Career
With the seductive coif of platinum blonde hair and the billing caption "44-24-38 World"s Most Sensational Exotic Entertainer" her appearances included the Gayety Theatre in New York, the Town Theatre in Chicago and the Colony Club in Dallas. While covering the burlesque circuit, she became a frequent guest on television and radio programs, including the Wally Phillips Show (World's Greatest Newspaper-Chicago), The Steve Allen Show and The Philosophy Donahue Show. She toured in a number of countries, and later found a home at the Majestic Inn (on MacLeod Trail and 50th Avenue South) in Calgary, Alberta.
The liberal stripping laws in Alberta allowed her to fully strip.
However Babette would only remove her tops while retaining a thong. She was the headliner for the hotel bar, the Majic Stik, opening during the Calgary Exhibition and Stampede to a packed house nightly for six months before departing for Las Vegas.
Although unconfirmed, Babette claimed that she was a distant relative of Brigitte Bardot and had once modeled for Pablo Picasso while in her late teens. During the Vietnam War, her popularity and public notoriety resulted in a photo insertion in the GI newspaper Stars and Stripes.