Paul Robeson and Hattie McDaniel sing a duet

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  • čas přidán 7. 09. 2024
  • Paul Robeson and Hattie McDaniel sings "Ah Still Suits Me" from the film, Show Boat (1936).

Komentáře • 177

  • @MFPhoto1
    @MFPhoto1 Před 2 lety +35

    Even when playing the typical Hollywood stereotype, Robeson's power comes through on the screen.

  • @chevydude658
    @chevydude658 Před 5 lety +112

    They were just magic on the screen. Hattie McDaniel was such a great talent. What a fine actress. Robeson had a magnificent voice too. No one can top his Old Man River.

    • @petertaylor3600
      @petertaylor3600 Před rokem +2

      I may be wrong about this, but I recall reading somewhere that at the preview of Gone with the Wind, Hattie McDaniel wasn't invited to attend. Why? Obvious in that time, and so cruel. I think she won a rightfully bestowed Academy Award for her performance in that. Hattie was simply marvbellous in everything she did.

    • @petertaylor3600
      @petertaylor3600 Před rokem +2

      More than magnificent, one of the most beautiful bass voices of his time and later. Warfield had a lighter tone and some think he was better. But, for me, nothing beat Robeson and the US simply had no idea what they had in their midst until it was gone.

    • @daniellipko710
      @daniellipko710 Před rokem

      Jim Croce’s Old Man River is also great. Just two different takes on the song that aren’t really comparable

    • @hoshimaruhajime7933
      @hoshimaruhajime7933 Před rokem +1

      Like james earl Jones

  • @davedrolett6890
    @davedrolett6890 Před 9 lety +140

    Two of the most extraordinary talents of their day.

  • @vivianmartinez5028
    @vivianmartinez5028 Před 3 lety +22

    I love Miss Hattie's wonderful expressions while shes singing...she means business.

  • @lass-inangeles7564
    @lass-inangeles7564 Před 3 lety +25

    What a voice! And Hattie was screen gold, such an expressive face. My Belgian mother used to play Robeson's 'Old Man River' on a vinyl LP record on our Grundig record player in India, and his rich bass voice rumbled out of the speakers and was low and thrilling. She said he could go so low it would shatter glass. It was impossibly low and rich. It was like watching the color black get darker and darker when you thought it could not possibly get any darker...
    Years later in America, I am hearing this man again immortalized on CZcams. How wonderful!

  • @helenkanakos7735
    @helenkanakos7735 Před 4 lety +18

    Two super talented artists. Hattie McDaniel and Paul Robeson.

    • @Juliaflo
      @Juliaflo Před 11 měsíci

      Props also to Jerome Kern for the music, Oscar Hammerstein II for the lyrics, and.............Edna Ferber for the BOOK.

  • @michaelbuttcher2956
    @michaelbuttcher2956 Před 4 lety +15

    Omg ..pure magic on the silver screen!!!! Loved THE both OF THEM since was lad ...Now at 65 they still bring tear of joy to me watch these amazing actors and along with being a gift from GOD ALMIGHTY to All .. I’ll never will I forget these beautiful people !!

  • @TellyWatcher1997
    @TellyWatcher1997 Před 4 lety +15

    We had the great honour to have Paul Robeson visit Great Britain. He made a film in Wales, or based in Wales (one of our home nations), but I don't think that Hattie visited us. I love them both. Great talents and had to work so much harder to overcome ignorance and prejudice. Dignified people from a time that forged great people.

    • @MFPhoto1
      @MFPhoto1 Před 2 lety +2

      Robeson made a few films in Great Britain, where he was not required to play into stereotypes.

    • @aarondigby9859
      @aarondigby9859 Před 2 lety +1

      This is the greatest America has offered as the best talent. They were the greatest. I can watch them all day.

  • @inquisitivesoutherntara6997

    One of the best duets ever!

  • @louisemiller2774
    @louisemiller2774 Před 10 lety +41

    They are too cute....

  • @Tenderness1959
    @Tenderness1959 Před rokem +4

    Our Paul was only 38 years back then; he is still and will remain in my heart.

