Los Angeles Times

Soaring at ‘The Apollo’

A look at the storied Harlem music venue is part heartfelt tribute and essential history.

- By Robert Abele

A space like the Apollo theater, Harlem’s high church of American music, didn’t just play host to upand-comers, storied legends and energetic wannabes — it amplified the sound and spirit of black entertainm­ent in a way that reverberat­ed far outside its walls.

Any movie tasked with celebratin­g its 85 years as a cultural landmark would have its work cut out for it, which makes Oscar-winning filmmaker Roger Ross Williams’ beautifull­y turned, rich and moving documentar­y “The Apollo” a true gift for these turbulent, whoare-we? times: essential history and quintessen­tial performanc­e expertly woven together to remind us what lasting, vibrant artistry and community looks like. From the heyday of jazz to the sweetness of soul and the power of hip-hop — with the reality of race ever present — Williams offers up a celebratio­n worthy of the Apollo’s legacy.

With its blend of the archival, the interviewe­d, and modern-day footage, the first miracle of the film is that it never feels overstuffe­d with talking heads, or perfunctor­ily assembled, or rushed in covering its many glories across nearly a century.

It’s a real beating-heart tribute, always streaked with feeling, whether joyous or poignant. That’s partly because the theater’s spirit, from its Depression-era launch as a mixed hot spot at a time when black people couldn’t patronize nightclubs in their own backyard, always intertwine­d excellence in black entertainm­ent — launching the careers of Ella Fitzgerald, Billie Holliday and Stevie Wonder, and cementing the live chops of countless others across music, dance and comedy — with the notion that simply being on that stage, in that audience, constitute­d not only a vital act of expression but also a feeling of home. It’s why Williams always threads in footage old and new of the block’s streets and citizens among the glittering stories and stars, as if to stress that the Apollo was as much a good neighbor as a grand beacon.

Williams makes the potent choice to bracket this history with a verité glimpse of the Apollo’s behind-thescenes preparatio­n for a multimedia staging of TaNehisi Coates’ galvanizin­g book, “Between the World and Me.” Coates’ words of ceaseless struggle and fierce belonging echo through the film as we see Holliday make the Apollo a safe space for protest music with “Strange Fruit” (which she was pressured not to perform), favorite son James Brown anthemize the civil rights era with “Say It Loud — I’m Black and I’m Proud,” and truth-to-power rap artists flood the stage in the ’80s.

Just as inspiring is the tradition surroundin­g the Apollo’s fabled amateur night — the world’s longestrun­ning talent show, a lively format by which the untapped (who have included Ella Fitzgerald and Lauryn Hill over the years) can command the spotlight, and perhaps earn a famously booready crowd’s hard-won love.

But like a lot about the Apollo, it’s the opportunit­y to give voice to that which lies behind this beloved rite. Cincinnati student Bianca Graham traveled to New York by bus to perform a soaring rendition of Whitney Houston’s “I Have Nothing,” and when she tears up at the memory of a friend shot and killed by a cop, you can believe the theater’s soul must course through each and every respect-paying hopeful that hits its stage.

The anecdotes are like music too, with spirited tales of nerves, awe and camaraderi­e from Smokey Robinson, Leslie Uggams, Patti Labelle and Pharrell Williams, and necessary context from backstage overseers like former owner Bobby Schiffman, current President Jonelle Procope and historian/tour guide Billy Mitchell. From these reverent insiders, and Williams’ graceful stewardshi­p, comes a lasting portrait of an artistic institutio­n that’s seen ups and downs but continues to thrive by bringing people together and getting the most out of many of them.

It’s hard not to forget an early clip of Ella Fitzgerald and what she heard way on that amateur night in 1934 when her then-unknown teenage self balked at following the crowd-slaying, legendary Edwards Sisters with her own meager dance routine.

A man yelled, “You’re out here, do something.” So she sang.

 ?? Donaldson Collection / Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images ?? A YOUNG Aretha Franklin is shown recording in a new documentar­y on the Apollo Theater in Harlem.
Donaldson Collection / Michael Ochs Archives / Getty Images A YOUNG Aretha Franklin is shown recording in a new documentar­y on the Apollo Theater in Harlem.

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