Stuff You Should Know - Harry Belafonte: The Real Deal
Episode Date: February 18, 2025Harry Belafonte is most famous for introducing America to calypso music, with hits like Day-O and Jump In the Line. But he was also one of the most earnest and hard-working fighters of injustice Ameri...ca has ever produced and he deserves to be celebrated.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hey, it's Alec Baldwin this past season on my podcast. Here's the thing
I spoke with more actors musicians policymakers and so many other
Fascinating people like writer and actor Dan Aykroyd. I love writing more than anything
You're left alone, you know, you do three hours in the morning
You write three hours in the afternoon go pick up a kid from school and write at, and after nine hours you come out with seven pages, and then you're moving on.
And actor and comedian Jack McBrayer.
The most important aspect is the collaboration with people that I like, I trust, are talented.
That has been the most amazing gift to me about this crazy business that we've chosen.
Meeting these people who have such diverse talents
and you're able to create something together.
Listen to Here's the Thing
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Black History Month is here
and we're excited to kick off season four
of I Didn't Know, Maybe you didn't either this season.
We're shining a spotlight on revolutionary women who redefined excellence.
Give grace.
Wish her her flowers.
Next time you see the American flag.
You just remember 16 year old black woman help to make it happen.
Listen to I didn't know maybe you didn't either from the black effect podcast
network on the I heart radioRadio app, Apple Podcast,
or simply wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to Stuff You Should Know, a production of iHeartRadio.
Hey, yo, and welcome to the podcast.
I'm Josh and there's Chuck and Jerry's here too. Which
is appropriate because this is a barn burner of an episode if you ask me.
Did you say hey yo?
I did.
Very nice.
I gotta freshen it up here there sometimes. It's starting to get a little stale.
No.
You don't think so?
No. I mean, you can freshen it up, but it's not stale.
Okay.
All right.
Okay, I like that.
If you have any ideas to freshen it up ever,
you know, lay them on me.
All right.
Let's see.
We're coming up on year 17.
Just want to point that out.
Yeah.
What is it in April?
Yeah.
Pretty cool.
Yeah.
And today also we are talking about Harry Belafonte.
And part of the reason why, but not the full reason why,
because this is, he was a perennial man,
a man of all seasons.
But it's Black History Month, so we wanted to profile him,
at least in part, for Black History Month.
Yeah, and he's awesome. And, you know, I watched that
We Are the World documentary not too long ago.
Oh, yeah, is it good?
Yeah, it's really good.
I think you would enjoy it.
Okay, I probably would then.
If you think I would.
Yeah, it's actually really, really good.
And you walk away from it thinking,
well, thinking like Harry Belafonte's awesome,
along with a lot of other people,
but you walk away thinking,
man, I just want to be friends with Lionel Richie.
Oh, yeah? I can imagine.
He's just the coolest, and he tells really great story.
He's a great storyteller and funny.
And like, I was like, man, Lionel Richie is awesome and fun.
That's pretty cool, man. That's awesome.
Yeah, there's a rumor that seems fairly substantiated that he's Kylie Jenner's real father.
Oh, really?
Yeah, apparently there's a lot of swinging going on out in that neighborhood back in the day.
I don't know what Kylie Jenner looks like.
Does she look like, is it sort of like Frank Sinatra's son, Ronan Farrow?
No, nothing like that.
And actually, I'm not sure any living human knows
exactly what Kylie Jenner looks like, so who's to say?
Oh, okay.
Well, let's talk about Harry B. then, the guy.
I love this guy.
Yeah, so Harry Belafonte, I was trying to figure out
how we can name this, and we might just say Harry Belafonte
or something like that, But we could also say
The thinking person's saint. Yeah, that's good. The real deal
Yeah, or a genuinely great person. Yeah
entertainer slash activist
Yeah, like he he did it all he was just one of these people who you people who, when you approach an iconoclast,
especially one who's just revered universally,
and you start picking at the edges,
you're like, oh my God, I hope it's not garbage.
Right.
And you just don't get to that point.
Like he was through and through a genuinely good person.
And one of the reasons why you don't get to
pick off the outer coating and
find garbage underneath is because he was just pretty much fully transparent his
whole life. And, um, he just, he was who he was and he wasn't apologetic for it.
And he just put it all out there based on his, his beliefs and his beliefs tended
to, um, coincide with the right side of history typically.
He saw people who were downtrodden being taken advantage of,
being discriminated against,
and he wanted to go help make that better.
Yeah, yeah, and as you'll see, you know,
throughout his career, he missed opportunities
because he refused to cave, lost opportunities,
had opportunities taken away from him.
And he was just like, you know,
I'm gonna be Harry Belafonte,
and no one is gonna change that.
Yeah.
Career be damned.
Let's kick the whole thing off, right?
Because for those of you who don't know,
we should probably say Harry Belafonte
is a legendary entertainer.
That's what he's most widely known for.
And most widely known for the song Dayo, which is why I said,
Heyo, come circle now in the banana boat song.
Yeah.
Um, and if you don't know what we're talking about still, just pause this,
go into YouTube, type in Dayo, look for the original version and listen to it
and come back and you will be pretty much as versed as you need to be going into
this episode.
Yeah.
Uh, you know, actor, stage performer, as you need to be going into this episode.
Yeah, you know, actor, stage performer,
Broadway star, EGOT winner.
Yeah.
If you don't know any EGOT,
that's if you have won the Emmy Grammy Oscar and Tony
in your lifetime, which Mr. Belafonte did.
It's a rare feat indeed, but he was born
to a very humble upbringing in March of 1927,
Harold George Belafonte Jr. in Harlem, New York City,
to Caribbean parents, his father Harold,
who was actually a cook on a banana boat,
was from Martinique and his mother, Melveen,
was from Jamaica and he was raised in Harlem
until he was eight, at which time his mom said,
you and your little brother Dennis
are going to live in my hometown in Jamaica.
And so from the ages of eight to what, like 12-ish,
he lived in Jamaica, and that's where he really
sort of saw the light as far as this Caribbean folk music
that would become his staple. Yeah, and he was raised by his grandmother there. sort of saw the light as far as this Caribbean folk music
that would become his staple.