    • @hegemonYT
      @hegemonYT Před rokem +1

      Not enough Pual Robeson fans out there sadly. I'm 20 and virtually nobody would have heard of him

  • @annstrahlendorf2879
    @annstrahlendorf2879 Před 3 lety +13

    Now that’s what I call talent👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏♥️👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏👏

  • @BernardProfitendieu
    @BernardProfitendieu Před 4 lety +18

    what great entertainers they were! this scene is just perfectly executed by two pros

  • @sueparkerjones1070
    @sueparkerjones1070 Před 8 lety +24

    Hattie and Paul my friends love you , your talent is brilliant SueX

  • @spewgilist
    @spewgilist Před 3 lety +3

    2:30 smiles at end totally infectious

  • @tiffanyg9746
    @tiffanyg9746 Před rokem +2

    AH STILL SUITS ME
    From the film "Show Boat" (1936)
    (Oscar Hammerstein II / Jerome Kern)
    Paul Robeson & Hattie McDaniel (Film Soundtrack) - 1936
    Paul Robeson & Elisabeth Welch - 1936
    Bing Crosby & Lee Wiley (Recorded as "I Still Suits Me") - 1947
    Thomas Carey & Ena Cabayo (London Revival) - 1971
    (The kitchen. JOE is shelling peas. The show boat is rocking
    violently on the swollen river. A lurch of the boat sends the
    boat of shelled peas to the floor. JOE looks down at them dubiously.
    QUEENIE enters)
    QUEENIE
    Joe! Dere you go again! Look at dem peas all over de floor!
    JOE
    River done it...
    QUEENIE
    De river done it?!?
    JOE
    Ol' river can do mos' anything, Queenie.
    Look out dere what it's doin' now - won't be letting us
    give no show tonight.
    (QUEENIE gets on her knees and proceeds
    to put the peas back in the bowl)
    QUEENIE
    Show? Dat don't worry me none. Dere's
    somethin' else on dis ol' boat worries me mo'.
    JOE
    Miss Nola?
    QUEENIE
    Dat's what...
    JOE
    She be all right.
    QUEENIE
    Dat's what you say 'bout ev'rythin'. You don't get excited.
    Why? 'Cause you don't do nuthin'. You don' cook like me.
    You don' act like the show folk. You don' work on the tow
    boat. What do you do?
    JOE
    Well, I jes' shelled dem peas.
    QUEENIE
    (snorting)
    You ain't pickin' dem up.
    JOE
    No, but I could've ef you didn't do it. I could do a lot of
    things ef it wuz necessary.
    QUEENIE
    Den why don'cha?
    JOE
    It ain't necessary...
    (He starts to sing, extemporaneously rhyming, stating his
    mood of the moment. He sings as QUEENIE goes about her work)
    JOE
    Keep on a-naggin',
    'n bullyraggin',
    'n criticizin',
    'n call me pizen,
    Ah ain't apologizin', no siree!
    No matter what you say,
    Ah still suits me.
    De rag you're chewin'
    Mus' be a ruin,
    Keep right on knockin',
    Keep right on mockin',
    Mah rockin' chair ain't rockin',
    No siree!
    No matter what you say,
    Ah still suits me.
    QUEENIE
    (coming over to him, belligerently)
    Does you ever wash the dishes?
    Does you do the things I wishes?
    Does you do dem?
    No, you don't!
    Will you do dem?
    No, you won't!
    When dere's any workin' to it
    I'm de one dat's gotta do it!
    When it's rainin' who's the feller
    Uses up the whole umbreller?
    Selfish as a man can be!
    JOE
    (looking up blandly)
    No matter what you say,
    Ah still suits me.
    QUEENIE
    You don' make money!
    JOE
    Ah know dat, honey!
    QUEENIE
    I never see none!
    JOE
    Ain't gonna be none,
    But dat don' worry me none,
    No siree!
    QUEENIE
    (spoken)
    Shif'less! Lifeless! No good!
    JOE
    No matter what you say,
    Ah still suits me.
    I may be no good,
    No good fo' yo' good,
    I may be lifeless,
    But wid one wife less
    Mah life would be mo' strifeless,
    Yes siree!
    No matter what you say
    Ah still suits me.
    (imitating QUEENIE with falsetto exaggeration)
    Does you ever wash de dishes?
    Does you do de things ah wishes?
    Does you do dem?
    No you don't!
    Will you do dem?
    No, you won't!
    QUEENIE
    (interrupting)
    Always imitatin' me
    An' always aggravation' me!
    Den in spite of ev'rything,
    'Spite of all de grief you bring,
    'Xpectin' me to love you true!
    JOE
    No matter what you say,
    Ah thinks you do.
    (He reaches out and pulls her to him affectionately.
    She roars with glee)

  • @BernardProfitendieu
    @BernardProfitendieu Před 4 lety +11

    "the rag you're chewin' must be a ruin" ... ahahaha!

  • @Maridun50
    @Maridun50 Před 4 lety +26

    Any man and wife - black, white, purple or green understands this one .......

  • @AugustMoon-qo5qf
    @AugustMoon-qo5qf Před 6 lety +10

    💝
    An Absolute Treasure.
    They Are Very Complementary Of Each Other.
    These Old Pictures Of Yesteryear's Are Absolutely Priceless.
    🎼

    • @flaming_trout
      @flaming_trout Před 4 lety

      these are racist performances imposed upon them by a racist movie studio?

