BLACK HISTORY MONTH ON BROADWAY
By Peter Filichia
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Time does fly, does it not? Already more than one twelfth of the ânewâ year in gone, and now weâre already in Black History Month.
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I trust that on Sunday, February 1, you started celebrating by playing Street Scene, for on this date in 1902, its librettist, Langston Hughes was born.
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And on February 2 â the date that Ragtime finished its two-disc recording session in 1998 â you played all the songs that captured Coalhouse Walker and Sarahâs joy and pain.
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But if youâre reading this on February 3 â or after — and need a few hints on how to celebrate the remaining days of Black History Month, may I make a few suggestions?
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February 3: Black History Month wouldnât be complete without acknowledging Show Boat, the first great American musical to deal with African-American issues. Highbrow theatregoers whoâd never given much thought to blacks came out of the theater feeling differently â especially after having heard âOlâ Man River.â
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But Show Boat was especially remarkable in the way it used âCanât Help Lovinâ Dat Man.â Julie, the boatâs star entertainer, sings it to Magnolia to indicate how love can make a person powerless. But Queenie, the shipâs black cook, mentions that sheâs only heard âcolored folk sing dat song.â Itâs the first clue that the ostensibly white Julie has some black blood. Never had the American musical theater used a song so subtly to reveal such an important plot point.
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February 4: In 1999, Youâre a Good Man, Charlie Brown is revived on Broadway. While cartoonist Charles Schulz and adapter Clark Gesner conceived the âPeanutsâ crew as all white, now an African-American, Stanley Wayne Mathis, was judged to be the best of all who auditioned for Schroeder and thus got the part. Not only that, Andrew Lippa wrote a new song for him. So although âBeethovenâs Birthdayâ was in December, listen to Mathis celebrating old Ludwig.
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February 5: The Hilton Twins are born together â literally — in 1908. Their musical Side Show was an important building block in the career of Norm Lewis, who recently wrapped up a run as Braodwayâs first African-American Phantom of the Opera. Listen to him swing his advice to the Hiltons: âThe Devil You Know.â
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February 6: In 1988, Michael Jordan makes his first signature slam dunk from the free throw line, which inspired Air Jordan and the Jumpman logo. As a result, play âMichael Jordanâs Ballâ from The Full Monty.
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February 7: Eubie Blake, born on this day in 1887, wrote the music for Shuffle Along in 1921. Alas, original cast albums werenât made in America in those days, so youâll have to settle for the studio cast album made a quarter-century later to hear four of its songs (including âIâm Just Wild about Harryâ).
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February 8: In 1978, a most modest revue opens at the woebegone space then occupied by the fledgling Manhattan Theatre Club. No one knew then that in only seventy-nine days, the show would be on Broadway and that a mere thirty-seven days after that, it would be the first revue to win the Best Musical Tony: Ainât Misbehavinâ: The New Fats Waller Musical Show.
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February 9: The weekendâs over and itâs time to return to working â but once you get home, return to Working, the 1978 musical that offers three fine songs by Micki Grant, one of the first African-American women to write for Broadway. Thereâs âLovinâ Al,â about a parking attendant who loves his job; âCleaninâ Women,â about a hard worker who doesnât and âIf I Coulda Been,â whose next lines âWhat I coulda been, I coulda been something.â Micki Grant need not wonder if she coulda-woulda-shoulda.
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February 10: In 1959, Lorraine Hansberryâs landmark play A Raisin in the Sun has its world premiere in Chicago â and if it didnât, we certainly wouldnât have had Raisin, the Tony-winning Best Musical of 1973-74. Judd Woldin and Robert Brittanâs acclaimed score holds up quite well.
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February 11: While weâre on the subject of A Raisin in the Sun, note that that title became a line in âBlack Boysâ from Hair. Never noticed? Listen closely.
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February 12: And while weâre on the subject of Hair, you could play âAbie Babyâ today in honor of Abraham Lincolnâs birthday. It may not be the ultimate tribute we can give our sixteenth president, but âtwill serve.
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February 13: Saratoga closes in 1960, but the album lives on. Listen to Carol Brice, one of the great African-American contraltos, sing
âGoose Never Be a Peacock.â The song starts with âTake a whole heap oâ learninâ for a person to know. Dis olâ world keep a-turninâ but it turn mighty slow.â Happily, itâs turned faster in the 135 years since Saratoga took place.
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February 14: Valentineâs Day is the busiest day of the year for marriages in Las Vegas. So play âI Could Get Married Today,â which black vaudeville star Maurice Ellis sang to perfection in one of his last roles in 1951âs Seventeen.