Yeah, and he was raised by his grandmother there,
his maternal grandmother, Melveen's mom,
was a white woman, a Jamaican white woman,
and she really raised him to kind of love all people,
which is a big early influence.
And then another influence of living in Jamaica
at the time was he saw black professionals.
He saw black doctors, black lawyers, completely competent, completely normal.
There wasn't anything wrong with them.
They were just black doctors and black lawyers and et cetera.
And it really kind of served as a foil to him, uh, to how, how things were back in
America, which was very discriminatory at the time.
Uh, he was smack dab in the middle of the Jim Crow era in the United States.
Yeah, so he hears this music down there, the sort of call and response work songs that, I mean, that's where the song...
Should we talk about Dayo real quick? I mean, as we're getting going?
Yeah, let's.
Yeah, because if you've heard the song, you might be thinking, and you never did any research,
you wonder, what the heck is he singing about?
Right.
You know, come Mr. Tally Man, tally me banana, daylight comes and we want to go home.
It was a work song, and it was a call and response song of these guys who worked on
banana boats, and they would work through the night, and the morning is when they were
allowed to leave if the tally man, the person who counted the bananas, tallied that they had enough
bananas to, you know, tally the end of their work day.
Yeah, and that's what they would get paid based on, how much they had loaded
overnight. So you couldn't leave until the guy came along and said you loaded
five million tons of bananas, here's your $50 or whatever, then you could go
home. I had no idea that's what that song was about.
Yeah, I mean, I didn't know what a tally man was,
but it makes perfect sense to someone who tallies.
Exactly.
And I love that song even more now,
and it just really kind of buttoned some stuff up.
Because up to that point, like, I had never looked up
the lyrics, and I was just going by ear.
My ear's not super good at picking out lyrics, so.
What were you singing?
I don't even remember what I was,
I was just listening and it was all just kind of like
vocal sounds.
It was like the cock-toot twins or something like that.
He was just making sounds,
not actually saying anything or saying words.
So now that I know there's a story behind it, I love it.
Yeah, pretty cool.
So he ends up back in Harlem though, supposedly had dyslexia.
So he wasn't a great student.
So at 17 years old, he quit school.
He joined the Navy in 1944.
And this was another sort of eye-opening experience
because he served in World War II in an all-black unit.
And at first was like, you know,
I don't like the segregation of the army here.
But he met a lot of guys in that unit
that turned him on to a lot of stuff
that kind of laid the groundwork
for what would be his social awareness and activism.
Yeah, they turned him on to books like
The Soul of Black Folk, The Souls of Black Folk
by W.B. Du Bois.
And like that combined with his early upbringing where he was able to
juxtapose society in Jamaica and society in America.
Like this really kind of got things started.
So by the time he met his wife, his first wife, Marguerite Bird, he was radicalized
at this point I saw it described as like he was full on like civil rights movement
guy and this is the 40s, so this is before the civil rights movement
had really kind of started in earnest, at least the version that we're,
you know, we think of and we think of it historically.
And Marguerite was not that way at all.
She was from an upper middle class black family.
She was a sorority girl in Virginia.
She was just raised in the type of conservative household where it's like,
you just trust the system.
You trust society.
If the news tells you something that's true.
And she and Harry were almost like foils to, to an extent.
She saw her role as taking care of this misguided, angry man and trying to help him through life.
And I'm sure he saw his role in part as opening her eyes.
But the big thing that came out of their union was his first two kids.
Yeah, he had two daughters with Marguerite, Adrienne, and of course Sherry, who went on
to become a successful actor herself.
And then served his time in the Navy.
They eventually lived in Harlem, you know, as a family.
And he worked as a janitor's assistant
at an apartment building.
And that's when another sort of monumental moment
in his life happened.
He fixed the blinds in someone's apartment,
in a tenant's apartment there.
And just as a thank you, they gave him,
they gifted him some tickets to the theater,
to the American Negro Theater,
which he had never seen live theater before like that.
Never seen, you know, black actors on stage performing.
And to say he caught the bug is an understatement.
He immediately tried to get a job there,
applied to be a stagehand at that theater.
And this is one of those life things where you're just like, are you kidding me?
This really happened?
He got that job and another young janitor there, his name was Sidney Poirier.
And he's just incredible.
Like what are the odds that these two incredible talented performers,
you know, get jobs as like stagehands
and janitors at this theater when they were just in their,
I guess, early 20s?
Yeah, and they both did so because they wanted to do
whatever they could to get their foot in the door
into theater, the world of theater.
I saw somewhere it mentioned that when they were just
two broke stagehands, they loved the theater so much
that they would pool their money together
to buy a single ticket to Broadway shows,
and then one would see one act,
and then they would switch off,
and the other would see the second act or whatever.
Amazing.
Yeah, I mean, you really love the theater.
Like you said, he caught the bug
if you're doing stuff like that.
He also enrolled in a really,
that's the measuring stick, by the way,
for whether you love theater or not.
Oh, if you just go to one act and split it with your friend.
Right.
He also enrolled in a legendary acting workshop
that was held at the New School for years.
Some of his classmates were Walter Mathau.
Have you seen, did you see the documentary
Sing Your Song about him? Not Walter Mathau, but-hmm. Have you seen, did you see the documentary, sing your song about him?
Not Walter Mathau, but about Bielofonte?
I didn't know Mathau was a singer.
No, I didn't see that yet.
It's good.
I'm going to.
It's good, but they show like some stills from that workshop and there's young Walter
Mathau.
He looks like some doofy 20-year-old Walter Mathau.
It's pretty great.
Except he looked 50 when he was 20.
Yeah, pretty much already, yeah.
But he has like a cowlick and he's wearing like a heavy flannel shirt, how it's pretty great. Except he looked 50. Yeah, pretty much already, yeah.
But he has like a cowlick and he's wearing
like a heavy flannel shirt, like he just walked
out of the woods of Minnesota or something.
I love it.