    • @dizasadorableanimals6554
      @dizasadorableanimals6554 Před 3 lety

      @@flaming_trout Stop putting your values on yesteryear. They are not racist at all. A simple portrayal of a time long gone. The beauty and the hard times.

  • @vleeco
    @vleeco Před 9 lety +26

    Love those voices. Very good

  • @cajsheen2594
    @cajsheen2594 Před 4 lety +15

    Clever lyrics and don't they do 'em justice! Really enjoyed this, never seen it before! Thanks for the opportunity! XXX

  • @phillipbeard640
    @phillipbeard640 Před 6 lety +5

    So many happy memories this song brings my late uncle Keith mathews and I would listen to this song together he would sing and I would play along on the mouth organ God I miss those happy times and yes what a song

  • @jaydub8596
    @jaydub8596 Před 4 lety +5

    The great Paul Robeson

  • @royksk
    @royksk Před 4 lety +22

    That’s real singing unlike most of today’s singers who rely on electronics.

  • @florkelly4276
    @florkelly4276 Před 6 lety +22

    Qué lindo!!! No sabía que Hattie podía cantar tan bien!!!!

    • @jonclayborne2103
      @jonclayborne2103 Před 5 lety +2

      Hattie started her career singing in Denver as a school child and then on the chitlin' circuit before heading to Hollywood

  • @Nacho-Mamma
    @Nacho-Mamma Před rokem +1

    People do nothing but degrade Hatties performances playing a "Mammy". This woman was a real superstar during her career. She could take the tiniest role and make it the most memorable character. She was a spokeswoman for civil rights, right along with Paul Robeson. She was a real powerhouse. Look at her... She was actually a beautiful woman. She was one of the kindest people in showbusiness. She acted rings around everyone. And, although it was a small sample, she proves she could sing. In fact, she sang in nearly every movie she starred in! Who can forget "Sooner Or Later" from "Son Of The South", which is her second greatest performance next to "Gone With The Wind".

