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Footnotes

The Black Artists Who Rewrote the Rules of the Great White Way

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

For readers of Hidden Figures and Something Wonderful, Footnotes is the story of New York in the roaring twenties and the very first Broadway show with an all-Black cast and creative team to succeed―and the indelible mark left on our popular culture.

These pioneering performers and the creators (composer Eubie Blake and lyricist Noble Sissle) sowed the seeds of the Harlem jazz scene and paved the way for people of color on stage and screen with West Side Story, Black Panther, and of course, Hamilton. Importantly, this audiobook illuminates the ways in which Black people in America have attained success amidst a culture actively whitewashing, controlling, or completely preventing their stories from being told.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      One hundred years ago, the first all-Black musical, SHUFFLE ALONG, changed the Great White Way forever. Author/narrator Caseen Gaines offers this fascinating, well-researched history of the struggles of Black actors and others who changed the face of Broadway. Gaines delivers first-rate performances of the anecdotes recounted by Black entertainers Noble Sissle, Eubie Blake, Flournoy Miller, and Aubrey Lyles and explains their positive influence on Black culture. In the early 1900s, Black actors were expected to play buffoonish characters in blackface. Sissle, Blake, Flournoy, and Lyles combined their talents to write SHUFFLE ALONG, a political satire in which Black actors portrayed non-stereotypical characters. How would white audiences respond to an all-Black musical? Gaines's narration brings both the period and the people to life. S.J.H. © AudioFile 2021, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 29, 2021
      Journalist Gaines (The Dark Crystal) unearths in this energetic, meticulously researched survey the story behind the 1921 musical Shuffle Along, the first show on Broadway that featured an “all-Black creative team.” Gaines focuses on the show’s four creators—playwright-comedians Flournoy Miller and Aubrey Lyles, singer and lyricist Noble Sissle, and composer and ragtime pianist Eubie Blake—and traces their collaborations and conflicts to show how Miller and Lyles developed a showstopping comedic routine that was so successful it dwarfed what “either of them could have achieved alone,” according to Lyles’s obituary. After meeting in 1915 in Baltimore, meanwhile, Sissle and Blake formed a “musical partnership that would last a lifetime.” Gaines explores how Shuffle Along (and its creators) proved that white audiences would pay Broadway prices to see Black musicals, and helped initiate the Harlem Renaissance as the show played to sold-out crowds and its popular jazz tunes spread throughout the country. In Gaines’s hands, the artists come to life as groundbreakers—and later civil rights advocates (Sissle was president of the Negro Actors Guild in 1935)—who paved the way for artists to come. This vibrant history is well worth checking out. Agent: Peter Steinberg, YRG Partners.

Formats

  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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