He was also in class with Tony Curtis, Marlon Brando,
and then the future, Dorothy Petrillos-Bornak,
also known as B. Arthur.
Oh, then there's Maude.
Can you imagine you go to class and that's who you're in class with?
But they don't mean anything yet.
They're all just acting students.
Yeah.
And I'm sure Belafonte is like, this Brando guy's got some promise.
Yeah.
They actually became pretty good friends.
Yeah.
Brando's.
He's worth an episode at some point, to say the least.
I think we could do just one episode on Don Juan de Marco. Right. So Harry Belafonte's in the new school.
He's doing what you do in theater school like that.
You're doing movement and voice, and eventually
like some singing.
And he was like, oh, wait a minute.
I can sing pretty good too.
And everyone else said, yeah, you can sing pretty good.
And you're handsome to a fault.
So you've kind of got it all going on. And everyone else said, yeah, you can sing pretty good, and you're handsome to a fault.
So you've kind of got it all going on.
There weren't a ton of roles for black men
in the theater at the time, or at least,
and this is something that we'll see he did
throughout his career, not the kind of roles
that he wanted to take that he thought were,
you know, dignified, I guess is the right word.
Yeah.
So he's like, I'm not gonna play the parts
that are available to me, I'm going to start singing. So he went to jazz clubs like the legendary Blue Note,
would sing jazz standards on stage. And then in the 1940s, spurred by the interest in,
it was like a renewed interest in square dancing and folk dancing at the time that led to
what was called the folk music revival. This was in the early 1940s in Greenwich Village, which, you know,
would eventually culminate in the sort of the peak of that movement in the mid-60s with
people like Pete Seeger and Bob Dylan. It all started in the early 1940s with people
like Harry Belafonte going to the Village Vanguard,
this legendary folk music club,
and seeing Lead Belly perform and was like,
all right, well now we're onto something here.
It's all happening and I'm right in the epicenter of it.
Yeah, because like you said, he wasn't happy
with singing jazz standards or pop music,
despite the fact that I saw that he was backed
at some points by Charlie Parker, the famous drummer Max Roach, and Miles Davis, all his young musicians. And he was
like, nah, let me go on to folk music. And he got so heavy into folk music that he spent his time
researching folk songs at the Library of Congress to expand his repertoire. That's how into folk
music he got. And he was so broke that he would find somebody
to split a ticket into the Library of Congress's archives
and would research for an hour
and then they trade off and do the next hour.
And that means you're really into folk music.
That's how we do our research, right?
That's right.
We just trade off.
It was around this time that he met
a pretty monumental figure in his life.
It was one of his idols.
It was an actor and singer named Paul Robeson.
And he was most famous probably at the time at least for his version of Old Man River
from Showboat, from the musical Showboat.
And Harry was like, yeah, nuts with this jazz stuff.
I'm into the traditional music.
I'm into folk. I can, you know, I'm trying to find my own voice
and he found that in what ended up being sort of like
the calypso folk music of the Caribbean,
you know, going back to his roots.
Right, and we'll get into that a little more in a minute,
but just kind of progressing on with his early career.
He essentially, not just his singing voice, but his stage presence, his presence was monumental,
but also he used it, his movements and sometimes props and stuff on the stage to kind of tell the
story that this folk song was trying to tell. So his act was just a sensation,
like basically out of the gate.
And he very quickly got picked up and put onto Broadway,
this time from the stage.
And the first thing I think he was in
was John Murray Anderson's Almanac,
which was a musical review in 1953.
And he did such a good job that his first time out,
he wins a Tony.
Not only does he win a Tony,
he's the first black man to win a Tony. Not only does he win a Tony, he's the first black man to win a Tony.
Yeah, 1954, best featured actor in a musical.
And not only that, but around the same time,
in 53, he made his first two movies
with Dorothy Dandridge.
And the second of those, Carmen Jones,
Dorothy Dandridge became the first African-American woman
nominated for a Best Actress Oscar.
So he's among this group of young African American entertainers that are just knocking
doors down left and right and getting, you know, real recognition kind of for the first
time.
Yeah.
And this is the early 50s.
That's right.
Let's take a little break and we'll come back
and talk a little more about his Calypso stuff.
Yeah, and we should mention before we break here
that his marriage to Marguerite was dissolving at the time,
but he would go on to marry again, as we'll see.
But maybe we should take that break.
You wanna take a break?
Yeah, let's take a break.
We'll be right back.
We will. Learning stuff with Joshua and Charles.
Stuff you should know.
Jon Stewart is back at The Daily Show
and he's bringing his signature wit and insight
straight to your ears with The Daily Show
Ears Edition podcast.
Dive into Jon's unique take on the biggest topics in politics, entertainment,
sports, and more.
Joined by the sharp voices of the show's correspondents and contributors.
And with extended interviews and exclusive weekly headline roundups,
this podcast gives you content you won't find anywhere else.
Ready to laugh and stay informed? Listen on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Yo, what up? It's your girl Jess Hilarious,
and I think it's time to acknowledge
that I'm not just a comedian.
It's time to add uncertified therapists to my credentials,
because each and every Wednesday,
I'm fixing your mess on carefully reckless
on the Black Effect Podcast Network.
Got problems in your relationship?
Come to me.
Your best friend acting shady?
Come to me.
Thinking about cursing that one stank auntie out
at the next family gathering?
Do it.
But come to me before you do,
because I cussed all mine out before.
You wanna fight your coworkers?
Come to me.
Baby daddy mad because you got a boyfriend? Come to me. Thought you was the father, but your coworkers? Come to me. Baby daddy mad because you got a boyfriend?
Come to me.
Thought you was the father but you not?
Come to me.
I can't promise I won't judge you, but I can guarantee that I will help you.
As a daughter, a sister, a mother, and an entrepreneur, I've learned a lot in life.
So I'm using my own perspective and experiences to help you fix your mess.
Send me your situation and let's fix it as a family.
Listen to Can't Carefully Reckless
on the Black Effect Podcast Network,
iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to My Legacy.
I'm Martin Luther King III,
and together with my wife, Andrea Waters King,
and our dear friends, Mark and Craig Kilburger,
we explore the personal journeys
that shape extraordinary lives.