  • @edwardprice140
    @edwardprice140 Před 5 lety +5

    AH STILL SUITS ME lyrics/complete
    From the film "Show Boat" (1936)
    (Oscar Hammerstein II / Jerome Kern)
    Paul Robeson & Hattie McDaniel (Film Soundtrack) - 1936
    Paul Robeson & Elisabeth Welch - 1936
    Bing Crosby & Lee Wiley (Recorded as "I Still Suits Me") - 1947
    Thomas Carey & Ena Cabayo (London Revival) - 1971
    (The kitchen. JOE is shelling peas. The show boat is rocking
    violently on the swollen river. A lurch of the boat sends the
    boat of shelled peas to the floor. JOE looks down at them dubiously.
    QUEENIE enters)
    QUEENIE
    Joe! Dere you go again! Look at dem peas all over de floor!
    JOE
    River done it...
    QUEENIE
    De river done it?!?
    JOE
    Ol' river can do mos' anything, Queenie.
    Look out dere what it's doin' now - won't be letting us
    give no show tonight.
    (QUEENIE gets on her knees and proceeds
    to put the peas back in the bowl)
    QUEENIE
    Show? Dat don't worry me none. Dere's
    somethin' else on dis ol' boat worries me mo'.
    JOE
    Miss Nola?
    QUEENIE
    Dat's what...
    JOE
    She be all right.
    QUEENIE
    Dat's what you say 'bout ev'rythin'. You don't get excited.
    Why? 'Cause you don't do nuthin'. You don' cook like me.
    You don' act like the show folk. You don' work on the tow
    boat. What do you do?
    JOE
    Well, I jes' shelled dem peas.
    QUEENIE
    (snorting)
    You ain't pickin' dem up.
    JOE
    No, but I could've ef you didn't do it. I could do a lot of
    things ef it wuz necessary.
    QUEENIE
    Den why don'cha?
    JOE
    It ain't necessary...
    (He starts to sing, extemporaneously rhyming, stating his
    mood of the moment. He sings as QUEENIE goes about her work)
    JOE
    Keep on a-naggin',
    'n bullyraggin',
    'n criticizin',
    'n call me pizen,
    Ah ain't apologizin', no siree!
    No matter what you say,
    Ah still suits me.
    De rag you're chewin'
    Mus' be a ruin,
    Keep right on knockin',
    Keep right on mockin',
    Mah rockin' chair ain't rockin',
    No siree!
    No matter what you say,
    Ah still suits me.
    QUEENIE
    (coming over to him, belligerently)
    Does you ever wash the dishes?
    Does you do the things I wishes?
    Does you do dem?
    No, you don't!
    Will you do dem?
    No, you won't!
    When dere's any workin' to it
    I'm de one dat's gotta do it!
    When it's rainin' who's the feller
    Uses up the whole umbreller?
    Selfish as a man can be!
    JOE
    (looking up blandly)
    No matter what you say,
    Ah still suits me.
    QUEENIE
    You don' make money!
    JOE
    Ah know dat, honey!
    QUEENIE
    I never see none!
    JOE
    Ain't gonna be none,
    But dat don' worry me none,
    No siree!
    QUEENIE
    (spoken)
    Shif'less! Lifeless! No good!
    JOE
    No matter what you say,
    Ah still suits me.
    I may be no good,
    No good fo' yo' good,
    I may be lifeless,
    But wid one wife less
    Mah life would be mo' strifeless,
    Yes siree!
    No matter what you say
    Ah still suits me.
    (imitating QUEENIE with falsetto exaggeration)
    Does you ever wash de dishes?
    Does you do de things ah wishes?
    Does you do dem?
    No you don't!
    Will you do dem?
    No, you won't!
    QUEENIE
    (interrupting)
    Always imitatin' me
    An' always aggravation' me!
    Den in spite of ev'rything,
    'Spite of all de grief you bring,
    'Xpectin' me to love you true!
    JOE
    No matter what you say,
    Ah thinks you do.
    (He reaches out and pulls her to him affectionately.
    She roars with glee)
    ******
    as rec by Bing Crosby & Lee Wiley w Victor Young & his Orch
    March 17th 1947 Los Angeles
    [bc]
    Keep on a-naggin' and bully-raggin'
    And criticisin' and call me "pison!",
    I ain't apologisin', no sirree,
    No matter what you say, I still suits me!
    [lw]
    Does you ever wash the dishes?
    Does you do the things I wishes?
    Does you do them? No you don't!
    Will you do them? No you won't!
    When there's any workin' to it,
    I'm the one who's got to do it!
    When it's rainin', who's the fella
    Uses up the whole umbrella?
    selfish as a man can be!
    [bc]
    No matter what you say, I still suits me!
    [lw]
    You don't make money,
    [bc]
    Ha-ha, I know that honey!
    [lw]
    I never see none!
    [bc]
    And there ain't likely to be none!
    But that don't worry me none, no sirree,
    [lw]
    Shiftless, lifeless, and no good!
    [bc]
    No matter what you say, I still suits me!
    [lw]
    I may be no good -
    [bc]
    No good for your good!
    [lw]
    I may be lifeless -
    [bc]
    But with one wife less
    My life would be more strifeless, yes sirree,
    No matter what you say, I still suits me!
    "Does you ever wash the dishes?
    Does you do the things I wishes?
    Does you do them? No you don't!
    Will you do them? No you won't!".
    [lw]
    Always imitatin' me,
    Always aggravatin' me!
    Still in spite of everythin',
    Spite of all the grief you bring,
    'Xpecting me to love you true!
    [bc]
    Ha-ha-ho-ho-ho!
    No matter whart you say, I think you do!
    [lw]
    I knows I do!
    (Transcribed by Peter Akers - June 2011)

  • @danmessias
    @danmessias Před 13 lety +15

    Five stars.

  • @sabrinapittsley2304
    @sabrinapittsley2304 Před 3 lety +1

    I miss these kind of movies

  • @PJGRAND
    @PJGRAND Před 3 lety +2

    A great clip with one of the 2 Greatest movies stars ever

  • @Warmhack
    @Warmhack Před 4 lety +5

    Brilliantly written

  • @mosesruben4027
    @mosesruben4027 Před 4 lety +4

    Two people who made it possible for others to succeed. Also if you look at the table , the pancake mix has that lovely lady picture on it. Wonder if that was her idea? If so, she had more power than we realize. So say I, Moses of Englewood Chicago

  • @renaldcosma7192
    @renaldcosma7192 Před 7 lety +12

    So sweet , ...Love them both !

  • @sandrakenney567
    @sandrakenney567 Před rokem

    Loved that film .Hattie was my idle .rest in peace Hattie GodBless You Amen.You May Be Gone But Your Not Forgotten. 🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🕊🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🦋🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌷🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹🌹

  • @bobchafin9868
    @bobchafin9868 Před 2 lety

    What would Gone With the Wind have been without her and Showboat an all of the movies she appeared in she gave so much love God bless Hattie

  • @aarondigby9859
    @aarondigby9859 Před 2 lety +1

    THE ABSOLUTE EPITOME OF GREAT ENTERTAINMENT.

  • @homeemail7021
    @homeemail7021 Před rokem +2

    Magical, spellbinding, pure joy!

  • @fay-amieaspen6046
    @fay-amieaspen6046 Před 2 lety +1

    Two Beautiful Awesome People !!

