Brendan Behan ended his poem about Paris and Gertrude Stein with:
- "I absolutely must decline
- To dance in the streets with Gertrude Stein
- And as for Alice B. Toklas,
- I'd rather eat a box of Fucking chocolates."
Both Toklas and Stein are referred to in both the stage (1966) and film versions of
Mame. In a lyric of the song "Bosom Buddies", Vera Charles declares: "But sweetie, I'll always be Alice Toklas, if you'll be Gertrude Stein."
The 1968 Peter Sellers movie
I Love You, Alice B. Toklas was named for Toklas' cannabis brownies, which play a significant role in the plot.
In 1969 on an episode of the ABC-TV variety show
Hollywood Palace hosted by Diana Ross & The Supremes, member Mary Wilson tells Diana that show guest and comedian Soupy Sales has asked The Supremes to bake him a pie, to which Diana Ross replies to her group mates: "A pie, huh? Well, you better not use the recipe you got from Alice B. Toklas"!
A reference was made to Toklas in a 1969 episode of "Bewitched" called "Tabitha's Weekend". Endora (Agnes Moorehead) makes a joke about eating Mother Stephens (Mabel Albertson) raisin cookies when Tabitha asks if "Grandmama" would like one too. When offered one, Endora says "They're not by chance from an Alice B. Toklas recipe?" Mrs. Stephens says, "They're my recipe." To which Endora says "Then I think I'll pass."
The Alice B. Toklas LGBT Democratic Club, a political organization founded in 1971 in San Francisco, is a namesake of Toklas.
Samuel Steward, who met Toklas and Stein in the 1930s, edited
Dear Sammy: Letters from Gertrude Stein and Alice B. Toklas (1977), and wrote two mystery novels featuring Stein and Toklas as characters,
Murder Is Murder Is Murder (1985) and
The Caravaggio Shawl (1989).
Alice B. Toklas is pictured in the 1978 Swedish absurdist comedy film
Picassos Äventyr (Adventures of Picasso), directed by Tage Danielsson. In this film she is played by Wilfrid Brambell, who was a star of the television series Steptoe and Son. A running gag is based on word play: Gertrude Stein often silences Alice B. Toklas with the phrase "Alice, be talkless."
Toklas is mentioned, along with Gertrude Stein, in Tim Curry's 1979 song
I Do The Rock.
Toklas is played by Linda Hunt in the 1987 film
Waiting for the Moon.Toklas appears in the book title and in one of the essays in Otto Friedrich's 1989 book "The Grave of Alice B. Toklas and Other Reports from the Past" (New York, Henry Holt). The chapter includes a sensitive interview with the elderly Alice.
The San Francisco Board of Supervisors voted in 1989 to rename a block of Myrtle Street between Polk Street and Van Ness Avenue in San Francisco as Alice B. Toklas Place, since Toklas was born one block away on O'Farrell Street.
The Toyes made mention of Toklas in their 1995 song "Monster Hash".
In certain California communities, female facial hair is an accepted form of self-expression and is referred to as a "Toklas-stache".
Toklas is mentioned in the Eric Schwartz song "Hattie and Mattie" on his 1999
That's How It's Gonna Be album. The song also appears on Holly Near's 2006 album
Show Up.
In La Chuisa's "The Wild Party" the lesbian stripper Madelaine True mentions her in the song "Like Sally"
Bill Richardson's 2001 book
Waiting for Gertrude makes reference to Toklas and Stein's relationship.
Vietnamese American writer Monique Truong developed a marginal character, Toklas' Indochinese cook, in her bestselling novel
The Book of Salt, published in 2003. The novel contains substantial citations and relays several scenes taken from the
Alice B. Toklas Cook Book.
Melissa Manchester wrote the song "When Paris Was A Woman" which appears on her 2004 album "When I Look Down That Road". The song is from the view point of Alice B. Toklas.