Range on Harlem
Herb Jeffries, Hollywood’s first black singing cowboy, has
died of heart failure at the age of 100. Jeffries made movie history as the
black Roy Rogers, as a singing cowboy with a Clark Gable mustache and a white
hat – some clichés know no racial lines – in several low-budget 1930s Westerns
with all-black casts, including Harlem Rides the Range and The Bronze Buckaroo,
and he was a prominent part of Rhythm Rodeo. Jeffries, who had grown up on a
farm, came up with the idea after seeing The Terror of Tiny Town, the
all-midget Western and decided that niche oaters was the wave of the future. He
later performed as a baritone with the Duke Ellington Orchestra, with his biggest
hit being "Flamingo," which sold in the millions long before
million-selling recordings where commonplace. Jeffries was largely forgotten
until a 1992 retrospective at the Gene Autry Museum, the discovery of several
long-list prints of his films and noted film preservationist Mario Van Peebles’
use of clips from Jeffries’ films in his 1993 movie Posse.
Labels: blaxploitation, Western
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