  • @Nickleby2
    @Nickleby2 Před 12 lety +11

    I may know very little about Paul Robeson, but I have read Paul Robeson by Martin Duberman's book, I read Paul Robeson, Jr volume l, Paul's 'Here I Stand, (what a magical book that is). I bought a docu from Amazon called 'Songs of Freedom', and I have watched countless speaches and documentaries on youtube and elsewhere on the net. I have many of his albums and have used his songs in assemblies and attended exhibitions in london by CLR James. So NO, I don't know much, but I am doing my best.

  • @stalliontrainer
    @stalliontrainer Před 3 lety +3

    I'm not apologizing...that was GREAT!

  • @JomoDaMusicMan
    @JomoDaMusicMan Před 2 lety +1

    Hattie was one of the 1st Rappers, and then Pigmeat Markum, who rapped just like the modern day ones. Paul Roberson was one of the 1st real crooners, his vocals could be played, even today, for people suffering from Insomnia

  • @calliegirl2022
    @calliegirl2022 Před 4 lety +3

    PURE PERFECTION!

  • @cleasterwilliams4623
    @cleasterwilliams4623 Před 4 lety +1

    Two magnificent ❤️ actors and I do remember watching this movie.👍👍👍

  • @mmm-3737
    @mmm-3737 Před 3 lety +2

    Love him ❤️

  • @markrogers7871
    @markrogers7871 Před 4 lety +1

    thank goodness for U tube .This was really nice and cute.

  • @c-light7624
    @c-light7624 Před 4 lety +4

    Basically me and my mom

  • @tomhaskett5161
    @tomhaskett5161 Před rokem +1

    Hattie won an Oscar for 'Gone With The Wind'. I remember watching a film clip some years later of her receiving the award, and she walked on from one side, made a speech, then left on the other side. As a child I did not understand why, and it seemed mean spirited. Of course it was, because she wasn't allowed to eat at the hotel.

  • @robinjohnson6225
    @robinjohnson6225 Před 3 lety +1

    They were great actor and actress be nice telivise Gone with the Windand Bealula

  • @vandewynckelfrancois937
    @vandewynckelfrancois937 Před 8 lety +3

    Wat een prachtige stem, warm en diep. Paul en Hattie Prachtig gedaan.

  • @Carvinter
    @Carvinter Před 11 lety +18

    I believe the woman whom you're referring to as the original "Queenie" in Showboat, was Miss Tess Gardella, often called "Jemima" because of her frequency in playing "Mammy" type characters on stage. Ironically, Miss Gardella was an Italian woman who played Blackface characters when it was unpopular (and sometimes illegal) for the races to appear on stage together; a point raised in this very film.

    • @patbulfin5459
      @patbulfin5459 Před 3 měsíci

      It’s funny that you say that because if you notice that there’s a box of aunt Jemima pancake mix probably a tribute to her.

  • @christopherkinzig5078
    @christopherkinzig5078 Před 9 lety +5

    Such talents back in the day......!

  • @musicaltheatergeek79
    @musicaltheatergeek79 Před 13 lety +6

    @brerfox71 according to the IMDb trivia: "In the scene in which Paul Robeson sings 'Ah Still Suits Me,' Queenie (Hattie McDaniel) has a box of Aunt Jemima pancake mix on her work table. It's a subtle nod to Tess Gardella (stage name 'Aunt Jemima'), who created the role of Queenie in the 1927 Broadway production."

  • @tombstoneharrystudios584
    @tombstoneharrystudios584 Před 6 měsíci

    Lovely!

  • @michaelbuttcher2956
    @michaelbuttcher2956 Před 4 lety +2

    Loved them dearly!!!!

  • @jslasher1
    @jslasher1 Před 8 lety +3

    Priceless. Five Stars.

  • @breezey64
    @breezey64 Před 6 lety +3

    Ohhhhhh that song is trifling!

  • @TheRivrPrncess
    @TheRivrPrncess Před 4 lety +1

    I never saw this before! I just love it and both of them!

  • @Carvinter
    @Carvinter Před 9 lety +11

    What a treat to see Miss McDaniels singing and dancing, and how kind of Mr. Wynn to give another vaudeville veteran some national exposure to "plug" her own show.

  • @digimonalvatrax2738
    @digimonalvatrax2738 Před 2 lety

    Ahh introduction to Dusty struggle love. 😄but I still love Miss Hattie

  • @robinjohnson6225
    @robinjohnson6225 Před 3 lety +1

    GONE WITH THE WIND AND BELULHA LAND
    MAYBE THEY DO SHOW THESE CLASSICS

  • @christienelson1437
    @christienelson1437 Před 5 měsíci

    Miss McDaniels always portrayed a hard working, generous, honorable loving woman. Her clothes weren’t rags and dirty, she was always impeccably dressed and mannered and made Scarlett look like trash. Good Morals are the finest gams to wear and she could definitely wear them.💕🙏💕🙏

  • @Scottsteaux63
    @Scottsteaux63 Před 9 měsíci

    Brilliant. Just heavenly.

