The Zimbabwe Independent

Lena Horne first black actress to receive Broadway honour

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AMERICAN actress Lena Horne (pictured) has become the first black woman to have a Broadway theatre named in her honour.

e theatre, on West 47th Street, Manhattan in New York, was built in 1926 and is currently hosting the hit British musical Six.

It comes a couple of weeks after another Broadway theatre was named after Star Wars actor James Earl Jones.

Horne, who died in 2010, battled racial segregatio­n to win a major Hollywood film contract and later found internatio­nal fame as a singer.

She later became the first black woman to be nominated for a Tony Award, Broadway theatre’s highest honour, for her starring role in the 1957 calypso musical Jamaica.

In 1981, she received a special Tony Award for Lena Horne: Lady and Her Music, a one-woman Broadway show in which she sang and discussed the ups and downs of her life.

“She opened so many doors for us that we as people of colour can thank her for being a beacon of light,” singer and actress Vanessa Williams said.

Horne’s granddaugh­ter, Jenny Lumet, attended Wednesday night’s unveiling and said she was overwhelme­d by the honour.

“I didn’t quite realise how emotional it was until I started speaking about it,” she said.

“My grandmothe­r would have pretended not to be as

ethrilled as she was. But she would have been completely, completely thrilled.”

Born in 1917, Horne got her start in the chorus line of Harlem’s famed Cotton Club when she was a teenager. She soon became a popular singer, and MGM signed her to star in its movie musicals in 1942.

She was not the first black woman to land a studio contract — MGM had signed actress Nina Mae McKinney for five years in 1929 — but she was the first to make an impact.

In 1943, she played Selina Rogers in the all-black film musical Stormy Weather, and the title song became both a major hit and her signature tune.

However, she never became a fully-fledged film star. She later recalled that her appearance­s in all-star musicals like Two Girls And A Sailor and Ziegfeld Follies often amounted to a few minutes of screen time that could be easily cut when the movies played in America’s southern states.

When Horne’s contract ended, she became a successful theatre star, recording artist and civil rights advocate, taking part in the historic March on Washington in 1963 where Martin Luther King delivered his “I have a dream” speech.

She won four Grammy Awards, including a lifetime achievemen­t prize in 1989, while her 1957 live album, Lena Horne at the Waldorf-Astoria, was the best-selling record by a female singer in RCA Victor’s history.

When actress Halle Berry became the first black woman to win a best actress Oscar in 2002, she cited Horne as a pioneer who had paved the way for her breakthrou­gh.

However, Horne downplayed the scale achievemen­ts.

e newly-christened Lena Horne eatre was originally the Mansfield eatre. It was renamed in honour of the New York Times critic Justin Brooks Atkinson in 1960.

Horne’s name was selected to fulfil a promise made by Broadway’s three biggest landlords when black artists pressed for greater recognitio­n in the wake of the 2020 Black Lives Matter protests.

In September, the Shubert Organisati­on renamed its Cort

eatre in honour two-time Tony Award winner James Earl Jones. Jujamcyn eatres already had a venue named for American playwright August Wilson, who died in 2005. — BBC Online. often of her

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