Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Herb Jeffries Dead: Jazz Singer And Actor Known As 'The Bronze Buckaroo' Dies At 100

LOS ANGELES (AP)
 Herb Jeffries, the jazz singer and actor who performed with Duke Ellington and was known as the "Bronze Buckaroo" in a series of all-black 1930s Westerns, died of heart failure Sunday morning at a Los Angeles hospital. He was 100.
His death was confirmed by Raymond Strait, who worked with Jeffries on his not-yet-published autobiography titled "Color of Love."
With a mellow voice and handsome face, Jeffries became familiar to jazz fans, but segregation in the film industry limited his movie career. He scored a big hit with Ellington as the vocalist on "Flamingo," recorded in 1940 and later covered by a white singer, the popular vocalist Tony Martin.

Among the other songs he did with Ellington were "There Shall Be No Night" and "You, You Darlin'."

"The camaraderie in his band was like a bunch of guys in college," Jeffries recalled in the book "Off the Record: An Oral History of Popular Music." ''Ellington had a knack for developing talent and stars. ... He was more like a father to me than a boss."

Jeffries has been described as the only black singing cowboy star in Hollywood history and, more recently, after the deaths of Gene Autry, Roy Rogers and others, as the "last of the singing cowboys."

Sometimes billed as Herbert Jeffrey, he starred in four Westerns aimed at black audiences from 1937 to 1939: "Harlem on the Prairie," ''Two-Gun Man From Harlem," ''The Bronze Buckaroo" and "Harlem Rides the Range."

As The New York Times noted, the low-budget films (produced by a white man, Richard C. Kahn) are "notable less for what's in them than that they exist at all."

Jeffries starred as Bob Blake. The films featured his horse Stardusk, the vocal group the Four Tones, and comic relief from prolific character actor Mantan Moreland. Among the songs: "I'm a Happy Cowboy," ''Get Along Mule" and "(Got the) Payday Blues."

"The Bronze Buckaroo" was recently revived on a DVD release called "Treasures of Black Cinema."

Jeffries "did something outrageous, and then rode off into the sunset," actor-director Mario Van Peebles told People magazine in 2005. "He did us proud."

Jeffries remained active as a singer into his 80s and 90s, touring and putting out the 1995 CD "The Bronze Buckaroo (Rides Again)" and following it up in 2000, with "The Duke and I." Among the honors that came his way late in life was a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame, dedicated in 2004.

"I don't believe in age," Jeffries told The New York Times in 1995, when he was appearing at a local club. "I believe this magnificent thing we have on our shoulders can help you evolve," he said. "In jazz, we keep going. There's no such thing as retiring, or being retired, so you never feel unwanted or useless. And that keeps your body vital."

He was born in Detroit to a racially mixed couple, referring to himself in a 2004 interview with The Oklahoman as "an Italian-looking mongrel with a percentage of Ethiopian blood, which enabled me to get work with black orchestras."

He lamented the days touring in the South when he was with Earl Hines in the 1930s. Black audiences were made to stand separately off in a corner and not allowed to dance.

"I don't think anybody was thrilled about the conditions, but if you wanted to advance and develop you couldn't show anger," he said.

He made light of the covering of "Flamingo," too, recalling he joked with Martin that he knew Martin had copied him because "you made the same mistake in the lyrics that I did."

Jeffries told American Visions, a publication on African-American culture, in 1997 that he was inspired to seek backing for the cowboy movies after seeing a black boy crying because other children with him "wouldn't let him play cowboy. But in the real West, one of every four cowboys was black."

But he had no plans to star in them himself, he said, until the search for a suitable actor-singer-rider came up short and he embarked on a crash course on lasso handling and other Western skills.

Strait said Jeffries recently had several surgeries that "just wore him out." He added that Jeffries "believed in one world and one people and was one of the most generous people I've ever met. He was always funding something or doing something for kids."

Jeffries is survived by his fifth wife, Savannah; three daughters; and two sons.

Biographical material in this story was written by former AP staffer Polly Anderson
Thanx Polly



From a proud grandpa of that era : Poppa

Hollywood was indeed segragated seventy years ago. Jeffires was a good looking, talented man, but his skin wasn't the 'right' color. MGM used Lena Horne in musicals, but put her in numbers that could be cut out for prints that would be dstributed in the south. That's always been a major mind-boggler for me: who in their right mind would want to 'AVOID' looking at such an incredibly beautiful lady?
Proud to say I meet Herb Jeffries  and  Lena Horne in  Vegas many years ago ,  a real gentleman and as I  said  Lena  was  an incredible  beautiful  and  a gracious lady .

A proud granpa G.
 
 
 

4 comments:

  1. Hi Poppa,
    You are so cute . Why did you let Aunty take a picture of you hiding in the toilet ? Where is Man ?
    Poppa you are the man .
    Your granddaughter

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    1. Hello my dear granddaughter ,
      Cute that is me (laughing my butt off) Man is peeking out the door for his mama .
      I am the man , love you much.
      Poppa

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  2. It's beyond my comprehension how a beautiful, enormously talented woman like Lena Horne could be treated in such an insulting manner. I guess all black artists of her era ( Herb Jeffries included ) were treated this way. Shame on all of us for allowing it to happen.

    Is that really you in the tub HB?
    You have cute toes.
    Luv and hugs Butterfly

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    1. Hollywood has come a long way and still has a long way to go , remember Donald Sterling there is a lot more out there . I do not include myself in the group that allows it and my Lady I do not think you should allow yourself either . There are still white racist young and old that feel that way still ,

      Of course that is me in the tub . my daughter is still cursing because I worried the crap out of her to find me just the fight picture if she wanted me to give my opinion sometime .

      Of course I have cute toes and I have a cute gun (laughing my butt off).

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