  • @sharpear1031
    @sharpear1031 Před rokem

    Robeson seemed to like singing this ditty; beautiful voice.

  • @charlesblack2523
    @charlesblack2523 Před 4 lety +2

    I always liked Hattie 👍

  • @danjones3746
    @danjones3746 Před 4 lety

    This makes me smile what a lovely movie 🇬🇧🥰

  • @sebthi7890
    @sebthi7890 Před 2 lety

    so cute 😄

  • @bobstephen782
    @bobstephen782 Před 4 měsíci

    great man

  • @headron66
    @headron66 Před 9 měsíci

    The absolutely wonderful Hattie singing the song all women on the daily sing😂❤️

  • @zacharycaldwell1398
    @zacharycaldwell1398 Před rokem

    Humorous and amiable duet

  • @curtbarnes4294
    @curtbarnes4294 Před 4 lety +3

    "Aunt Jemima Pancake Flour?" Product placement, that long ago, or just "atmosphere?" The Voice upstages everything, of course.

    • @jmann6130
      @jmann6130 Před 3 lety +1

      That’s Tess Gardella’s face on the flour bag she was a black face vaudeville performer who originated the role of Queenie on stage in the 20s ironically the book that Showboat was adapted from was about the unfairness of segregation. I like to think that the pancake mix bag was cinemas first Easter Egg reference and I think a jab at the original Showboat cast for its own racism

  • @kevinnorman2937
    @kevinnorman2937 Před 2 lety

    At 2:07 (on the table) is an ORIGINAL Aunt Jeremiah's pancake mix.

  • @maszlagma
    @maszlagma Před 9 lety +15

    Aww, this is cute :)

    • @jslasher1
      @jslasher1 Před 8 lety

      +maszlagma Cute? How patronising.

    • @maszlagma
      @maszlagma Před 8 lety +5

      jslasher1 Why is it?

    • @flaming_trout
      @flaming_trout Před 4 lety

      this is so racist

    • @useyournogos6845
      @useyournogos6845 Před 4 lety +1

      @@flaming_trout How is it remotely racist?

    • @dizasadorableanimals6554
      @dizasadorableanimals6554 Před 3 lety

      @@maszlagma It's not. Some people can't handle the truth and the truth is this is just a fun song, not meant to be taken too seriously. Just a married couple exaggerating each other's faults. In a time when husbands did not do much domestically. It's not racist or patronising as they are portraying the time period of the movie and they are just living as best they can.

  • @kimkelly5512
    @kimkelly5512 Před rokem

    Imagine the parts that they would have now, I know Hattie McDaniel said she would rather play a maid then be one. But she was a pioneer, the first Black to win an academy award!

  • @Josephtimeisallwegot
    @Josephtimeisallwegot Před 4 lety +1

    that video was sweet. injoyed it with a cup of joe.

  • @Mascro1977
    @Mascro1977 Před 3 lety +3

    Just remember the doors there two opened and what these two did with what was given to them

  • @danjones3746
    @danjones3746 Před 4 lety

    Love this 🥰😃🇬🇧 xx

  • @kristinbecerra4694
    @kristinbecerra4694 Před 8 lety +3

    My new bio song 🔥🔥🔥🔥 I still suits meeeeee 🖕🏽

  • @iain62able
    @iain62able Před 13 lety +1

    Love this!!

  • @elliotudell164
    @elliotudell164 Před rokem

    The best

  • @frederickwise5238
    @frederickwise5238 Před rokem

    They were G R E A T

  • @leonore1719
    @leonore1719 Před 11 lety +4

    LOVE! Thank you for posting this gem

  • @EeBee51
    @EeBee51 Před 7 lety +2

    This has to be the song of my life. It used to drive my Mrs crazy, especially when I'd sing the "I maybe lifeless, but with one wife less, my life would be more strifeless" verse to her.. :D :D :D

  • @mozellentertainmentgroup5309

    Brilliant & wonderful but also heartbreaking because of what could & should have been but for RACISM! 🤩💔😍

  • @Nickleby2
    @Nickleby2 Před 12 lety +15

    You don't get it. You are focussing on me offending you yet you say it's my problem if I am offended by you. Where do you get your reasoning from? You make no sense at all. I don't care what you think about me, I am just saying to you that there is nothing derogatory about the way the artist are acting, because it is placed at a certain time in history. They are speaking and acting as people did around that time. slavery was still not very far from their minds and jim crow law was still fresh.

    • @wilrobles9824
      @wilrobles9824 Před 4 lety +5

      History needs to be understood in the context of how people thought and felt during that time. Issues then were resolved according to the times, and we don't need to relive them today. We got enough problems of our own today than having to deal with problems that have already been resolved.