Each week, we'll sit down with inspiring figures like David Oyelowo, Mel Robbins, Martin Sheen,
Dr. Sanjay Gupta, and Billy Porter. And they're plus one, they'll ride or die,
as they share stories never heard before about their remarkable journey.
Listen to My Legacy on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
This is My Legacy.
Okay, Chuck.
So, we're talking Calypso now.
Um, it's really, really difficult to understate like how big of a star Harry
Belafonte became thanks to Calypso music.
Calypso music is like this traditional Caribbean music, typically folk songs,
work songs, call and response is a big one.
So the people in the chorus seeing like daylight come
and we want to go home.
That's like the response where Harry Belafonte's singing
the call part, right?
It's just traditional work song stuff.
Come on.
So he starts out this whole jam where he is playing folk music
at the Village Vanguard, goes onto Broadway, starts singing some of this folk, is playing folk music at the village vanguard, goes onto Broadway,
starts singing some of this folk, like Caribbean folk music. And within a couple of years, he's on
a NBC show doing the same thing. And Dave helped us out with this. And he makes a point that had
it not been for a guy, an artist who went by Lord Burgess, but his real name was Irving Burgey, Irving Burgey, who was also a Caribbean-American who
was raised in New York.
Also being into Calypso at the same exact time
and then meeting Harry Belafonte and then collaborating,
it probably would not have taken off.
But thanks to Lord Burgess and then a playwright friend
of Harry Belafonte's named William Attaway,
working together, rewriting some of these traditional songs,
rearranging them to make them peppier, a little poppier.
Like, they made Calypso, like, they just,
they made it way more palatable to Americans,
way more dancing and just way more infectious
than other people who'd recorded
some of these same songs previously had.
Yeah, and you know, Banana Boat was a cover song.
It's an old school song that had been around since the turn of the 20th century.
And like you said, they had a more upbeat version and it was a huge, huge hit.
He got a little, you know, as we'll see, there are people within some of the communities he even admired
and worked with that often didn't love him back as much.
Calypso was one of them, some traditional Calypso purist,
apparently, especially in Trinidad, where Calypso was born,
were like, hey, this guy's coming in, he's in New York,
he's not a real Calypsoanian, and, you
know, he's kind of changing it up, adding like American folk sort of interest to it.
And he was like, you know what, I think in 1959 in a New York Times interview, he said,
purism is the best cover-up for mediocrity.
There's no change.
We might as well just go back to the first, ugh, which may have been the first song,
or which must have been the first song.
And I think at which time Tuk Tuk,
a tear rolled down his cheek.
Yeah.
And he went back to the fire.
He said, that was my number one song.
Yeah.
But Harry was like, you know, I'm taking it.
I'm making it popular.
I'm making it my own.
I'm finding my own voice.
And it's, you know, it's my version
of Calypso folk music.
Yeah, I think also he was criticized by Trinidadians
for being known as the King of Calypso.
They're like, we have our own King of Calypso competition
every year, and you ain't it.
And he's like, so?
And they just couldn't come back with anything after that,
so the whole beef ended right there.
His 1956 album, Calypso, came out after that. So the whole beef ended right there.
His 1956 album, Calypso, came out after that TV special. It was a huge, huge hit.
It stayed number one for 38 weeks,
knocked Elvis out of the number one spot at the time,
and became the very first record in history
to sell one million copies in its first year out.
Yes, that was just in the US alone.
It did the same thing in the UK.
And Chuck, one of the songs on this album was Dayo, right?
Yeah.
Dayo itself sold a million copies just to the 45.
So just the single, right?
I can see just the single selling a million copies and then the album suffering because of that.
The album continued to sell as well.
It's crazy how nuts for Harry Belafonte,
the United States and a lot of other parts of the world too,
were at that time.
Like he just blew up.
You said it was number one on the charts for 38 weeks.
Not on the charts for 38 weeks. Not on the charts for 38 weeks.
The number one album in the United States
for like the better half of a year.
No one does that.
That's crazy.
Yeah, it was incredible.
He was one of the biggest performers in America
all of a sudden.
One of the biggest singing stars.
Big crossover success, obviously.
And for all of that, this is how he was treated on the road.
He would not be allowed to stay in the hotels when he performed in Vegas because of segregation.
When he was touring the South with the Broadway show Almanac, a state trooper threatened to shoot him
in a whites-only bathroom.
In LA, he was stopped by the cops for just taking a walk
through Beverly Hills at night.
So these are the kinds of,
this was the world he was living in.
Even one of the biggest stars in the world was not immune
to the just blatant racism that was going on.
Yes, absolutely.
That didn't stop him though, didn't discourage him.
Like he found it personally discouraging,
but he didn't behave, he didn't acquiesce basically.
Yeah.
One of the things he did was he took a role,
and this is very much in line with his decision making as far as his career went, uh, which we'll talk
about a little more in a second, but he, um, he took a role called, uh, or in a
movie called Island in Island of the sun.
It's from 1957 and in it he has an, an insinuated, um, romance with a white woman, Joan Fontaine.
And they don't touch, they don't kiss, there's nothing like that.
The closest to a kiss that happens is they share a sip from a coconut.
Like one of them takes a sip, hands it to the other one, and then she takes a sip.
That's the closest thing to an onscreen kiss that there was. That's not close to a kiss at all.
No, but it was so groundbreaking
that the South Carolina legislature introduced a bill,
I don't know if they passed it,
that would fine any theater in South Carolina
that showed Island in the Sun.
That's how controversial that movie was.
And it sounds so tame that it's actually preposterous
and like embarrassing now,
but that was at the forefront of pushing the envelope
as far as race relations in America went.
And that's why Harry Belafonte was like,
yes, give me that role.
I will totally take that role.
Yeah, for sure.
In real life, IRL, he married his second wife
around the same time.
Her name was Julie Robinson.
She was a dancer and she was white.
And they were probably,
I would not even say one of the most,
they were probably the most prominent interracial couple
in America at the time.
For sure.
