The Mercury News

Louis Armstrong gets the last laugh

- By Alan Scherstuhl

The tapes are thrilling, revelatory, wrenching: the warm-gravel voice of Louis Armstrong, perhaps the most famous voice of the 20th century, speaking harsh truths about American racism, about the dehumanizi­ng hatred he and millions of others endured in a world he still, to the end, insisted was wonderful. He tells the stories — of a fan declaring “I don't like Negroes” to his face; of a gofer on a film set treating him with disrespect no White star would face — with fresh outrage and can-you-believe-this? weariness.

He also tells them with his full humor and showmanshi­p, his musicality clear in the rhythm of his swearing.

The public can hear these stories, privately recorded by Armstrong as part of his own lifelong project of self-documentat­ion, in the Sacha Jenkins documentar­y “Louis Armstrong's Black & Blues” (streaming on Apple TV+). Often, Armstrong recalls getting the last laugh on those who disrespect­ed him — he harangues that gofer, and the studio, too, telling both where to stick their movie.

It's no revelation that a Black man born less than 40 years after the abolition of slavery endured harrowing racism, or that stardom on par with Bing Crosby's and Frank Sinatra's offered him no exemption. Armstrong faced blowback in 1957 for speaking against discrimina­tion, and donated to the civil rights movement. Usually, though, he avoided controvers­y.

By the 1960s, Armstrong's reticence — as well as that wide-grinning, eye-rolling performanc­e style that echoes minstrelsy — inspired backlash, most painfully among younger jazz musicians who revered his recordings of the 1920s, the very headwaters of jazz.

Well into this millennium, defenses of Armstrong's later years have been, well, defensive. But Jenkins' film, following the lead of Ricky Riccardi's 2012 biography “What a Wonderful World: The Magic of Louis Armstrong's Later Years,” draws deeply on the Armstrong archives to make an assertive argument, often in Armstrong's own words, that the man called Pops was deeply committed to the cause of racial justice.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? The documentar­y “Louis Armstrong's Black and Blues” deals with the harsh truths about American racism.
FILE PHOTO The documentar­y “Louis Armstrong's Black and Blues” deals with the harsh truths about American racism.

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