[Josephine
Baker (CinemaArtsCentre.org)]
“Members:
$9 / Public: $13
Includes Reception and Book Signing
Tickets
available at the Box Office,
or by calling 800-838-3006
“A revealing
documentary about one of the most famous and popular performing
artists of the 20th century. Her legendary banana belt dance created
theater history. The film portrays the artist in the mirror of
European colonial clichés as well as a resistance fighter, an
ambulance driver during WW11, and an outspoken activist against
racial discrimination involved in the worldwide Black Consciousness
movement of the 20th century. For black Americans, Baker became ‘a
role model’. Baker herself 'wasn’t allowed to be the real
American she wanted to be.' In an article she says, 'I had been
suffocating in the United States…A lot of us left, not because we
wanted to leave, but because we couldn’t stand it any more…'
During the mid-1920s Baker found fame in Paris, performing at the
Theatre des Champs-Elysees and eventually the Folies Bergeres.”
1 comment:
I played in the orchestra which accompanied Josephine Baker at Carnegie Hall and the Loews Victoria on 125th Street in 1972......I think. A recording of that show was made and I don't think it was ever released. It was an unforgettable experience!
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