Movers & Shakers: Greg Smith and LASAE

Greg Smith is the president of the Believe Foundation, an organization dedicated to providing high-quality arts programming to underserved communities, primarily through after school programs. Now, Believe has a new project coming down the pipeline: the Los Angeles School of Arts and Entertainment (LASAE) which plans to opens its doors Fall of 2013. This Wednesday, the board of LASAE goes before Inglewood Unified School Board to make its case for LASAE and needs community support to ensure that this school gets a chance to exist. Listen in as KC and Greg discuss the importance of a school like LASAE in the community and its impact on our children.

Feel free to show your support by attending the school board meeting this Wednesday in Inglewood at 401 S. Inglewood Avenue, Inglewood, CA 90301 at 7pm!

Black History: The Original Black Kings of Comedy

Bert Williams (1874-1922) was one of the preeminent entertainers of the Vaudeville era and one of the most popular comedians (of any race) at the time. He became the first black American to take a lead role on the Broadway stage, as well as the only black performer to sign with Ziegfeld Follies (1910-1918). Fellow vaudevillian W.C. Fields, who appeared in productions with Williams, described him as “the funniest man I ever saw – and the saddest man I ever knew.” Williams was a key figure in the development of African-American entertainment. In an age when racial inequality and stereotyping were commonplace, he became the first black American to take a lead role on the Broadway stage, and did much to push back racial barriers during his career.

Williams met George Walker in San Francisco in 1893 and the two formed what became the most successful comedy team of their time. They staged several vaudeville shows and full musical theater productions, including Senegambian Carnival (1897), The Policy Players (1899), The Sons of Ham (1900), In Dahomey (1902)…their biggest hit, Abyssinia (1906), and Bandana Land (1907). When George took ill and retired in 1908, Bert continued working and shared his earnings with him until he died in 1911.

Williams achieved great success performing in many of the Follies’ productions, making as much money as the president of the United States by playing a character that could best be described as the black counterpart to Charlie Chaplin’s Little Tramp. During summer breaks, he traveled to Europe and studied with the great French pantomimist Pietro, who, according to Williams, taught him that “the entire aim of art in the theater was to achieve simplicity.” In 1918, Williams discussed comedy as he understood it:

“All the jokes in the world are based on a few elemental ideas….Troubles are funny only when you pin them down to one particular individual. And that individual, the fellow who is the goat, must be the man who is singing the song or telling the story….It was not until I could see myself as another person that my sense of humor developed. For I do not believe there is any such thing as innate humor. It has to be developed by hard work and…I have studied it all my life.”

Bert Williams’s last show, considered one of his best, was Under the Bamboo Tree. Williams died in New York City on March 4, 1922 after contracting pneumonia while touring with that production in Detroit.  He was the original comic who never got any respect, an individual of great personal dignity who was never allowed to show it on stage.