Our prayers are with her family, friends and fans. Ms. Horne was in a class all by herself and blazed a trail in Hollywood for many to come after her. She opened doors that still may be closed today had she never been bold enough to knock them down. Her intelligence, talent and elegance will remain a classic example of a leading lady. Our hearts go out to those who truly loved her. She inspired so many!
MeaLee
Lena Horne, who was the first black
performer to be signed to a long-term contract by a major Hollywood
studio and who went on to achieve international fame as a singer, died
on Sunday night at New York-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center
in New York. She was 92 and lived in Manhattan.
Her death was announced by her son-in-law, Kevin Buckley.
Ms. Horne might have become a major movie star, but she was born 50
years too early, and languished at MGM in the 1940s because of the color
of her skin, although she was so light-skinned that, when she was a
child, other black children had taunted her, accusing her of having a
“white daddy.”
Ms. Horne was stuffed into one “all-star” musical after another —
“Thousands Cheer” (1943), “Broadway Rhythm” (1944), “Two Girls and a
Sailor” (1944), “Ziegfeld Follies” (1946), “Words and Music” (1948) — to
sing a song or two that could easily be snipped from the movie when it
played in the South, where the idea of an African-American performer in
anything but a subservient role in a movie with an otherwise all-white
cast was unthinkable.
“The only time I ever said a word to another actor who was white was Kathryn Grayson in a little segment of
‘Show Boat’ ” included in “Till the Clouds Roll By” (1946), a movie
about the life of Jerome Kern,
Ms. Horne said in an interview in 1990. In that sequence she played
Julie, a mulatto forced to flee the showboat because she has married a
white man.
But when MGM made “Show Boat” into a movie for the second time, in 1951,
the role of Julie was given to a white actress, Ava Gardner, who did not do her own
singing. (Ms. Horne was no longer under contract to MGM at the time, and
according to James Gavin’s Horne biography, “Stormy Weather,” published
last year, she was never seriously considered for the part.) And in
1947, when Ms. Horne herself married a white man — the prominent
arranger, conductor and pianist Lennie Hayton, who was for many years
both her musical director and MGM’s — the marriage took place in France
and was kept secret for three years.
Ms. Horne’s first MGM movie was “Panama Hattie” (1942), in which she
sang Cole Porter’s
“Just One of Those Things.” Writing about that film years later, Pauline Kael
called it “a sad disappointment, though Lena Horne is ravishing and
when she sings you can forget the rest of the picture.”
Even before she came to Hollywood, Brooks Atkinson, the drama critic for
The New York Times, noticed Ms. Horne in “Lew Leslie’s Blackbirds of
1939,” a Broadway revue that ran for nine performances. “A radiantly
beautiful sepia girl,” he wrote, “who will be a winner when she has
proper direction.”
She had proper direction in two all-black movie musicals, both made in
1943. Lent to 20th Century Fox for “Stormy Weather,” one of those show
business musicals with almost no plot but lots of singing and dancing,
Ms. Horne did both triumphantly, ending with the sultry, aching sadness
of the title number, which would become one of her signature songs. In
MGM’s “Cabin in the Sky,” the first film directed by Vincente Minnelli, she was the brazen,
sexy handmaiden of the Devil. (One number she shot for that film, “Ain’t
It the Truth,” which she sang while taking a bubble bath, was deleted
before the film was released — not for racial reasons, as her
stand-alone performances in other MGM musicals sometimes were, but
because it was considered too risqué.)
In 1945 the critic and screenwriter Frank Nugent wrote in Liberty
magazine that Ms. Horne was “the nation’s top Negro entertainer.” In
addition to her MGM salary of $1,000 a week, she was earning $1,500 for
every radio appearance and $6,500 a week when she played nightclubs. She
was also popular with servicemen, white and black, during World War II,
appearing more than a dozen times on the Army radio program “Command
Performance.”
“The whole thing that made me a star was the war,” Ms. Horne said in the
1990 interview. “Of course the black guys couldn’t put Betty Grable’s picture in their
footlockers. But they could put mine.”
Touring Army camps for the U.S.O., Ms. Horne was outspoken in her
criticism of the way black soldiers were treated. “So the U.S.O. got
mad,” she recalled. “And they said, ‘You’re not going to be allowed to
go anyplace anymore under our auspices.’ So from then on I was labeled a
bad little Red girl.”
Ms. Horne later claimed that for this and other reasons, including her
friendship with leftists like Paul Robeson
and W.E.B. DuBois, she was blacklisted and “unable to do films or
television for the next seven years” after her tenure with MGM ended in
1950.
This was not quite true: as Mr. Gavin has documented, she appeared
frequently on “Your Show of Shows” and other television shows in the
1950s, and in fact “found more acceptance” on television “than almost
any other black performer.” And Mr. Gavin and others have suggested that
there were other factors in addition to politics or race involved in
her lack of film work
Although absent from the screen, she found success in nightclubs and on
records. “Lena Horne at the Waldorf-Astoria,” recorded during a
well-received eight-week run in 1957, reached the Top 10 and became the
best-selling album by a female singer in RCA Victor’s history.
In the early 1960s Ms. Horne, always outspoken on the subject of civil
rights, became increasingly active, participating in numerous marches
and protests.
