Al Jolson: Beyond the Spotlight

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  • čas přidán 16. 04. 2024
  • Al Jolson: Beyond the Spotlight: An in-depth look at the life and legacy of Al Jolson, a pioneering figure in American entertainment. This documentary delves into Jolson’s impact on early cinema, his groundbreaking performances, and the complex issues surrounding his portrayal of race and identity. Through archival footage, interviews, and expert analysis, viewers gain a deeper understanding of Jolson’s influence on popular culture and his enduring legacy in the world of entertainment
    #aljolson
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Komentáře • 109

  • @garyseward1641
    @garyseward1641 Před 11 dny +17

    What most people today don't know about Al Jolson is how much he was loved in the black community back in those days. He was the first performer to have an African American dance troop in one of his shows on Broadway. He was the first to hire black actors for a Broadway show. When he made a movie with Cab Calloway he told the studio that Cab was a star in his own right and that the studio better make sure that he got whatever Al got (the same pay, the same size dressing room, the same fancy food and all the other perks that Al had from the studio). When he was touring in vaudeville he heard that Eubie Blake and his partner couldn't get served in any of the restaurants in town because they were black. He grabbed up Eubie and his partner and took them to a Jewish delicatessen and worked it out with the owner to always let them to eat there when they were in town. Another time there was a black performer that couldn't get served at a restaurant. He told the man to come with him and they went back to the restaurant telling the man, you're with me and if anyone tries to stop us I'll punch them right in the mouth. The major black newspapers in the 20s and 30s were full of articles praising him as a wonderful man that was doing so much for black people. Al's performances in blackface were sympathetic portrayals of black people, racism was never his intent, and the black community saw that. Only today do people disrespect him and it's a shame because their disrespect of him is based on a misconception about his blackface performances.

  • @hochim
    @hochim Před 9 dny +7

    There is not one Black entertainer during the Jolson era who would ever say anything negative about him. He opened so many doors for Black performers. Always treating them equally, with affection and respect.

  • @vincentblack7467
    @vincentblack7467 Před 7 dny +3

    My grandma loved him I remember playing his music as a child and enjoy it as well...

  • @IvanRodriguez-hl4pg
    @IvanRodriguez-hl4pg Před 17 dny +8

    Jolie kept winning fans generation after generation. I became a fan and started buying his records after seeing The Jolson Story. They said that Jolson sang with a tear (pronounced teer) in his voice and it brought tears to the eyes of his audience. One of his biggest hit songs was Let Me Sing and I'm Happy. In it he sings if my song can start you crying, tapping your feet or homesick, I'm happy. He lived for the songs and applause. Singing was his drug just as writing is Steven King's drug. I got misty just watching this piece. Thank you CZcams.

  • @ingridbergman2583
    @ingridbergman2583 Před 18 dny +14

    Whether you agree with this type of entertainment, this is history.

  • @marthadoody
    @marthadoody Před 28 dny +11

    Thank you for posting this. I remember watching "The Al Jolson Story" probably in the 1960s on the afternoon movie, which I watched nearly every day. He's one of the greats.

    • @rubytuesday4564
      @rubytuesday4564 Před 20 dny

      Jolson was a narcissist. He married younger and younger, 4 times. Ruby Keeler was. She became a star, bigger than him. He dumped her, just like Don Trump. Narcissism is a lifelong sickness.

  • @SC-cd4hb
    @SC-cd4hb Před měsícem +13

    Although his singing is not as popular as in times past, his songs will live on.

  • @grouchosays
    @grouchosays Před 14 dny +3

    I used to be a professional musician. One night I played a gig in the mid-80’s at an Al Jolson Convention. Guy after guy came up to the stage to sing one of his songs.

  • @RoaroftheTiger
    @RoaroftheTiger Před měsícem +10

    Jolson started to use His Famous Whistle; When He once forgot the Lyrics to a Song He was singing.

  • @jamieb0nd
    @jamieb0nd Před 4 dny +1

    I first saw this documentary in 1986. Ever since I've been a massive fan of his.