She was also Brando's girlfriend when they met.
Look out Marlon.
Harry Belafonte, pretty handsome guy.
Oh man, beyond handsome.
Yeah.
So Chuck, when we were just talking about Islands in the Sun,
I was saying that Harry Belafonte would totally choose a role
that pushed the envelope for race relations.
Not to stick it in the eye of white America, but to push things forward and
just basically say black people are people too, let's portray them as such on
the screen.
Okay.
Yeah.
In doing that, he had to choose over and over and over again between advancing
his career and standing by his values and without missing a single opportunity,
he stood by his values every time.
Yeah, I mean, he was offered,
and this is kind of what I was alluding to earlier,
he was offered roles.
He called them Uncle Tom roles,
and he said that's about all you could get
at one point in Hollywood or on stage.
And he just wouldn't play those roles.
He, you know, it depends on who you are
and where you draw the line.
And I mean, that's where he drew his line.
His good friend Sidney Poitier would take
not necessarily those roles,
but other roles that Harry Belafonte
didn't think had enough sort of nuance for a black actor
or spoke to his truth.
Sometimes his friend Sidney Poitier would take those roles,
not in any way like a sellout or anything like that.
He had his own ideas of how to advance the cause
and advance his career and stay in the limelight
so he could do his good work as well.
But they were rivals in a way, but also best friends.
Yeah, exactly, but certainly professional rivals
because almost invariably, the roles
that Belafonte passed on would go to Poitier,
because like you said, he would take these roles.
And he was, he became, as a result, the ambassador
of black America to white America,
because these roles he was taking in the early 60s,
these films were written to advance
the cause of black civil rights in the early 60s, these films were written to advance the cause of black
civil rights in the United States. And Sidney Poitier is like, yes, put me out there. Tell
me what we need to do and let's show these Americans that black people are people too.
And like you said, Bellifani was like, there's just, it's still missing some stuff. And like
Lilies of the Field is a good example. It's from 1963. Um, it starred Sidney Poitier.
He went on to win an Oscar for it.
Um, and he plays a black man who is helping Nazi nuns
hide from the communists.
And the reason Bellafonte passed on it is because he said that this black man
has like no background, no history, not really a human.
He said, um, to Henry Louis Gates and Gates Jr. in 1996 in the New Yorker,
it's a really good article, he said he didn't kiss anybody,
he didn't touch anybody, he had no culture,
he had no history, he had no family, he had nothing.
So he was like not even a caricature of a black person,
he was like human being happens to be black, go. You know? And that just was not nearly enough
for what Harry Belafonte was willing to take on as an actor.
So he would just let these things come and go
and pass on them, or else he would try it,
push the envelope, that thing would get canceled,
and he'd just move on.
He never, ever went to Hollywood, you know,
on his knees or asking. like, they came to him
and he would either pass or not,
based on what kind of, how willing they were
to portray black people in that film.
Yeah, highly principled decision making career-wise.
Yes, that's very-
Which is tough to do, period, but very tough to do
trying to make it in a cutthroat business
like Hollywood, you know?
For sure, man.
So in 56, this was kind of right around the time
he had gotten married and that Islands in the Sun
had come out.
Just before that, he got a phone call
from Martin Luther King Jr.
And they ended up meeting in person
and having a four hour meeting on their first meeting.
And this is sort of what lit the fire for Belafonte to really, really get into very
public civil rights work.
It was his awakening in a lot of ways.
And he wasn't just like, yeah, you know, I'll show up and I'll be a celebrity face here
and there.
He was bailing civil rights leaders out of jail.
He and Sidney Poitier were smuggling cash, 70 grand, into Mississippi during the Freedom
Rides and with the Freedom Schools.
I think we did a whole episode on the Freedom Schools at one point.
He didn't just show up at the March on Washington.
He was one of the organizers. So he was, he was in deep doing the hard work.
Yeah, he looked out for MLK's family during MLK's life, but also like he funded his children's
education. He took out a huge insurance, life insurance policy against MLK, and then he just was there
for the family afterward.
Like he kind of stepped in when MLK was assassinated.
So he certainly walked the walk.
He was at all these sit-ins and rallies and marches,
and he just was there.
Like you said, he wasn't just a figurehead.
He didn't just show up for the press. He was, like you said, he wasn't just a figurehead.
He didn't just show up for the press.
He didn't just write checks behind the scenes.
He did it all.
And again, it just goes right back to the upbringing from his mom who taught
him like, not only just wherever you see injustice in the world, go, go fight it
and try to fix it, Like actively search every day for injustice
that you can go help.
And you know, there was nothing more unjust
and right in your face for an American,
a black American in particular at the time
than the civil rights movement.
Yeah, absolutely.
So his, you know, entertaining or entertainment career
kept blossoming as well kind of in conjunction with this. And he would use that to sort of, you know, entertaining or entertainment career kept blossoming as well kind of in conjunction with this.
And he would use that to sort of, you know, help subtly raise awareness just about his community and what he's like and what his people are like.
And The Tonight Show is a big example. In 1968, Johnny Carson invited him to host for a week, to host The Tonight Show, you know, Take Johnny's Seat.
First black guest host in the history of the show.
And this is in 1968, you know,
everything going on in 1968 seems fraught.
And race relations certainly were a part of that.
And he wasn't like, all right, I'll go host the show
and I'll get in and just kind of try it out the usual
guests that Johnny might have.
He said, no, I'm going to have Bobby Kennedy and Martin Luther King Jr. and Aretha Franklin
and Dionne Warwick and Paul Newman and Nipsey Russell and all these people who had these
progressive causes or were just famous black entertainers who didn't get that kind of stage
very often
and open every night with a song. Obviously, Johnny didn't do anything like that. So it
was still fun and entertaining, but it was also educating people and talking about serious
issues in these interviews.
Yes. So that was just huge. I mean, also you got to credit Johnny Carson too. He did that on purpose.
He wasn't like, I'm going on vacation for a week, just call whoever.
Like he did that on purpose because he was trying to advance race relations as well.
So hats off to him for that as well.
They also had really high ratings. That was another thing too.
