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Date: | Mon, 4 Jul 1994 16:35:11 -0400 |
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State University of New York at Stony Brook
Stony Brook, NY 10025
Krin Gabbard
Associate Professor
Comparative Literature
212 749-1631
04-Jul-1994 04:30pm EDT
FROM: KGABBARD
TO: Remote Addressee ( [log in to unmask] )
Subject: Re: jazz soundtracks
Thanks to Blaine Allan for his posting about "Check and Double Check." Yes, it
is the Ellington band in a memorable performance scene, but it's not
Ellington's music on the background score elsewhere in the film. Much to his
chagrin, Duke was not commissioned to do a soundtrack by a major Hollywood
studio until 1959 when he did "Anatomy of a Murder." "Check and Double Check,"
by the way, is especially interesting in the context of recent discussions of
blackface. Two members of Ellington's orchestra, Barney Bigard (a light-
skinned creole from New Orleans) and Juan Tizol (Puerto Rican), appear in
blackface when the band is on the screen. And this in a film in which two
blacked-up white actors play Amos and Andy.
Krin Gabbard
SUNY Stony Brook
[log in to unmask]
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