    • @elena16350
      @elena16350 Před 4 lety +5

      Nickleby2 Hattie McDaniel and Paul Robeson were happy to sing that song, I know just as much about Paul’s exacting life, but you can see both Hattie and Paul have a great rapport with each other, they obviously enjoyed each other. The serious side comes into play later in Paul’s spectacular life, I say spectacular because in my opinion he was the greatest human being of all. He petitioned for black rights more effectively than Martin Luther King ever did, he spoke all over the world on equality for black people, he met with prime ministers, with Queens, going to Russia and China, black people have forgotten history, forgetting that they were given dignity by Paul Robeson.

  • @twinky666666
    @twinky666666 Před 11 lety +1

    she the one off the tom and Jerry cartoons !!!!!!!!

  • @TheHaratashi
    @TheHaratashi Před 3 lety +1

    Even blacks at that time gave her crap for playing the role of a maid all the time, but what they didn't understand was she played those roles with dignity and she did it her way and ignored her critics both white and black. Now THAT is someone to look up to.

    • @sandyk378
      @sandyk378 Před 2 lety

      Excellent comment💯‼️✝️❤️

  • @dovbarleib3256
    @dovbarleib3256 Před rokem

    Was this song included in the Show Boat from 1951?? I think not. Maybe it was in the original 1927 Broadway musical??
    Upon looking it up, this particular Duet was definitely excluded from the 1951 MGM musical. I wonder why?
    My guess might be that Paul Robeson wrote the song, not Jerome Kern, and Robeson refused to release the rights to be used in the MGM remake?

  • @ashpasch6004
    @ashpasch6004 Před 2 lety

    Shame on the entertainment industry back in those days she had to accept roles that picture her cooking and cleaning they even made her have a certain dialect . In fact she didn't even like to cook if you read history on her. That's why she always wanted to be shown with just a spoon cooking.
    She was underrated most definitely. What a beautiful lady and then to turn around and die of breast cancer at 59. Even more sad. May the world realize that all people are to be treated equal no matter what. 💟🙂

  • @2up3rm4n1
    @2up3rm4n1 Před 3 lety

    Was this song in the 1950s Showboat with Howard Keel and Ava Gardner?

  • @udz5480
    @udz5480 Před 4 lety +1

    OMG I love this lady, I saw her in Gone with the Wind! She was wonderful! I hope they were treated well given all the racist bullsh*t

    • @udz5480
      @udz5480 Před 3 lety

      @Roland Jefferson Hi Please note that I said "I hope they were treated well - hope". Thank you

  • @jeffersonjames1964
    @jeffersonjames1964 Před 2 lety +1

    The NAACP was really misguided re: Hattie McDaniel. Instead of hailing an amazing talent and continue to march towards equality.
    They used Hattie as a scape goat re: the civil rights movement. This lady was an amazing talent. A powerful actress that transcends time.

  • @barbaraforde9213
    @barbaraforde9213 Před 3 lety

    I had no idea Paul Robeson had such an extraordinary voice.

  • @ljvjngljkelarry9092
    @ljvjngljkelarry9092 Před 3 lety +1

    Can someone tell me what Hattie McDaniels says in her last lines in this song?

  • @darkfeather6857
    @darkfeather6857 Před 4 lety +25

    As beautiful as the music is, this makes me so sad: the lyrics, the caricature, the setting, the misogyny...yuck! We are some strong people! I don't know how my ancestors lived through that time, constantly trampled over and dehumanized. I'm not strong enough. I couldn't have done it.

    • @conorcolon
      @conorcolon Před 4 lety +3

      Dark Feather- Understand how you feel as an Irish- Italian growing up in that era. Everybody was ‘trampled over and dehumanized’ in those days. Heck I still get email ‘jokes’ about drunk Irishmen on St. Patrick’s Day. My mother confronted those ‘Irish need not apply’ signs when looking for work. Italians were vilified. The wasp city I grew up in was prejudiced against everyone not wasp. Anti- semitism was flagrant. Having said that, I can’t imagine your feelings. To me, Paul Robeson was one of the greatest talents ever ( AND got out of America’s toxic environment. Went to Europe, lived in France, honored everywhere.) Hatti Mc Daniels was a great talent who indeed was stereotyped, and still won an Academy award, was very successful. But in those days everyone was stereotyped.And yes, especially black people. But gosh they were talented. And yes your ancestors were ‘some strong people! Honest, decent, kind, smart, generous, patient, resilient, good humored, and so many other admirable qualities. You must be proud. I must also say that Yes, the song is yuck, but just to see those two great talents is thrilling. I hope you can look beyond an era that is so blessedly outdated. Truly different times. An example of that is the movie of John Steinbeck’s ‘Tortilla Flat’ about Mexican laborers. Who were the ‘Mexicans’? - Spencer Tracey, John .Garfield, Hedy Lamar and Akim Tamiroff. Ay, dios mio!