In 1969, she returned briefly to films, playing the love interest of a
white actor, Richard Widmark, in “Death of a
Gunfighter.”
She was to act in only one other movie: In 1978 she played Glinda the
Good Witch in “The Wiz,” the film version of the all-black Broadway
musical based on “The Wizard of Oz.” But she never stopped singing.
She continued to record prolifically well into the 1990s, for RCA and
other labels, notably United Artists and Blue Note. And she conquered
Broadway in 1981 with a one-woman show, “Lena Horne: The Lady and Her
Music,” which ran for 14 months and won both rave reviews and a Tony
Award.
Ms. Horne’s voice was not particularly powerful, but it was extremely
expressive. She reached her listeners emotionally by acting as well as
singing the romantic standards like “The Man I Love” and “Moon River”
that dominated her repertory. The person she always credited as her main
influence was not another singer but a pianist and composer, Duke
Ellington’s longtime associate Billy Strayhorn.
“I wasn’t born a singer,” she told Strayhorn’s biographer, David Hajdu.
“I had to learn a lot. Billy rehearsed me. He stretched me vocally.”
Strayhorn occasionally worked as her accompanist and, she said, “taught
me the basics of music, because I didn’t know anything.”
Strayhorn was also, she said, “the only man I ever loved,” but Strayhorn
was openly gay, and their close friendship never became a romance. “He
was just everything that I wanted in a man,” she told Mr. Hajdu, “except
he wasn’t interested in me sexually.”
Lena Calhoun Horne was born in Brooklyn on June 30, 1917. All four of
her grandparents were industrious members of Brooklyn’s black middle
class. Her paternal grandparents, Edwin and Cora Horne, were early
members of the National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People, and in October 1919, at the age of 2,
Lena was the cover girl for the organization’s monthly bulletin.
By then the marriage of her parents, Edna and Teddy Horne, was in
trouble. “She was spoiled and badly educated and he was fickle,” Ms.
Horne’s daughter, Gail Lumet Buckley, wrote in her family history, “The
Hornes.” By 1920 Teddy had left his job with the New York Department of
Labor and fled to Seattle, and Edna had fled to a life on the stage in
Harlem. Ms. Horne was raised by her paternal grandparents until her
mother took her back four years later.
When she was 16, her mother abruptly pulled her out of school to
audition for the dance chorus at the Cotton Club, the famous Harlem
nightclub where the customers were white, the barely dressed dancers
were light-skinned blacks, Duke Ellington was the star of the show and
the proprietors were gangsters. A year after joining the Cotton Club
chorus she made her Broadway debut, performing a voodoo dance in the
short-lived show “Dance With Your Gods” in 1934.
At 19, Ms. Horne married the first man she had ever dated, 28-year-old
Louis Jones, and became a conventional middle-class Pittsburgh wife. Her
daughter Gail was born in 1937 and a son, Teddy, in 1940. The marriage
ended soon afterward. Ms. Horne kept Gail, but Mr. Jones refused to give
up Teddy, although he did allow the boy long visits with his mother.
In 1938, Ms. Horne starred in a quickie black musical film, “The Duke Is
Tops,” for which she was never paid. Her return to movies was on a
grander scale.
She had been singing at the Manhattan nightclub Café Society when the
impresario Felix Young chose her to star at the Trocadero, a nightclub
he was planning to open in Hollywood in the fall of 1941. In 1990, Ms.
Horne reminisced: “My only friends were the group of New Yorkers who
sort of stuck with their own group — like Vincente, Gene Kelly, Yip Harburg and Harold Arlen,
and Richard Whorf — the sort of hip New Yorkers who allowed Paul
Robeson and me in their houses.”
Since blacks were not allowed to live in Hollywood, “Felix Young, a
white man, signed for the house as if he was going to rent it,” Ms.
Horne said. “When the neighbors found out, Humphrey
Bogart, who lived right across the street from me, raised hell with
them for passing around a petition to get rid of me.” Bogart, she said,
“sent word over to the house that if anybody bothered me, please let him
know.”
Roger Edens, the composer and musical arranger who had been Judy Garland’s chief protector at MGM,
had heard the elegant Ms. Horne sing at Café Society and also went to
hear her at the Little Troc (the war had scaled Mr. Young’s ambitions
down to a small club with a gambling den on the second floor). He
insisted that Arthur Freed, the producer of MGM’s
lavish musicals, listen to Ms. Horne sing. Then Freed insisted that
Louis B. Mayer, who ran the studio, hear her, too. He did, and soon she
had signed a seven-year contract with MGM.
The N.A.A.C.P. celebrated that contract as a weapon in its war to get
better movie roles for black performers. Her father weighed in, too. In a
1997 PBS interview, she recalled: “My father said, ‘I
can get a maid for my daughter. I don’t want her in the movies playing
maids.’ ”
Ms. Horne is survived by her daughter, Gail Lumet Buckley. Her husband
died in 1971; her son died of kidney failure the same year.
Looking back at the age of 80, Ms. Horne said: “My identity is very
clear to me now. I am a black woman. I’m free. I no longer have to be a
‘credit.’ I don’t have to be a symbol to anybody; I don’t have to be a
first to anybody. I don’t have to be an imitation of a white woman that
Hollywood sort of hoped I’d become. I’m me, and I’m like nobody else.”
via the NY Times
Monday, May 10, 2010
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