  • @PeacefulPegasus-dr6jo
    @PeacefulPegasus-dr6jo Před 14 dny +2

    He could make them laugh or cry and old timers say he was the best.

  • @alanwitton5980
    @alanwitton5980 Před 11 dny +3

    Great documentary very informative thanks for uploading it

  • @scottrichards3246
    @scottrichards3246 Před měsícem +26

    Jolson will always be the worlds greatest entertainer, no matter what decade or century we are in...

    • @derdude1491
      @derdude1491 Před 29 dny

      I don’t think a J3w singing about his mommy in blackface deserves that title

    • @BCNbananas
      @BCNbananas Před 27 dny +1

      Judy Garland was much better...just saying.

    • @scottrichards3246
      @scottrichards3246 Před 27 dny +4

      @@BCNbananas You have no clue... Completely different enterainers, get a life..

    • @doreekaplan2589
      @doreekaplan2589 Před 18 dny +1

      Nope. Too weird for nowadays the black face. No one would stand for it.

    • @pjangels609
      @pjangels609 Před 14 dny +1

      @@scottrichards3246 you like entertainers that did racist black face?

  • @ziplip5678
    @ziplip5678 Před 4 dny +2

    al would be just as popular today..

  • @vincentkalafate43
    @vincentkalafate43 Před měsícem +9

    Jolson was The : Elvis, Beatles, Michael Jackson, Bing Crosby, Tom Jones Ect. Equivilants of His Times ! With Huge Biographical Movies of His Career !

    • @anthonyfrew1571
      @anthonyfrew1571 Před 27 dny +1

      May I add Al Bowlly - Britain's first pop star

    • @IvanRodriguez-hl4pg
      @IvanRodriguez-hl4pg Před 17 dny

      You just hit the nail on the head, Vince. He really was the world's greatest entertainer.

  • @tinatina1104
    @tinatina1104 Před 8 dny +2

    I was a young child when I watched him on tv. Black and white minstrel show. I thought nothing of it I just watched because there wasn’t much else on tv

  • @rogerrambo4172
    @rogerrambo4172 Před 29 dny +6

    Jolson will be back. He can still get any audience doing anything. It's just a case of finding the correct format

    • @doreekaplan2589
      @doreekaplan2589 Před 18 dny +1

      Never again with blackface. No one would stand for it.

    • @rogerrambo4172
      @rogerrambo4172 Před 14 dny +2

      @@JoshMaxPower what I mean is, there will come a time, maybe because of a new biopic, that audiences rediscover him & his music & make him popular again, I didn't mean he physically would return

  • @jamesAlexander007
    @jamesAlexander007 Před měsícem +7

    Wonderful documentary by the South Bank Show with Melvyn Gragg thanks for posting a decent copy of this documentary.

    • @varietyguy
      @varietyguy Před 22 dny

      I was one of the advisors on that South Bank Show back in 1986.

  • @user-vr6xm8lm1o
    @user-vr6xm8lm1o Před 13 dny +2

    Jolson wanted the second movie made because …
    At the end of the first one, “Julie Benson “ was walking out on him; the next one he got married again and he stays happily married from then on , there was going to be a 3rd movie with Jolson playing HIMSELF, but he soon passed on …😮

  • @robertramirez3994
    @robertramirez3994 Před 29 dny +7

    It's interesting to revisit the past to see what was happening during that period of time and what was celebrated, and then leave it in the past were it belongs .

  • @peterjarratt8823
    @peterjarratt8823 Před 2 dny

    Throughout musical entertainment we have a lot to thank the Cantors for.

  • @user-vr6xm8lm1o
    @user-vr6xm8lm1o Před 13 dny +1

    Jolson’s true title has always been “ The Minstrel of Broadway”. 😊😊

  • @margaretthomas8899
    @margaretthomas8899 Před 28 dny +2

    The intro! Well said!!!

  • @user-vr6xm8lm1o
    @user-vr6xm8lm1o Před 13 dny +1

    Jolson’s famous whistling was taught to him by his manager, Louis Epstein. Jolson was always calling him Eppy.

