Business Day

Harry Belafonte: A life of music and social activism

- ADEKEYE ADEBAJO ● Prof Adekeye Adebajo is a senior research fellow at the University of Pretoria’s Centre for the Advancemen­t of Scholarshi­p.

Harry Belafonte, who recently died in New York at the age of 96, was a pioneering singeracto­r who used his fame and wealth to support social causes.

Strikingly handsome and multitalen­ted, Belafonte was the first artist to have sold 1-million records with his 1956 Calypso album. He was born in New York on March 1 1927, growing up in poverty. His Martiniqua­n father, Harold senior, worked as a chef on merchant ships, while his Jamaican mother, Melvine, was a domestic servant.

His abusive father abandoned the family when Harry was six, and a struggling Melvine took Harry and his younger brother, Dennis, back to Jamaica.

He immersed himself in Caribbean culture, and fell into the warm embrace of his white grandmothe­r, Jane: an experience which he later credited for his ease in interactin­g with diverse races and classes.

The family returned to New York, but Belafonte soon dropped out of high school to join the US navy in 1944, where black servicemen introduced him to the work of WEB Du Bois and other black intellectu­als. He met his lifelong fellow Caribbean-American friend and rival, Sidney Poitier, with whom he trained at the American Negro Theatre in Harlem. Belafonte — a lightskinn­ed cultural polyglot — suffered from an identity crisis throughout his life: not fully black nor white; not fully Caribbean nor American.

Belafonte met Marguerite Byrd, an African-American teacher, whom he married in 1949. He struggled to find success, singing at New York clubs like the Royal Roost, where jazz legend Charlie “Bird” Parker played with him.

He moved from jazz to folk music before finally achieving great fame as the “Calypso King”. He was soon touring America and Europe, playing to sell-out audiences.

Belafonte divorced Marguerite in 1957, marrying a white dancer, Julie Robinson. He divorced Robinson in 2004, and four years later, married a white photograph­er, Pamela Frank, who survives him along with four children from his first two marriages.

After his singing success, Belafonte’s film and acting career took off. He starred in

Bright Road (1953) and a year later in the Oscar-nominated

Carmen Jones. He also won a Tony in 1954 for the musical

Almanac. He won an Emmy for the 1959 television show

Tonight with Belafonte.

A Grammy followed a year later for best folk performanc­e for the album Swing Dat Hammer. Another Grammy was awarded in 1965 for an album with Miriam Makeba,

An Evening with Belafonte/ Makeba. In 1972, Harry teamed up with Poitier — the first African-American man to win an Oscar — to produce Buck and the Preacher. His film career was limited because he refused stereotypi­cal roles available to black actors.

The sources of Belafonte’s social activism sprang from his poverty-stricken childhood; the widespread discrimina­tion he encountere­d in America’s segregated navy and apartheid society, despite his fame. The globe-trotting African-American singer-actor-activist, Paul Robeson, would become Harry’s main inspiratio­n, urging him to “sing your song and they Belafonte will want’to s 2011 know autobiogra­phy who you are”: advice that inspired both My Song, and the documentar­y about his activism, Sing Your Song, of the same year.

Belafonte met Martin Luther King junior in 1956, holding fundraisin­g concerts, and recruiting his Hollywood friends to join the March on Washington in 1963. He condemned the US trade embargo against Cuba, and defiantly visited Fidel Castro in Havana. He financiall­y backed the anti-apartheid AfricanAme­rican lobby group TransAfric­a, and supported the careers of SA musicians Miriam Makeba and Hugh Masekela.

For seven decades, Belafonte remained uncompromi­sing in his determinat­ion to act as America’s moral conscience. He described the warmongeri­ng US president George W Bush as “the greatest terrorist in the world”; noted that: “Barack Obama seems to lack a fundamenta­l empathy with the dispossess­ed”; and dismissed Donald Trump as “feckless and immature”.

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