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February 15: In honor of the day in 1964 when âHello, Dolly!â — sung by a black man (Louis Armstrong) — becomes the Number One Record in the country, play the Pearl Bailey recording of Hello, Dolly! Believe me, if Bailey hadnât come into the show almost four years into the run, it would have never been able to eventually eclipse My Fair Lady as the longest-running Broadway musical.
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February 16: Otis Blackwell is born in 1931. Heâd later co-write two very big hits for Elvis Presley, which you can hear on the 2005 original cast album of All Shook Up: the title song and âDonât Be Cruel.â
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February 17: Itâs The Official âRandom Acts of Kindnessâ Day, so play âKindnessâ from Inner City. While youâre at it, get to know the entire stunning rock score that Eve Merriam and Helen Miller wrote for this much-too-unknown 1971 musical that centered on urban life.
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February 18: In 1688, this country saw its first official protest against slavery. Hence, play âFreedom,â the joyous cakewalk from Shenandoah. Nice, too, that during the Civil War era, a white woman thinks nothing of joining a young black man in song.
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February 19: Purlie begins previews with no fanfare: unknown songwriters, unknown performers and little advance sale. But in less than a month, all three major New York theater critics will proclaim âPurlie is victorious!â â a reference to the characterâs last name and the title of the play from which the musical sprang. Literally two months after that first preview, both Cleavon Little and Melba Moore, those previously unknown performers, win Tony Awards.
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February 20: How fitting that âThe Official World Day of Social Justiceâ should come during Black History Month. Alas, this is only the sixth anniversary of the event; although the United Nations ratified it in 2007, it didnât begin until 2009. That was eighty years too late for Thomas âFatsâ Waller, Harry Brooks and Andy Razaf, who in 1929 wrote about the travails of being âBlack and Blue.â
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February 21: In 1967, Hallelujah, Baby! starts rehearsals, and while it will be the only Tony-winning Best Musical to have closed when it receives the award, it does have a magnificent score by Jule Styne, Betty Comden and Adolph Green. It told of 20th century Black History, from few rights to civil rights. Thus, it utilized the various styles of black music heard throughout the century. Leslie Uggams and Lillian Hayman were also the first actresses to win Tonys for playing mother and daughter. The formerâs âMy Own Morningâ and the latterâs âI Donât Know Where She Got Itâ certainly helped.
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February 22: Itâs Washingtonâs Birthday, so while youâre washing up, play âThe Washingtons Are Cominâ In,â which got Tiger Haynes (later The Tinman in The Wiz) great recognition in New Faces of â56. Afterward when you put on your Sunday clothes, put on âPut on Your Sunday Clothesâ as sung by Pearl Bailey, Jack Crowder, Winston DeWitt Hemsley and Roger Lawson on the aforementioned 1967 Hello, Dolly! recording. See if you agree with me that this is one of the best show songs of all time.
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February 23: Sundayâs over, and itâs a Monday morning again. Playing âFirst Thing Monday Morningâ from Purlie will help resurrect you and get your juices flowing.
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February 24: Spring training is now in full swing for major league baseball. Play âSix Months out of Every Yearâ from the Damn Yankees soundtrack â not original cast album, mind you, but the soundtrack. For the 1958 film was smart and sensitive enough to include a black couple among the wives who mourn their husbandsâ obsession with the Washington Senators. Yes, the nationâs capital has long been a district that African-Americans have called home, but bless directors George Abbott and Stanley Donen for acknowledging that when many other films of the era would not.
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February 25: In 2000, Andrew Lippaâs The Wild Party gets strong reviews, especially for Taye Diggs as Black. His part in âPoor Childâ helps to make it a powerful duet, but his solo âIâll Be Hereâ is especially noticed by the critics.
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February 26: This is actually a minor holiday called âTell a Fairy Tale Day.â Finianâs Rainbow qualifies because of its leprechaun. But bookwriters E.Y. Harburg and Fred Saidy had much more on their minds. They wondered how a bigoted white man would feel if he suddenly turned black. Then heâd know how the other 11% lived in 1947. Listen to all of one of Broadwayâs best scores.
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February 27: Elizabeth Welch is born 1904, so play âI Must Have That Man,â the number in which she appeared in Blackbirds of 1928. Again, original cast albums werenât yet being made back then, so youâll have to hear the song on the 1953 studio cast album â alas, without Welch.
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February 28: Reserve this day for Bring in âDa Noise, Bring in âDa Funk, which, through song and dance, gives us centuriesâ worth of Black History in far less than a monthâs time. And get ready for March â which is Womenâs History Month.
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Peter Filichia also writes a column each Friday at www.mtishows.com and www.kritzerland.com. His upcoming book The Great Parade: Broadwayâs Astonishing, Never-To-Be Forgotten 1963-1964 Season is now available for pre-order at www.amazon.com.
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