Yeah. There was the Tradewinds. I went to the Tradewinds and there was the Brown Derby and there was a place called Lolly Chi's on the beach. I went to the Tradewinds first and that's where -- Billie Holliday came to work at the Brown Derby. Louis Armstrong I met at the Brown Derby. Gene Cooper, Cozy Coles, Helen Humes, Anita O'Day. The room that the stars worked, the people who were better known worked at the Brown Derby. I finally worked the Brown Derby after six months at the Tradewinds. I did. I gained a reputation as a wonderful singer. I worked for about -- well, a few weeks with the Knights, the Four Knights at Lolly Chi's, with the ukelele. It wasn't my thing, and I came back and I worked at the Brown Derby another year with Blinkie Allen. I went there with the Rampart Streeters. We hadn't been to town three months and everybody was lost. The piano player was an alcoholic because he could get -- I mean, people would send you the alcohol. I mean, it was like free. The drummer who was the uncle to the saxophone player, they were both heroin junkies. The bass player, who was the band leader, was a cocaine junkie. It was disgusting, and they admired street life. Pimps and whores and I was lonely. I was really alone and I knew it, but it served me because when everybody was busted finally, it didn't take long, the Americans came and they took that place. They came and they busted everybody. Two young guys from Kentucky, they came and they hung with everybody, did everything everybody was doing, and then they started to bust everybody and they beat them and they sent them to jail and nobody ever came to bother me, to say Anna Marie, because they knew that I was a singer and that was all, but it was the protection. It's what I got from my mother, you know.