Florence Hines was born about 1868 in Ohio. Little is documented of Hines' early life, or how she became an entertainer. The earliest mentions of her as a performer appear in 1890, when she performed with the Sam T. Jack Creole Show. The Creole Show was an all-black review which featured singers and
tableau artists as well as comedians. Florence Hines, with her male impersonation act, was the
master of ceremonies and a star of the show. She was also a singer, a dancer, a comedic 'conversationalist' and a
burlesque performer in a group
tableau called "Beauty of the Nile, or Doomed by Fire," which she later directed. The Creole Show was created when
Buffalo Bill Cody made a $1,000 bet with his friend
Sam T Jack, a white Chicago entrepreneur, that "the African could never shine upon the stage". Jack accepted the bet, and hired a group of Black performers who not only allowed Jack to collect his $1,000 but went on to perform sold-out shows across the country. The Black press of the time wrote that Hines and her co-star
Florence Briscoe in the groundbreaking show "gave a new impression of the possibilities of our girls in show business". In the Creole Show, black entertainers had a venue where they were able to perform for the first time "racially-grounded" comedy that was not filled with derogatory
stereotypes of black people. In her early days, Hines commanded the largest salary paid to a Black female performer. Wearing a tuxedo with tails, cane, cape and top hat, Hines crossed racial, social and gender barriers in her portrayal of the Black
dandy, breaking with previous poor and illiterate
minstrel show stereotypes of Black men. The songs she sang, which emphasized the dandy's material wealth, included “For I’m the Lad That’s Made of Money”, “I Can’t See My Money Go That Way” and “A Millionaire’s Only Son”. Hines worked with the Creole Show for seven seasons, sometimes performing a singing duet with Marie Roberts. She was described as 'the greatest living female song and dance artist:" and 'the queen of all male impersonators". The Creole show was not the only show Hines worked for. In 1893, Hines also performed as a male impersonator with Eaton's Afro-American Vaudeville Company, managed by Black comedian and entrepreneur
Harry S. Eaton. In 1896, she was one of the many celebrity performers in a "wildly successful" touring company called Darkest America that traveled fourteen states and included
Sam Lucas and Billy Miller. Two years later, she entertained a full house with the Big Afro American Company, where she was featured along with male
soprano Sylvester Russell. ==Personal life==