In Concert Series: Dorothy Dandridge
Actor(s):
Dorothy Dandridge
Label: Passport
Publisher(s):
Passport
Studio: Passport
Manufacturer: Passport
Binding: DVD
Brand: Koch International
MPN: PIP-DV1640
Format(s): Best of, Color, DVD-Video, Original recording remastered, NTSC
Rating: NR (Not Rated)
List Price: $9.99
Our Price: $9.99
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Similar Items:
Carmen Jones
Introducing Dorothy Dandridge
Dorothy Dandridge: An American Beauty
Dorothy Dandridge - Singing at Her Best
Everything and Nothing : The Dorothy Dandridge Tragedy
Island in the Sun
Smooth Operator
Tamango
The Josephine Baker Story
Stormy Weather
Editorial Reviews
Product Description
Track Listing
1. Paper Doll
2. Lazy Bones
3. Swing For My Supper
4. Cow Cow Boogie
5. Blow Out the Candles
6. My Heart Belongs To Daddy
7. You Do Something to Me
Bonus Biography
Dorothy Dandridge: An American Beauty
System Requirements:
Format: DVD MOVIE
Customer Reviews
First things first, this disc has the documentary "Dorothy Dandridge: An American Beauty" on it. Here I rented two discs, when I only needed one.
About a decade ago, I saw a video cassette of Josephine Baker performances at a video store. I was delighted that living people could actually see her perform and not just hear about it from others. Lynn Whitfield did a wonderful job portraying her in a biopic, but it was great to see the real person. The same applies here. Most people my age and younger have not seen Ms. Dandridge in anything besides "Carmen Jones." This is a great opportunity for the youngsters. Of course, Halle portrayed her brilliantly, but it is still great to see the real woman in action.
But having said that, this work is filled with all the racism of her era and it was a bit difficult to watch as an African American. Black dancers are seen grinning and bugging out their eyes and sticking out their lips. The performers did all the actions that Robert Townsend tried to critique in his "Hollywood Shuffle." I don't want to use potty mouth here, but there is a word that rhymes with spoon and loon that describes this carrying-on. In fairness, Black artists of the time were only given such demeaning roles. Still, it's not easy to see directly.
And here's another thing. In "The Same River Twice," Alice Walker wrote that being a dark-skinned woman was not seen as a bad thing until television and film came around. She said that is why she was happy that a dark-skinned actress was chosen to play Shug Avery in her film. In these vignettes from the past, Black men were of various hues, but all the Black women were light-skinned. This work painfully shows how the beauty and talent of dark-skinned women was ignored during this oppressive era.
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