Sunday, May 25, 2014

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.

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