Harry Belafonte, the legendary civil rights champion, singer and movie star, has died aged 96.
Belafonte, whose reminiscence is intently related to the political and social activism of Martin Luther King, Jr, Paul Robeson, Langston Hughes and James Baldwin, ranked visible artwork and artists excessive as inspiration for his civil rights work and within the quite a few inventive collaborations he engaged in to assist the reason for Black individuals and the deprived in the US and internationally.
The Nationwide Civil Rights Museum in Memphis, Tennessee, stated in an announcement “it joins the world in grieving the lack of a civil rights activist, cultural icon, and its 1999 Freedom Award honoree, Mr. Harry Belafonte”.
“From his early years of meteoric rise to celeb within the Nineteen Fifties,” the museum stated, “he was linked to the American Civil Rights Motion and put his cash the place his mouth was by funding the efforts of organisations just like the Southern Christian Management Convention and Pupil Nonviolent Co-ordinating Committee. He was a part of the power-packed slate of Hollywood celebrities current in the course of the March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom 60 years in the past.”
A lot of what I’ve come to know, as an activist, was realized from the artists who preceded me and who closely influenced my beliefs
Harry Belafonte
In an interview with Forbes journal in 2018, Belafonte elaborated on his perception that artists “have at all times been there” for social causes. “Return to Charlie Chaplin, Paul Robeson, in the event you return to a number of artwork, not simply within the performing arts, however actually a number of artists like Picasso and others who’ve at all times been deeply concerned in social causes or social pursuits, from the viewpoint of activism, artists, from my expertise, have at all times been there,” he stated. “A lot of what I’ve come to know, as an activist, was realized from the artists who preceded me and who closely influenced my beliefs.”
His monumental success as a folks singer—with the 1953 single Matilda after which his album Calypso (1956), reportedly the primary ever to promote 1,000,000 copies—and as a display actor, and his charismatic beauty, made him probably the most photographed individuals of his period, notably by Carl van Vachten. His pal and fellow folks singer and social activist Joan Baez painted a portrait of Belafonte in 2017, after greater than 50 years of friendship. “He was the primary singer I heard in folks music, earlier than Pete Seeger and Odetta,” she wrote on the time. “I couldn’t know at that early age that we’d find yourself marching with Dr. King.” Of the portrait, she added: “His was the simplest portrait I’ve ever painted. He’s so … good-looking.”
Belafonte’s success additionally gave him the sources and the profile to make a profound contribution to the Civil Rights motion, notably after assembly King in 1956, turning into one in all his primary supporters, providing King a house away from house in his New York house and bailing him out of jail once in a while. Belafonte supported King’s widow Coretta Scott King and her youngsters financially and personally following King’s assassination in 1968.
The Kings’ youngest daughter, the lawyer and minister Bernice King, recalled, “Once I was a toddler, Harry Belafonte confirmed up for my household in very compassionate methods.” She posted a picture of Belafonte supporting Coretta Scott King at her husband’s funeral, writing: “Right here he’s mourning with my mom on the funeral service for my father at Morehouse School. I received’t neglect…Relaxation properly, sir.”
The visible artist that Belafonte is most intently related to is the Chicago-born draftsman Charles White. They first met in 1947 at a gathering of the Committee for the Negro within the Arts. On the time of a 2018 retrospective of White’s work on the Museum of Fashionable Artwork in New York, Belafonte recalled the day: “I had simply come out of the conflict and uh, I had no id. I walked into a spot that simply blew me away. Quite a lot of Black individuals gathered in a room making noise and speaking and searching like they’d objective in life … The aim was to advance black tradition. It was to develop into main contributors within the American cultural scene. We might convene and debate and get a grasp on what the collective energy of Black artwork might do. It was the centre of rebellious thought, wonderful thought, and the leaders of that have been individuals like Charlie White and Langston Hughes and James Baldwin.”
Belafonte grew to become a collector of White’s work, after which in 1957 when Belafonte, by then an enormous pop star, was provided an hour of primetime tv to host, he commissioned White to make a picture—Folksinger (Voice of Jericho: Portrait of Harry Belafonte) 1957—to be used on the present.
As Belafonte recounted 60 years later: “I couldn’t discover sufficient methods by which to let the world be uncovered to Charlie. I used to be so caught up in his work. I stated on this particular not solely will they hear the great thing about the songs however the viewers would have a visible expertise—not only a set—however one thing that was crammed with ardour. It shook up tv as a result of they by no means fairly noticed something like that, all this blackness. It was unimaginable.”
Born in New York Metropolis, to a father born in Martinique and a mom born in Jamaica, Belafonte grew up in Harlem however spent 1936 to 1940 in his mom’s native island earlier than being reunited with the remainder of his household in New York. After serving within the US Navy he took up performing in New York and his rising celeb as singer and actor meant he was a pure selection for the gala that Frank Sinatra deliberate for the inauguration of President John F Kennedy in 1961.
In 1963, Belafonte rallied his Hollywood colleagues, together with Charlton Heston, Marlon Brando, James Garner and his pal Sidney Poitier to attend the conclusion of the March on Washington, when King gave his immortal “I’ve a dream” speech on the Lincoln Memorial. The next yr, James Baldwin mirrored in The Makes use of of the Blues (1964) of how little had modified: “The truth that Harry Belafonte makes as a lot cash as, let’s say, Frank Sinatra, doesn’t actually imply something on this context. Frank can nonetheless get a home wherever, and Harry can’t. Individuals go to see Harry and stand in lengthy traces to look at him. They love him onstage, or at a cocktail social gathering, however they don’t need him to marry their daughters. This has nothing to do with Harry; this has all the pieces to do with America.”
Belafonte’s memoir My Track: A Memoir of Artwork, Race, and Defiance (2012) is a vivd, superbly written account of a packed, consequential life. After the March on Washington and the publication of Baldwin’s The Makes use of of the Blues, he nonetheless had one other six many years of campaigning forward of him, most lately in urging individuals to vote within the 2016 and 2020 US presidential elections.
Within the Eighties he supported the cultural boycott of South Africa and was a part of efforts to fight hunger in Africa, participating within the 1985 Stay Help live performance in London and the recording of the all-star fund-raising single We Are the World. In 2013, speaking of the report and making ready for its thirtieth anniversary, he returned to the theme of the artist’s position in society. “Individuals who characterize artwork have the general public belief,” he stated. “I feel we’re trusted by individuals who hearken to our songs and have a look at our work. And that is an enormous reward. To assume that artists can do finest is to focus a highlight on any given topic … and as a rule the general public will reply.”
- Harold George Bellanfanti (Belafonte); born New York Metropolis 1 March 1927; married 1948 Marguerite Byrd (marriage dissolved 1957); 1957 Julie Robinson (marriage dissolved 2004), 2008 Pamela Frank; Nationwide Medal of Arts 1994; died New York Metropolis 25 April 2023