    • @dizasadorableanimals6554
      @dizasadorableanimals6554 Před 3 lety +9

      They're representing a poor black family of the time, at home. Poor was hard work for everybody at that time and there were all sorts of prejudices going on. This is tongue in cheek. There's no way any husband of that time was that lazy. No work. No money. No welfare system. The writers and actors appreciated the value of laughing at yourself and not taking stereotypes too seriously. Wish we could do more of that now, but everything is so P. C. These 2 were just beautiful in every role they ever had. RIP.

    • @pmccoy5511
      @pmccoy5511 Před 2 lety

      @@conorcolon I think that you need to remember that the Irish and Italians had almost ALL of Latin America to migrate to instead of the WASP United States. It's warm on the East coast so how bad could have Cartagena, Caracas or Rio do Janeiro have been? In any case massive immigration to Brazil, Sao Paulo, Rio grande do sul, Uruguay Montevideo, Argentina Buenos Aires, Mendoza etc; and Chile were welcoming Irish and Italians with wide open arms- as Whites and Catholics they faced no religious nor ethnic discrimination- the same could NOT be said of the Afro Latino nor the Afro Brazilian populations. Sure they may say that there was no Jim Crow or KKK but Segregation and exclusion from education, job opportunities even decent places to LIVE were denied to them not too dissimilar from Blacks in the United States or under British rule. You can't tell ME that no Italian nor Irish ever got wind of the discrimination in the United States, yet and still went anyway. Along the way Boston changed from a WASP to an Irish Catholic city, the Irish dominated the Catholic church , the fire and police departments and made their way up the political realms. Joe Kennedy got to be the United States ambassador responsible for US interests in Great Britain before WWI! Now that's thumbing it to the Brits isn't it. With Italians yes we got great actors and other professionals but we got the MAFIA too; America glamorizes and idolizes the Godfather, Goodfellas, etc; but excoriates Black and Latino criminals who never get high on the food chain of crime- there are NO Black Michael Corleones in the African American community. It seems hypocritical to ME to laud any kind of criminal. So it's all about choices. Robeson had to go to the USSR to get his freedom, Josephine Baker , James Baldwin and Richard Wright had to escape to France. Regular, less gifted African Americans could make it to Canada or Mexico if they were lucky. It pays to look at every side of a situation and it might make You ponder why your ancestors made the choices they did.

  • @rochellewarren6219
    @rochellewarren6219 Před rokem

    💜💥

  • @parreiramiranda
    @parreiramiranda Před 5 lety

    Nice

  • @j0eX
    @j0eX Před 12 lety +2

    Trivia: Hattie McDaniel put the "Aunt Jemima" box on the table because the woman on the box was the actress in the original "Showboat" on Broadway. It was a sort of homage. I've heard this more than once, but cannot remember the actress' name. Her stage name was "Aunt Jemima" though.
    Also, many women tease their men in this way. Why, even I have been called "shiftless and no good". No truth to it, of course.

  • @paulroberts9451
    @paulroberts9451 Před rokem

    Two great talents, never appreciated in their home nation, which is still riddled with prejudice and racism.

  • @tommyt9761
    @tommyt9761 Před 4 lety +1

    Their roles were stereotyped but their talent was not. So fortunate that we have them on film!

    • @tommyt9761
      @tommyt9761 Před 3 lety

      @Roland Jefferson Roland, I think you really should see someone. Your embittered agenda is not only not accurate, it will never get you to the next level. I wonder if you even have the capacity to be happy and productive. Kande West hugging Trump. Pardoning Jack Johnson, where was Obama?

    • @tommyt9761
      @tommyt9761 Před 3 lety

      @Roland Jefferson Hattie got a well deserved academy award for "Gone with the Wind" three years later. The fact that neither got their full recognition is accepted and understood by everyone in film today, and you, Roland, need to change doctors......and soon! Maybe time to move on?

    • @tommyt9761
      @tommyt9761 Před 3 lety

      @Roland Jefferson Since I "clearly know very little" and do not possess your level of knowledge, I have a feeling that a "civil conversation" would not be forthcoming. Both actors were very special and did wonders with what was offered to them at that time, which is ABSOLUTELY not the case today. Somehow, I have a deep feeling you are never going to accept the obvious evolution of minority actors to major starring roles. So, I will pass on your invite, wish you the best, and I will move on.

  • @JESUSISLORDforevermore888

    1/5/19: There is a new world coming where there will be no more racism, no diseases, killing, sadness, no disappointments or anything that is false or a lie. JESUS CHRIST will completely reign & rule. Even so, Come, LORD JESUS.