Harry Belafonte, when he did something on TV, it drew viewers. And even still, it didn't matter
because there were so many angry white racists in America
that would call up these sponsors and be like,
you're sponsoring this black guy on this show,
you better stop.
They'd go to the producers,
the producers would come to Bella Fani and be like,
hey, you know how you have white people
and black people dancing together?
What if we just did white or just did black?
Bella Fani wouldn't blink and it would get canceled
despite all of the crazy great reviews
and viewership it had.
And you know, that would be that.
And he would just kind of move on.
But of course he developed like this distrust and distaste
for the entertainment industry.
And I saw that he initially thought
that he would be able to help change
America through Hollywood.
And then he quickly came to see like, no, Hollywood is just one more
facet of this machine that keeps things going exactly as they are.
So he, he got really disgusted by that.
Um, kind of fortunately for us, because he really kind of started to throw more
and more of his energy into being an
activist not just in the United States but around the world.
And in particular, Paul Robeson, like you said, was one of his idols, who was also just
one of the early civil rights crusaders around the world.
And then Eleanor Roosevelt, FDR's wife, first lady, introduced him to the plight of different
countries in Africa, which was decolonizing
at the time.
And he really kind of turned his attention toward that continent for a while.
Yeah, for sure.
I mean, all of the major causes that you've heard from, you know, basically starting then,
even and especially through the 80s, with apartheid in South Africa, Kenyan independence.
And I mentioned early on, We Are the World,
Ethiopia and the famines there,
he was the guy that called up Quincy Jones
and was like, hey, we need to do something here.
And We Are the World was a huge, huge hit
that sold, I think, 20 million copies
and raised 65 million bucks for fame and relief.
And if you were a kid in 1985,
We Are the World was like, that and Live Aid
were two of the biggest deals in music history.
And, you know, I was 14 years old at the time,
and it was just like, it was incredible
to see all these people together and like even as a kid even as a
like little snot-nosed 14 year old white kid from the south I knew what that I
was watching was important I didn't maybe fully understand it I had seen
stuff about the famine on television but it was it was raising awareness for
everybody including little white suburban kids from Georgia.
Yeah, which is exactly part of the point
in addition to raising money too.
One of the cool things I saw about it was,
I'm not sure if it was his idea
or if he kind of headed up the push to do this or both,
but Harry Belafonte is credited
with talking radio stations around the world
into playing We Are the World
at the same time on the same day.
It was I think March 28th, 1986.
I remember.
There was something like, do you remember that?
Oh yeah.
Cool.
There was like 5,000 radio stations around the world
and they all played it at the same time.
I think 10 50 a.m. Eastern Standard Time.
And Musac actually played it as well.
And it was only the second time in the history of Musac
that they played voices over their service,
which by the way at the time
reached like 80 million Americans.
So that's a lot of people listening to
We Are the World at that same moment, which is neat.
That's right.
Including just, I counted for one of those.
I don't remember listening to it on the radio, but I do remember my family sitting around
listening to the record.
Yeah.
It's so funny.
All right.
Maybe we should take our second break and come up and talk some more about Harry Belafonte.
Okay. Joshua Charles stuff you should know.
John Stewart is back at the daily show and he's bringing his signature wit and
insight straight to your ears with the daily show years edition podcast dive
into John's unique take on the biggest topics in politics, entertainment,
sports, and more joined by the sharp voices of the shows,
correspondents, and contributors.
And with extended interviews
and exclusive weekly headline roundups,
this podcast gives you content you won't find anywhere else.
Ready to laugh and stay informed?
Listen on the iHeart Radio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
podcast or wherever you get your podcasts.
Yo, what up? It's your girl Jess Hilarious. And I think it's time to acknowledge that I'm not just a comedian. It's time to
add uncertified therapists to my credentials. Because each and
every Wednesday, I'm fixing your mess on carefully reckless on
the black effect podcast network. Got problems in your
relationship? Come to me. Your best friend acting shady?
Come to me.
Thinking about cursing that one stank auntie out
at the next family gathering?
Do it.
But come to me before you do
because I cussed all mine out before.
You wanna fight your coworkers?
Come to me.
Baby daddy mad because you got a boyfriend?
Come to me.
Thought you was the father but you not?
Come to me.
I can't promise I won't judge you, but I can guarantee that I will help you. As a daughter, a sister, a mother, and an entrepreneur,
I've learned a lot in life. So I'm using my own perspective and experiences to help you fix your
mess. Send me your situation and let's fix it as a family. Listen to Can't Flee Reckless on the
Black Effect Podcast Network, iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to My Legacy.
I'm Martin Luther King III, and together with my wife, Andrea Waters King, and our dear
friends Mark and Craig Kilburger, we explore the personal journeys that shape extraordinary
lives.
Each week, we'll sit down with inspiring figures like David Oyelowo, Mel Robbins, Martin Sheen, Dr. Sanjay Gupta, and
Billy Porter. And their plus one, their ride or die, as they share stories never heard
before about their remarkable journey.
Listen to My Legacy on the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, wherever you get your podcasts.
This is my legacy.
All right so Harry's doing his activism.
He is still an entertainer.
He never sort of fully left that behind.
He started doing less and less of that
as through the sort of 80s and 90s
when his activism was, I think, at its peak.
But he was still doing his thing.
1960, he became the first black American
to win an Emmy for Tonight with Bella Fonte,
one of his TV specials.
Again, which they were all super big hits,
even though people loved them
and the ratings were through the roof.
It was that silent majority complaining
about Petula Clark holding his arm,
a white woman holding his arm in a special
that drove away some advertisers,
which is just, you know, very sad to say the least.
But he was still serving up this sort of Caribbean tinge
folk music to people.
CBS ordered five more episodes after
Tonight with Bella Fonte was such a big success.
But of course, that was one of the ones where sponsorship
was pulled because he had black people and white people
dancing and singing together and said,
no, no, no, no, you cannot do that.
Right.
And so he would just leave show business for, you know,
years at a time, or at least, like, TV or movies
or something like that.