  • @RoaroftheTiger
    @RoaroftheTiger Před měsícem +3

    Milton DeLugg (!) on the Accordian and one time Conductor of the Tonight Show Band.

    • @grouchosays
      @grouchosays Před 14 dny

      Milton DeLugg and his band with a thug

  • @Thomas-yr9ln
    @Thomas-yr9ln Před 22 dny +1

    He was very popular when he had the hit song I think it was daddy's little fellow. In 1939 when it played over the car radio people in the street honk their horn.

  • @martinbryan3716
    @martinbryan3716 Před 14 dny +2

    15:27 -- "...what was to become the first EVER talking picture." Not true at all! (I would hope that this bombastic claim would not be used in better researched documentaries nowadays!) Even Jolson himself appeared in a Vitaphone talking picture short a year earlier called "A Plantation Act." Aside from this, Edison produced talking pictures a decade earlier, and Lee de Forest pioneered successful talking pictures with electrical recording earlier in the 1920s.

  • @RayPointerChannel
    @RayPointerChannel Před 27 dny +2

    Al Jolson was one of the major Broadway Stars of 100 years ago, a reflection of social attitudes of the time. He had the good fortune to be associated with great songs, and projected a personalty that projected in theaters. But as a singer, may have differing opinions about him since he was extremely nasal, but improved with age as his voice gained more of a bass range. The controversy about Jolson is his connection with the Blackface performances, the necessity being questionable. It is a paradox that Jolson gain such acclaim as an artificial Black man when there were many natural Black entertainers just a talented, but never reaching the levels of acclaim. And while Jolson had a great stage presence, he was one of those stage personalities who did not translate well to film. Aside from his reputation as "The World's Greatest Entertainer" helping to sell THE JAZZ SINGER, which ushered in sound motion pictures forever, his subsequent films became more and more difficult to take, especially placed with a Black cast. The camera was not complimentary for Jolson, and on the big screen he was a bit grotesque to look at, made worse with the black face makeup. Perhaps if he had not fallen back on a Minstrel images, he would have been less controversial aside from his personal issues.

    • @margaretthomas8899
      @margaretthomas8899 Před 23 dny

      How old do you happen to be please?

    • @Carl.Henriksson
      @Carl.Henriksson Před 22 dny +2

      It only became controversial in recent years. Back then, it could have been controversial too, but for the opposite reasons. After all, him doing blackface actually helped the black entertainners.

    • @anbraiii4798
      @anbraiii4798 Před 20 dny +1

      Hallelujah I'm a Bum is actually not a bad film. Its adventurous and has a sad ending which musicals didn't tend to do in those days and no blackface in that one.

    • @anbraiii4798
      @anbraiii4798 Před 20 dny

      Yeah 'Going to heaven on a Mule' is terrible but blame the studio more than Jolson for that one.

    • @varietyguy
      @varietyguy Před 12 dny +1

      @@anbraiii4798: Jolson can’t be blamed at all - zero - for any of his blackface performances on film. He was an “at will” actor who signed a contract with one of the motion picture studios here in Hollywood. Once he affixed his signature to the contract, he had to do whatever they told him to. It’s really that simple.

  • @janmcdonald3896
    @janmcdonald3896 Před 20 dny +1

    I’m a big fan of stars from the 1930s & onwards but I never really got Al. Give him his due though he was a huge star at the time & a lot by the sheer force of his personality as his voice while recognisable wasn’t that great. I agree with some of the earlier comments that he will not be taken on by new generations. The black face & acting like a minstrel is just too cringeworthy. Most remembered now of course 4 the Jazz Singer the first talkie. RIP Al.

    • @varietyguy
      @varietyguy Před 3 dny

      @@janmcdonald3896 I hate the new age term cringeworthy. I don’t feel cringeworthy or cringey when I see white performers in blackface. Jolson, Cantor, Judy, Bing and Fred Astaire excelled in blackface entertainment. Why do you feel so “cringeworthy?”

