Click here to read about 'JAMAICA'

Lena Horne receives honorary degree

By Gloria Monti

From the newsletter "Yale Film News", Fall 1998

Thanks, Gloria, for making this article available to this site!


Lena Horne received an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters at Yale's 297th Commencement on May 25, 1998. Her citation read :

You once said you wanted to be a teacher instead of a singer. You have been both, because we have learned from you, from your music, from your films, and from your social activism. In the stormy weather of a segregated society, you were a pioneer who refused to be stereotyped. A singer of legendary status, your artistic achievement continues to amaze and delight us, winning new generations of admirers. You are elegant, gifted, and courageous, and we sing your praises by conferring this degree of Doctor of Humane Letters.
About the Author

Gloria Monti (MC 85, Ph.D. 99) is a visiting lecturer and DUS in Yale's Film Studies Program this year. "Yale channeled my interest in film into an academic pursuit while I was an undergraduate," she notes. Gloria then went on to receive an M.A. in Film Studies from University of Iowa before returning to Yale's American Studies program as a graduate student in 1989. "I thought Yale was about to start a graduate program in film studies when I came back," she recalls. Gloria's dissertation, "This Ain't You Girl!: Staging Impersonations of Race in American Cinema" looks at the intersection of gender and race in several key films of the classic Hollywood cinema, from Joseph Von Sternberg's "Blonde Venus" (1932) to Douglas Sirk's "Imitation of Life" (1959).

Lena Horne was born in Brooklyn on June 30, 1917. She started her career at sixteen, as a dancer in the Cotton Club's chorus line in New York. As she has unequivocally put it : "I worked for white hoods who hired the best Negro talent of the day but wouldn't let Negro people into the club, though it was smack in the middle of Harlem." Horne quickly moved to featured numbers and was spotted by Broadway producers and playwrights who eventually offered her parts in all-black cast revues.

In 1935, Horne left dancing and became a singer in the black band Noble Sissle's Society Orchestra. She made her film debut in 1938 with "The Duke is Tops", an independent all-black film. In 1940, she joined Charlie Barnet and his Orchestra, one of the first white bandleaders who hired African-American musicians. Nonetheless, she left after one season, as touring with the band in racially segregated America proved quite exacting for her. Horne could not stay at the same hotel as the other band members, could not use the theatre's dressing room and had to change in the bus, and could not sit on stage with the other musicians between musical numbers.

In 1942, Horne signed a 7-yr contract with M-G-M, the first African-American performer ever to land a long-term contract with a major studio. Moreover, built into Horne's contract was the provision that she would not be playing domestics or jungle native roles. In fact, studio executives thought that she would be more marketable if they passed her off as Latin-American : she should change her name, learn Spanish, and study a new repertoire. When Horne refused this proposition, the studio appointed Max Factor to create an especially designed make-up to darken her skin - "Light Egyptian". Ironically, this "corrective" device turned against the very person for whom it had been designed, as the studio used it to paint white actors dark and gave them the parts that might have gone to Horne instead. During her tenure in Hollywood she made 13 films and except for the all-black cast "Cabin in the Sky" (1943) and "Stormy Weather" (1943), Horne appeared in featured specialty numbers without speaking lines. "I never felt like I really belonged to Hollywood. At that time, they didn't know what to do with me, a black performer. So, I usually just came on, sang a song, and made a quick exit," commented Horne (in the documentary "That's Entertainment III"). Her appearances were designed to exist independently of the narrative : musical sequences that could easily end up on the cutting room floor without compromising the story line. In fact, these scenes were often removed from the films when the pictures were shown to Southern audiences.

After playing Julie's role and singing "Can't Help Loving Dat Man" in an excerpt from "Show Boat" for "Till the Clouds Roll By" (1946), Horne had little doubt that she would be chosen to play that character again in MGM's remake of "Show Boat" (1951). Instead, Horne lost the part to her best friend Ava Gardner. Realizing that her film career was not going to bring any more than bit parts, Horne left Hollywood and went back to singing, performing in the top night spots.

While the Fifties brought tremendous success to Horne's singing career, she encountered serious political difficulties that barred her from any other professional engagements. She was blacklisted because of her left-wing associations (notably her friendship with Paul Robeson) and that meant no film work in Hollywood, no radio and television broadcasts, and no music recording. Horne was also listed in "Red Channels", a publication that kept a count of "subversive" people in the entertaining industry. By the mid-Fifties the situation improved : she was called back to Hollywood to appear in a film in 1956 ("Meet Me in Las Vegas"), and her name was lifted from "Red Channels" the year after. During the Sixties, Horne was actively involved in the Civil Rights movement. She returned to the stage in 1981 with "Lena Horne : The Lady and her Music", which became the longest-running one-woman show in the history of Broadway. She earned a special Tony Award, a Drama Desk Award, and a citation from the New York Drama Critics' Circle. She also returned to the screen occasionally : her most recent film was "That's Entertainment III" (1994). And she continued to record albums. Her latest one, "Lena Horne : Being Myself", was released this past June. Being herself, indeed.

Miss Horne lives in New York City today.

Books

Filmography

Music

Message Board

Sign/View My Guestbook

Home


In Her Own Words

"My life has been about surviving. Along the way, I also became an artiste".

On her marriage with Lennie Hayton
"We were caught in three different kinds of prejudice - against Negroes, against Jews, and against mixed marriages".

"I married Lennie, I guess, for selfish reasons. I knew that a white man could get me into places that a black man couldn't. But you know - I learned to love him completely."

"Everybody who was not madly in love with Lena Horne should report to his undertaker and immediately turn himself in". -- Ossie Davis on Lena as a pinup girl