But he got pulled back into it in the early 70s
because his buddy, Sidney Poitier, was like,
hey, I want to start directing black exploitation movies.
Let's do this.
And they made Buck and the Preacher,
which I have not seen.
I think it was from 1972.
Everything I've read about it
makes me want to see it basically immediately.
Sidney Poitier directed it,
but he also plays Buck,
who's this ex Civil War soldier
who helps ensure safe passage for African Americans
moving out of Louisiana out west after the Civil War.
And the preacher is Harry Belafonte,
who's this con artist dressed as a preacher.
It just sounds awesome.
And then Uptown Saturday Night.
Haven't seen that one either.
It sounds pretty great,
except it's so hard now to get past anything with Bill Cosby.
Yeah. It's so hard now to get past anything with Bill Cosby.
Yeah. It's so hard, not just because of the horrible stuff he did,
sexually assaulting women,
but also because he was so preachy leading up to it.
He was so holier than how.
And it makes the whole thing so much worse,
if you ask me.
Yeah, I mean, and this,
he was doing those things back then, too.
The CNN documentary that Kamau Bell did was very upsetting to see, but the way they did
it, I think I mentioned it before, was it was they were just sort of tracking his career
and like, and he was the biggest star and on TV at the time, and this was 1960 something.
And then it was like, and in 1960 whatever,
he sexually assaulted this woman.
And it was happening the whole time.
Ugh, so I'm with you.
Impossible to watch that stuff,
but you can watch Buck and the Preacher though.
Right, he's not in that.
That's right.
So hearing all this, you're like, wow,
Harry Belafonte was a Superman.
And he never got in a bad mood, and he never got tired, and he was never frustrated.
And it was just wine and roses all the time for Harry Belafonte.
And that is not the case.
It was a serious fatigue on his life.
To do what he did was hard work,
emotionally hard work, physically demanding,
going all over the place doing his thing,
while also being an entertainer.
And, you know, in 1960,
I think this is a little bit after Martin Luther King Jr.
was murdered, he was, Bela Ponti was asked
what it's like being such a prominent civil rights leader.
And he was pretty testy.
He said, you know, I'd like to take my family and go live in Africa and be able to stop
answering questions as though I were a spokesman for my people.
I hate marching and getting called at 3 a.m. to bail some cats out of jail.
And this is just the toll that that takes on anybody, even like a Superman
like Harry Belafonte.
Yeah.
Also a human.
Yeah, but he had a really great inspiration
in the form of Paul Robeson, who kind of guided things.
You mentioned him before, he was an idol of his
and a real inspiration.
He was the guy who sang Old Man River among other things.
But he was a model for Harry Belafonte.
Paul Robeson was running around the world.
He took his fame and he used it to highlight,
you know, plights around the world.
But he was also like a huge,
he protested for peace and he ran around the world
trying to make peace.
I mean, between the US and the USSR
at the beginning of the Cold War, this guy was going back and forth trying to make peace. I mean, between the US and the USSR at the beginning of the Cold War,
this guy was going back and forth trying to like
create friendships where there was nothing but animosity.
He did the same thing with Communist China.
And he was also not afraid to criticize the United States
and like its racist policies too at the time.
So you put all that together,
this guy was prime meat for the McCarthy trials
and he got blacklisted, but he refused to be cowed.
He would not name names, he would not renounce his work,
he would not take back anything
that they demanded he take back.
And he really served as this model for Harry Belafonte,
despite, I mean, Robeson had it hard, he
fell hard. The State Department, he was doing all this traveling to promote
peace. The State Department suspended his passport from 1950 to 1958. Kind of hard
to run around the world pre-internet. Phones are still relatively expensive to
use trying to organize peace when you can't travel
outside of the US.
But he was a really, like he deserves it, I think,
in episode himself, but he stood as this inspiration
and model for Harry Belafonte.
So even when he would get downtrodden and defeated,
he had Paul Robeson to look to and be like,
this guy went through even worse than me.
Yeah, for sure.
And it wasn't always a love affair
within the black community with Harry Belafonte.
He was criticized at various times for marrying white women.
He married two white women.
After splitting up with Julie Robinson in 2004,
he married Pamela Frank in 2008.
He doesn't think he was of mixed race himself
so he didn't feel like at times he was always fully accepted
by the black community.
And he would, you know, be critical of that.
In 1996 in the New Yorker, he said,
and again, that's a great read.
He said, let me tell you something.
I don't know of any artist at my level
who has ever been as much on the line for black liberation as I have and has as few black people in attendance
at anything he does as I do.
And he described one of his typical concerts, I never saw so many white people in my life.
So he never felt like he got the support from the black community that he thought he deserved
and he thought he earned.
And when it came to who he married, he said,
I didn't marry anyone to further an integration cause.
Like I married who I fell in love with
and they married me because they fell in love with me.
Yeah, for sure.
Yeah.
So we've kind of talked about some of the stuff,
some of the causes he took up
that he's best known for like civil rights.
Did you mention anti-apartheid?
Yeah.
He performed at a rally, a no-nuke rally in the early eighties in Germany.
He sought to broker peace between the Crips and the Bloods in LA back in the
late eighties, he protested the Iraq war in the early two thousands.
He protested the Iraq War in the early 2000s.
And then, um, the cause that he, uh, he kind of got behind
toward the very end of his life was incarceration in general.
He was, I think, the first performer to play Rikers Island.
James Brown famously did in 1972.
Harry Belafonte did it a couple months before James Brown.
Um, and then throughout the rest of his career, he would visit prisons and hang out with the inmates.
But he also really focused on child incarceration
and just found that totally amoral and immoral
and inexcusable.
So he really started a whole generation of like activists
in that right before he died.
It's just one more thing he did, you know.
Yeah, he passed away just a couple of years ago in April, April 25th of 2023 at 96.
So just a very full long life and received lots of accolades during that lifetime.
I mentioned the EGOT, part of that included the Oscar was the Jean Herscholt humanitarian award in 2014
and a lifetime achievement Grammy in 2000. You can add the Kennedy Center honor
in 1989 to that list and the National Medal of the Arts. Oh Billy Clinton gave
him that one in 1994 and what else Harlem, he had a library named after him.
