Coralee (Coco) Burson Davis Collection

Cast of "Tars and Spars" movie
The cast of the Columbia Pictures film version of "Tars and Spars" poses for a publicity photo in 1945. Actor Sid Ceaser is center; Coralee Burson Davis, one of a few SPARS from the traveling show cast in the movie, is in the last row, second from the right.
Coralee "Coco" Davis Scrapbook
A scrapbook showing Coralee "Coco" Davis's involvement in the Tars and Spars musical.
Coralee Burson Davis
Full-length portrait of Coralee Burson Davis in the Coast Guard SPAR blue enlisted service dress uniform, garrison cap, and handbag, taken in 1944.
Coralee Burson Davis and Gower Champion in "Tars and Spars"
Coralee Burson Davis and Gower Champion dance during a 1944 performance of "Tars and Spars," a musical review about the U.S. Coast Guard performed by actual Coast Guard members.
Oral history interview with Coralee Burson Davis
Primarily documents Coralee "Coco" Burson Davis' service in the Coast Guard SPARs during World War II, including her involvement in the play and musical Tars and Spars, and her acting career and personal life after the war. Davis describes her early love of theater, her per-service show business pursuits, and her failed attempts to enlist in the Women Marines and US Navy WAVES before joining the Coast Guard SPARs. Davis discusses of her assignment to US Coast Guard Headquarters in Washington, DC, including her work typing vouchers; giving recruiting lectures; appearing on the radio show The Fighting Coast Guard; visiting wounded soldiers; and trying out for the play Tars and Spars. She also describes play rehearsals in Palm Beach, Florida; being reunited with a Japanese friend who was sent to an internment camp at a performance; famous people cast in the play; actors and actresses she met; visiting military hospitals; and performing on a TV show. Of her performance in the Tars and Spars film, she mentions the actors she worked with and living in Hollywood. Other topics from Davis' service time include traveling in Pennsylvania while performing the play; doing publicity for the film in New York; her opinion of Franklin and Eleanor Roosevelt; her memory of the attack on Pearl Harbor; and returning to civilian life. Davis discusses living with actress friends in Manhattan after her discharge from the SPARs and returning to California with friends, where she visited her family and met her future husband, Walter "Bunny" Rathbun. She mentions forming a summer theatre with Walter, and his death due to Hodgkin's disease. She then discusses meeting her second husband, Horace Davis, on a visit to San Juan, Puerto Rico, different cultural dating traditions in Puerto Rico, and her husband's work with the Foreign Service. She also mentions their moves to Washington, DC; Europe; and Charlottesville, Virginia.