This is 
Black History Month (
see link below) and today
 is the birthday of 
Sidney Poitier; he is 90 years old. WOW! I remember 
when he began acting. The first film I saw him in was 
Blackboard Jungle. This film not only introduced me to Poitier but 
rock 'n roll as well (
link below).     
So, I went trotting off to my 
vinyl LP collection to see how I could honor him and came up with this vinyl gem, 
Sidney Poitier in Poetry of the Negro, which features Poitier reading poems of the American Negro. Reading with him is 
Doris Belack
 who was an American character actress of stage, film and television. 
She was born on February 26, 1926. She died on October 4, 2011.  The 
album was produced by her husband, 
Philip Rose, who died on May 31, 2011.   
Rose met Poitier while producing, 
A Raisin in the Sun, a 1959 play written by 
Lorraine Vivian Hansberry. Rose owned a 
rhythm and blues label, 
Glory Records, and asked Poitier to record a spoken 
word album, 
Poetry of the Negro, with liner notes written by the then unknown Hansberry.  
The
 title of Hansberry’s play is taken from a 
Langston Hughes poem, called 
“Harlem” in which the poet asks, “What happens to a dream deferred?/ 
does it dry up/ like a raisin in the sun?” In one critic’s words, 
Hansberry wanted “to write a social drama about blacks that was good 
art” (
npr.org). Because the project was considered risky, investors were
 scarce, but idealistic record executive Philip Rose was willing to take
 a chance and produce the play. He knew he had an asset in the star 
power of his friend, 
Sidney Poitier, 
Hollywood’s first black leading 
man, whom he met after the actor’s phenomenal success as a young 
juvenile delinquent in 
Blackboard Jungle (1955) which featured the song, 
Rock Around the Clock (
link below).    
vinyl LP, back cover 
Hansberry was born May 19, 1930, in 
Chicago, where her father was a prominent 
real-estate broker and political activist who successfully challenged 
the segregated city’s restrictive real estate covenants. These laws 
denied equal housing to blacks, but Mr. Hansberry illegally moved his 
family to a white neighborhood and then successfully challenged the laws
 all the way to the 
Supreme Court. The Court stuck down the covenants in
 
Hansberry v. Lee, 1943. By the early 1950s, she was writing essays and 
reviews for leftist journals and was one of an avant-garde circle of 
black intellectuals. In 1953, she married a Jewish writer and activist, 
Robert Nemiroff, whom she met on a picket line. At 26, disgusted with 
the stereotyped portrayals of blacks on stage, she wrote 
A Raisin in the
 Sun, produced in 1959. It was the first play by a black woman produced 
on 
Broadway, and Hansberry was the first black author to win the 
New York Drama Critics’ Circle Award, defeating fellow nominees 
Eugene O’Neill, 
Archibald MacLeish and 
Tennessee Williams. Hansberry, erudite 
and outspoken, wrote only two complete plays before her career was cut short when she died of cancer at 34.   
The poets & their poems 
with links to their work
 
Sidney Poitier With 
Doris Belack – 
Sidney Poitier Reads Poetry Of The Negro
Label: 
Glory Records – GLP-1
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album
Country: US
Released: 1969
Genre: Jazz, Non-Music, Stage & Screen
Style: Poetry, Spoken Word
Tracklist: 
Side 1: 
A1     The Creation     4:15
A2     Mother To Son     2:00
A3     When Melinda Sings     3:06
A4     Debate Of Dark Brothers     1:06
A5     To John Keats, Poet At Springtime     3:15
A6     At Candle Lightin' Time     2:39
A7     Yet I Do Marvel     3:01
Side 2: 
B1     An Ante - Bellum Sermon     4:36
B2     Ere Sleep Comes Down To Soothe The Weary Eyes     4:16
B3     I, Too     00:37
B4     When You Have Forgotten Sunday     1:55
B5     The Debt     00:52
B6     Epigram     00:43
B7     We Wear The Mask     1:08
B8     Blues At Dawn     00:35
B9     Lift Every Voice     2:25
Credits: 
    Percussion, Piano – 
Specs Powell
Net links:
     
IMBD bio           
Sidney Poitier Filmography                  
Bill Haley ~ Rock Around the Clock             
Black History articles                
Happy birthday, Sidney!
         
Styrous® ~ Monday, February 20, 2017
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