Thursday, July 29, 2010

Ethel Waters : Jazz Baby Great


Ethel Waters was a major singing and acting star during the Harlem Renaissance period, and was the second African American to be nominated for an Academy Award. At a time when opportunities in entertainment were few for blacks, Ethel made the most of every opportunity she was offered. She performed regularly on Broadway beginning with the show "Hello 1919", and then in Hollywood films including "Rufus Jones for President", "Cotton Club", and Director Vincente Minelli's "Cabin in the Sky". Her classic phrasing as a singer on such songs as "Stormy Weather" and her best-known recording of the spiritual "His Eye is on the Sparrow" cemented her legacy, earning her a Grammy Hall of Fame Award.

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Josephine Baker : Jazz Baby Number One


Is it any wonder that this vivacious force-of-nature captured hearts around the globe? Famous for her wild dancing and later for the beauty of her singing, style and sophistication; the likes of Pablo Picasso and Ernest Hemingway were adoring fans. Josephine is the embodiment of a Jazz Baby, watching the instrument that is her body move those syncopated hips, I have the sense that she was a living cubist portrait. Sadly, America, was the one place where this Saint Louis, Missouri native failed to receive her just accolades. The French adopted her and she returned the favor by taking up citizenship there...

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

1920s Berlin Project Sim

One quiet Sunday afternoon I found myself rooted to a spot on Alexanderplatz in 1920s Berlin Project Sim, that's in Second Life (SL) for those who don't know, feeding peanuts to a small monkey wearing a fez who danced atop an organ grinder's cart to the Kurt Weill's "3 Penny Opera".

From the beginning I felt right a home there, and the more I learned about the Weimar Era in German history, the more passionate I became....

Saturday, July 10, 2010

STARLIT HOUR

In order to escape the pressures of Twenty-First Century life I enjoy returning to the Jazz Age, and the beginning of what we know of as Modern Times. Why then? It's the period in which I feel most at home. It's the time when women in the western world were first liberated. A time when both my grandmothers and my great aunts were young women. The choices they made in their lives wouldn't have previously been possible, and I'm standing firmly on their shoulders.



Women first voted, and bobbed their hair then; they worked outside the home, in large numbers in jobs and careers that enabled then to earn their own incomes, but more importantly they experienced the power of their own creativity and sexuality more openly than before. The period after World War One (WWI), ending with the rumblings of World War Two (WWII) - roughly 1920 to 1939, established the cultural foundation for our times.