Growing up in the 1930s in segregated coal mining country in West Virginia, Doris Payne played a game she called “Miss Lady.” She’d don a hat and purse, and imagine herself living a life far from her own impoverished circumstances. This ability to cast herself as someone else would prove a lucrative one—and take her from a child playing pretend to one of the world’s most notorious jewel thieves and career criminals.
Over nearly 70 years, 32 aliases and nine passports, in a trajectory worthy of the Ocean’s film franchise, she traveled the world and stole over $2 million worth of jewels. Payne has been arrested and incarcerated more times than she can count. She claims to have spent every cent of her takings. Her story is currently being adapted for a forthcoming Codeblack Film, starring Tessa Thompson.
Payne was the daughter of a Cherokee mother and an illiterate African-American father, who beat his wife. This experience, producer Eunetta T. Boone told filmmakers in the 2013 documentary The Life and Crimes of Doris Payne, seems to have had a profound influence on her. “Those things can set in the mind of a young girl: ‘I’m never going to be under the thumb of a man. I’m gonna be the judge of my own destiny,’” she said. ‘I really think that that alone drives Doris.”