  • @TJ1920
    @TJ1920 Před 26 dny +3

    Brilliant entertainment Al Jolson
    yes he did black face. back in the day nobody new any better back in the day he was in fact Jewish

    • @Carl.Henriksson
      @Carl.Henriksson Před 22 dny +5

      Him doing blackface didn't hurt anyone back then, because people weren't as spoiled back then to take such offense. In fact, him doing blackface helped the black entertainners INFINITELY more than any of these useless activists today ever have and ever will.

    • @pjangels609
      @pjangels609 Před 14 dny

      nobody knew any better?! Are you serious? It was a direct reflection of perpetuating racist stereotypes through dialects, culture and disguising ethnic identity.

    • @DEKMAN99
      @DEKMAN99 Před 11 dny

      The emperor has no clothes. This dude is extremely overrated. Nothing entertaining about him.

    • @varietyguy
      @varietyguy Před 8 dny +1

      @@DEKMAN99: That’s dumb. Really dumb.

    • @margaretthomas8899
      @margaretthomas8899 Před 4 dny

      @@DEKMAN99 Why are you here then? BE CAREFUL SOMEBODY YOU KNOW MIGHT FIND OUT?

  • @williamevans9426
    @williamevans9426 Před 27 dny

    That is Aaron Copland, isn't it?

  • @robertalbano3826
    @robertalbano3826 Před 13 dny

    A slight narcissist. Lol Although, I love Him...Lol

  • @ChurlsBeardSmug
    @ChurlsBeardSmug Před měsícem +6

    No more generations will be 'discovering' Jolson. Some artists do not survive their time.

  • @genecarmichael
    @genecarmichael Před 8 dny

    It was just the way society was back in the day, bigotry was looked upon as a normal thing. I didn't say it was right, but it was what it was.

  • @bahiras
    @bahiras Před 9 dny

    It’s offensive. Period.

  • @angloaust1575
    @angloaust1575 Před 26 dny

    Why would he want to colour up maybe to hide something
    Soldiers use camaflage dye
    As well!

    • @Sassyjass2012
      @Sassyjass2012 Před 26 dny

      Many American performers during the early 20th Century started their careers in minstrel and vaudeville shows, where blackface was used. This sometimes included African Americans! It’s awful now, but was matter of fact then.

  • @edwardnashen5960
    @edwardnashen5960 Před 16 dny

    I realize he was huge and the talent of the time, totally vauudville in style. Even the timber of his voice was a bit much.. That Mammy thing. Yes historic because of the first talking film. For me it doesn't stand up with time. I actually prefer Eddie Cantor. Jolson was so Over done with the black face and very much of an over actor. Corny and cheesey. But of course that was the style. It's Apples and oranges, but a Garbo, she holds up after all the decades. He is a legend of early entertainment.

  • @paulhicks6667
    @paulhicks6667 Před 8 dny

    Fascinating to see the weird shit that previous generations found entertaining.

    • @grouchosays
      @grouchosays Před 2 dny

      @@paulhicks6667 that’s the way I feel about my children’s love of Michael Jackson.

  • @WGARVA
    @WGARVA Před 26 dny +2

    Judy's versions of Al Jolson's songs have aged better than his, IMHO.

    • @margaretthomas8899
      @margaretthomas8899 Před 23 dny

      When did Judy Garland died, and how old was she, and when did her career begin?

    • @varietyguy
      @varietyguy Před 22 dny +1

      Which recordings are you referring to?

    • @clivestraw1913
      @clivestraw1913 Před 21 dnem +2

      He wore black up to protest against there not being any black people in shows he was very anti racist and supported the black entertainers

    • @WGARVA
      @WGARVA Před 21 dnem

      @@varietyguy they are all over CZcams.

    • @user-vr6xm8lm1o
      @user-vr6xm8lm1o Před 13 dny +1

      @@margaretthomas8899Judy was becoming a legend well into the 1950s , she died in 1969 of an accidental overdose at 47 and she was becoming popular into the late
      1930s.

  • @BCNbananas
    @BCNbananas Před 26 dny

    He couldn't even dance. Go find your own life

    • @user-ul3xy4bd4e
      @user-ul3xy4bd4e Před 22 dny

      Never. Knew he was so. Great ,THANKYOU. For sharing xx