Black Pearls &
Strange Fruit Written by Jackie Gordon
& Paulene Terry-Beitz
Performed by Jackie Gordon
Directed by Paulene Terry-Beitz
The Melbourne International
Festival of the Arts 1999
The
Prince of Wales Hotel October 19 - 24
The
Canberra TimesAustralia
Black
Pearls and Strange Fruit (
Prince of Wales Hotel, St.Kilda) October 31st 1999
Reviewer: Helen Musa
Devised
and performed by Jackie Gordon, at the Prince of Wales, St.
Kilda, October 19 to 24.
Most Billie
Holiday fans know the song Strange Fruit, but do they, Jackie
Gordon wonders, know what the fruit are.The fruit that grow on Southern tree are the bodies of lynched black
Americans.
Starting
from this point, Australian-American performer Gordon launched
first into the famous Billie holiday protest against racism
and then into a 75 minute narrated presentation about the
“black pearls” of American song, the black female singers
who changed the face of American music.
Gordon’s
spoken voice is light but her singing variously expressive,
poignant and joyous.Backed
by a fine jazz combo and changing slide projections showing
us the real black pearls, she does not spare us the best –
Billie, Bessie, Ella, Dinah, Nina, Eartha, and Lena – with
Aretha hovering in the background throughout.
My
one objection is to Gordon’s imposition of saintliness on
to the lives of these women – convenient to see than as heroic,
but they were not uniformly so.The result is partly educative – who knew, for instance
that Go Down Moses was a code song on the plantations?But the strongest impression was the pleasure at hearing
such music in a concentrated program.I would hope to see Black Pearls and Strange
Fruit touring Australia, perhaps even to the stage of the
Canberra Theatre.