duke Ellington, and many more.
But who was Charlie? How did he rise to power? And what price did he pay for achieving the impossible? This is a story of joy and passion that erupted into violence and changed a community forever.
Episode 1: Whispering Pines
“Myrtle Beach was a good place, if you stay in your place, I’ll put it like that.”
At the height of segregation, when everywhere else was divided. Black and white people danced together to the biggest R&B acts of the time at Charlie’s Place. How was this possible? And who was the proprietor of this mythic space?
Episode 2: Sin City
“All the dancers wanted that Black music. Why? Because it had a danceable backbeat.”
Dance at Charlie’s Place wasn’t just dance; it captured the spirit of an era defined by both segregation and creativity. When white audiences arrived for the music, these moments sparked shifts that transformed Myrtle Beach and resonated far beyond its borders.
Episode 3: Power Cedes to Power
“He helped people. He loaned people. He wasn’t to be trifled with.”
Charlie Fitzgerald built multiple businesses across Myrtle Beach–the hotel, the club, the cab company, the high-stakes poker game–and loaned money to white folks in town to bend the rules in his favor. How long would this last before Charlie became a target?
Episode 4: Mr. Nobody From Nowhere
“And in the minds of many, Charlie Fitzgerald’s dance hall becomes the worst fears of the champions of white supremacy.”
There’s much mystery surrounding Charlie Fitzgerald and who he was before Myrtle Beach. Before he was Charlie Fitzgerald he was Lucious Rucker. So who is Lucious Rucker?
Episode 5: All Costs
“You know, that incident was what many of us consider the ugliest black molar in our local history. It was just pure evil and ugly.”
August 26th, 1950 was the night that changed Myrtle Beach. It changed Charlie and the impact reverberated throughout the south.
Charlie’s Place is a podcast series co-produced by Atlas Obscura and Rococo Punch in partnership with Pushkin Industries and Visit Myrtle Beach.
Sponsored by Visit Myrtle Beach.
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