In 2017, near his childhood home,
it was renamed the Harry Belafonte 115th Street Library.
Yeah, I also saw he was inducted
into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2022,
and the bio almost defiantly dares you
to be like, he's not rock and roll. They said that basically every artist
who's mixed politics with their music
from Bob Dylan and Bono to Rage Against the Machine
and Public Enemy, they stand on his broad shoulders.
Which I mean, that's absolutely true.
Yeah, and there are plenty of non-rock and roll bands
in that hall of fame. Sure, but they were like, say-quote-unquote rock and roll bands in that hall of fame.
Sure, but they were like, say something.
And then, you know, you did and then you felt like a jackass.
Yeah, like is anyone gonna really protest that?
I don't know, I could see Gene Simmons saying something about it.
There's also a really great appearance on The Muppet Show, where he sings Deo with some of the Muppets, and it's just sweet and wholesome and just great.
Yeah, good stuff.
One more thing, we cannot not mention Beetlejuice, dude.
Oh, was he, did he have something to do with Beetlejuice?
Yeah, obviously, people were already typing their emails.
Beetlejuice featured not only the Banana Boat song,
but Jump in the Line,
which I like more than the Banana Boat song.
I love that song.
To great effect, I think Tim Burton apparently
wasn't super keen, he didn't think it was funny enough.
And I'm like, dude, it's not funny, it's fun.
You added two extra letters.
It's not supposed to be like slap your knee funny,
but it is certainly fun.
And the little dance routines,
they're almost like apart from the movie itself,
like an additional music video or something like in the movie.
But they are part, one small part,
or I guess a large part really of what makes that movie so great
were those two numbers.
Yeah, and the whole thing's just amazing,
but for some reason, Catherine O'Hara is just,
you just see she is so cool when she's doing this.
Like, it's just perfect, and she's supposedly the one
who suggested Calypso for the music that they use.
Oh, that's funny.
Yeah, Harry Belafonte.
Not funny.
No, it's not funny at all, Chuck.
You're absolutely right.
But apparently Harry Belafonte. Not funny. No, it's not funny at all, Chuck. You're absolutely right. It's fun. But apparently Harry Bellafonte said that
about a year after Beetlejuice,
he became popular with kids.
Apparently, Dayo and Jump the Line,
Jump in the Line, sorry.
They both ended up on the Billboard 200
after Beetlejuice for a little while.
And he said that all sorts of kids would come up to him
after they saw Beetlejuice. And he said that they sorts of kids would come up to him after they saw Beetlejuice.
And he said that they would wipe their hands full
of tomato ketchup and mustard on my clothes.
And I enjoyed the whole excursion.
Yeah, go listen to some of his stuff.
I've been listening to it for two days.
Harry Belafonte and the Belafonte folk singers.
And some of it's maybe unusual to modern ears,
but it's like really good stuff.
Yeah, and it's even better if you watch like
footage of him singing it too.
Like you really, his stage presence really comes across
even on video years later.
That's right, did we mention he was handsome?
He was.
Easy on the eyes, not hard to look at.
No, for sure.
He could really wear a shirt unbuttoned down
to his navel too, man.
Oh boy, heck, I never could get away with that.
I can't either.
All right, well, that's Harry Belafonte, everybody.
R.I.P., Harry.
R.I.P.
And if you want to know more about Harry Belafonte, like Chuck said,
go look him up and start listening to him and watching some videos.
And in the meantime, I think that means it's time for Listener Mail.
This is just a little quickie. some videos and in the meantime I think that means it's time for listener mail.
This is just a little quickie. Hey guys, I heard on a recent Christmas episode
that you're desperate for new Christmas material.
A few months ago I sent in a show idea about the Halifax explosion.
Did you know that this has a Christmas connection?
Halifax was so thankful for the help from the city of Boston that we continue
to send Halifax, so thankful for the help from the city of Boston that we continue to send Halifax their city's Christmas tree to this very day. Pretty cool.
Boston does or Halifax does?
Boston sends, I don't know, Halifax sends Boston the tree.
Okay. Now the story is delightful.
Yeah, yeah, it is. All the best from your neighbors in Canada. That is Mathias Dernford.
That's a great one.
We should have done that as like a segment,
but now we can't because everybody knows it.
Yeah, maybe we did a whole episode on it,
but this is a nice addendum.
Did you say Mathias or Matthias?
Well, I mean, there's an H in there.
I don't know if it's pronounced though.
Mathias.
I said Mathias.
Good.
Well, if you want to be like Mathias
and have us debate how to say your name, love
that kind of thing, you can send us an email too to stuffpodcastsatihartradio.com.
Stuff You Should Know is a production of iHeartRadio.
For more podcasts, my heart radio, visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple podcasts, or wherever
you listen to your favorite shows.
Black History Month is here and we're excited to kick off season four of I Didn't Know.
Maybe you didn't either.
This season, we're shining a spotlight on revolutionary women who redefined excellence give grace
Wish her her flowers next time you see the American flag
You just remember a 16 year old black woman helped to make it happen listen to I didn't know
Maybe you didn't either from the black effect podcast network on the I heart radio app Apple podcast
Or simply wherever you get your podcast
Hey, it's Alec Baldwin this past season on my podcast here's the thing you get moving on.
And actor and comedian Jack McBrayer. I trust, are talented. That has been the most amazing gift to me about this crazy business that we've chosen.
Meeting these people who have such diverse talents and you're able to create something
together.
Listen to Here's the Thing on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your
podcasts.
Hey, you guys.
I'm Catherine Legge.
I'm a racing driver who's literally driven everything with four wheels across the planet.
And I've got a new podcast.
It's called Throttle Therapy.
This season I'm competing in some of the world's most notorious racing events.
Tune into my new podcast, Throttle Therapy, with Catherine Legg,
an iHeart women's sports production in partnership with Deep Blue Sports and Entertainment.
You can find us on the iHeart radio app Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Presented by Capital One. Founding partner of I Heart Women's Sports.