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| Stage Performances |
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Black Pearls &
Strange Fruit
Written by Jackie Gordon
& Paulene Terry-Beitz
Performed by Jackie Gordon
Directed by Paulene Terry-Beitz
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The Melbourne International
Festival of the Arts 1999
The
Prince of Wales Hotel October 19 - 24
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The
Age Melbourne,
Australia
Lady
sings the blues
Jackie
Gordon - Black Pearls and Strange Fruit ( The Prince of
Wales Hotel, St. Kilda) October 1999 Reviewer: Fiona Scott-Norman
It
is always difficult to define exactly what makes a cabaret
show a good one, but if it makes you weep, it must be doing
something right.
Jackie
Gordon's Black Pearls and Strange Fruit is as emotional
as it is entertaining, a compact history black American female
singers, from the introduction of slavery through the civil
rights movement of the 1960's
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The
cabaret begins with Gordon singing and explaining Billie Holiday's
haunting ballad Strange Fruit, which refers to the
dead bodies of black people, who were lynched in America's
deep south.
This
is not a frivolous show, but neither is it a litany of complaint.
Black Pearls and Strange Fruit is a celebratory show
that brims with authority, full of pride and admiration for
women who became successful despite racism and poverty.
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Gordon,
with a three-piece band and two back-up vocalists, sings songs
from the repertoire of Bessie Smith, Holiday, Lena Horne,
Dinah Washington, Ella Fitzgerald, Eartha Kitt and Nina Simone.
Gordon accompanies the songs with biographical information
about the singers, contextualises them in time and place,
and explains the treatment they received.
Washington
for example, sold out a 3000-seat room in an La hotel, but
was not allowed to actually stay in a room there and was given
a trailer out the back.
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Black
Pearls and Strange Fruit,directed and co-written by Paulene
Terry-Beitz, also includes the projection of historic black-and-white
stills.
There
is also enough of a breath of Gordon's own family story -
she is the daughter of a white woman and black father, she
moved to Australia from New York seven years ago - to make
the show personal, intimate and immediate.
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This
is a very restrained, beautiful show with a surprising amount
of humor. Gordon is shy performer, but she has plenty of presence,
the ability to spin a yarn, and a strong, textured singing
voice.
Black
Pearls and Strange Fruit would be a satisfying show even
if it were solely a concert, with such songs as I Want
To Be Evil, Stormy Weather, What A Difference
A Day Makes and Ain't Nobody's Business (But My Own).
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Gordon's
finale a rendition of Maya Angelou's poem, I Rise,
followed by Simone's anthem for the black civil rights movement,
Young Gifted and Black, is a stirring and funky way
to finish a profound, powerful hour.
It
is also a grand opportunity for Melbourne Festival goers to
get out of the CBD and into another part of town. It may be
the only time many people step inside the lovely lounge of
the upstairs section of the Prince of Wales Hotel.
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