She wasn't a great singer like Ella Fitzgerald or Sarah Vaughan. Hattie McDaniel and Dorothy Dandridge were better actors. But Lena Horne was a much more important figure in American social history, because she was able to bridge the gap between black and white in a way that others could not. She could be vocal, even strident in her advocacy for civil rights; she could be a proud black woman who stood up for African American causes and refused to back down. But she could do all of this without ever seeming alienated.
Tuesday, May 11, 2010
Lena Horne
Before she died Sunday, the only things I knew about Lena Horne was that she was ridiculously beautiful (someone teach Alicia Keys how to act so she can play her in the bio-pic) and had once been on The Cosby Show, thus invoking my "anyone who the Cos likes is cool with me" rule. Today I don't really know much more, but this Eugene Robinson article seems like a nice first step:
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2 comments:
Alicia Keys as Ms. Horne in the bio-pic: nice casting. But she can't act, huh?
i have no idea, never seen her act. maybe she's great for all i know. she could act the phone book, im watching
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