Black Women Musicians Photo Gallery and related media
Black Women Musicians
Mary Lou Williams
Mary Lou Williams (1910-1981) was a jazz pianist and arranger.
Related Photo Galleries (2)
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Black Women Musicians
Black Women Musicians(20 Photos)
20 Photos
View images of famous female African American singers and musicians.
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Historical Best Picture Winners
Historical Best Picture Winners(9 Photos)
9 Photos
Like "The King's Speech" and "The Social Network," movies about real people and actual historical events win big at the Academy Awards.
Related Videos (10)
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Ask Steve: The 60's Music
Ask Steve: The 60's MusicVideo Clip (1:48)
Video Clip (1:48)
The influence of rock and roll music on young people in the 1960's is examined in this Ask Steve video. This rock and roll music grew up simultaneously with the Baby Boomers, and was used as a way to differentiate themselves with their parents.
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Harry Belafonte: Early Frustration with Black Leadership
Harry Belafonte: Early Frustration with Black LeadershipVideo Clip (1:30)
Video Clip (1:30)
Black History Month: Harry Belafonte: Black Leadership - In this clip Harry Belafonte talks about his frustrations with black leadership during the Civil Rights Movement era.
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Harry Belafonte: King 'Always Worried'
Harry Belafonte: King 'Always Worried'Video Clip (2:00)
Video Clip (2:00)
"There was hardly a thing that Martin King set out to do that didn't worry him, he wretched over everything . . . Death was always preeminent in his thoughts."
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Harry Belafonte Recalls Meeting Dr. King
Harry Belafonte Recalls Meeting Dr. KingVideo Clip (0:38)
Video Clip (0:38)
On a normal day years ago, Harry Belafonte remembers receiving a phone call that would change his life forever. What was this phone call about? Watch this History Channel interview with Harry Belafonte to find out.
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Harry Belafonte: Rosa Parks
Harry Belafonte: Rosa ParksVideo Clip (1:18)
Video Clip (1:18)
Belafonte gives a great summation of the impact of the bus boycott and the seismic shift it caused in the civil rights movement; how the center of power and the "hope" for the future shifted south. He talks about the sudden emergence of a "young preacher named Martin Luther King."
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Harry Belafonte: Aftermath of King Assassination
Harry Belafonte: Aftermath of King AssassinationVideo Clip (2:19)
Video Clip (2:19)
Belafonte details his learning of King's death and traveling immediately to Memphis to meet with Correta. He talks about her strength & "dignity" in agreeing to lead the "Poor People's March" in Memphis the very next day.
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Harry Belafonte Recalls March on Washington
Harry Belafonte Recalls March on WashingtonVideo Clip (1:57)
Video Clip (1:57)
The Civil Rights Movement: Harry Belafonte: March on Washington - In this clip Harry Belafonte shares his thoughts about the march on Washington and how Martin Luther King, Jr. was concerned that the success of the march would elude them.
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Harry Belafonte: King 'Had a Tic'
Harry Belafonte: King 'Had a Tic'Video Clip (2:36)
Video Clip (2:36)
"The inability to reason with death caused more anxiety than he realized." Harry Belafonte relates these words of Martin Luther King, as well as his experience with the great reformer. To learn of Belafonte's relationship with King, watch this video.
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Belafonte 'Devastated' by MLK Assassination
Belafonte 'Devastated' by MLK AssassinationVideo Clip (0:52)
Video Clip (0:52)
Harry Belafonte visited with Dr. King just days before the assassination.
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Harry Belafonte Recalls Youthful King
Harry Belafonte Recalls Youthful KingVideo Clip (1:00)
Video Clip (1:00)
Belafonte details his memories of a youthful Dr. King.
Related Speeches & Audio (10)
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Harry Belafonte Rates "I Have a Dream" Speech
Harry Belafonte Rates "I Have a Dream" SpeechAudio Clip (0:27)
Audio Clip (0:27)
According to Belafonte, Martin Luther King's "I Have a Dream" speech ranks as one of the most important speeches in American political history.
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Josephine Baker Confronts Racist
Josephine Baker Confronts RacistAudio Clip (1:06)
Audio Clip (1:06)
A Los Angeles news report explains how the African-American dancer Josephine Baker took a stand against racism by making a citizen's arrest.
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Irving Berlin on Stephen Foster
Irving Berlin on Stephen FosterAudio Clip (0:39)
Audio Clip (0:39)
Twentieth-century composer Irving Berlin discusses songwriter Stephen Foster's contributions to American popular music. Foster's most well-known songs include "Oh! Susanna," "Camptown Races" and "My Old Kentucky Home."
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James Dean on Set of "Rebel Without a Cause"
James Dean on Set of "Rebel Without a Cause"Audio Clip (2:29)
Audio Clip (2:29)
On a break from shooting, movie legend James Dean is interviewed about his approach to acting. "Rebel Without a Cause" was released in 1955, less than a month after Dean's untimely death.
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Jim Morrison on Songwriting
Jim Morrison on SongwritingAudio Clip (0:57)
Audio Clip (0:57)
In an interview with Village Voice rock journalist Richard Goldstein for PBS's "Critique," which aired May 23, 1969, Doors frontman Jim Morrison describes the influence of live performance on song structure.
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Critic Judith Crist on "Let It Be"
Critic Judith Crist on "Let It Be"Audio Clip (1:31)
Audio Clip (1:31)
Film critic Judith Crist reviews the upcoming documentary "Let It Be," which was released in May 1970 after Paul McCartney announced the Beatles were breaking up.
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Bernstein's New York Philharmonic Debut
Bernstein's New York Philharmonic DebutAudio Clip (1:37)
Audio Clip (1:37)
On November 14, 1943, an introduction to the New York Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra concert at Carnegie Hall announces that the young American-born assistant conductor, Leonard Bernstein, will be taking the place of Bruno Walter, who fell ill.
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Harold Lloyd on Slapstick Comedy
Harold Lloyd on Slapstick ComedyAudio Clip (0:49)
Audio Clip (0:49)
Harold Lloyd, who along with Charlie Chaplin and Buster Keaton was one of the Big Three of silent film comedy, compares his early work to current comedy in film.
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George Lucas on Becoming a Filmmaker
George Lucas on Becoming a FilmmakerAudio Clip (1:31)
Audio Clip (1:31)
The imaginative force behind "Star Wars"" and "Indiana Jones," George Lucas is interviewed about his early days in film school and breaking into Hollywood.
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Silent Film Director Recalls W.C. Fields
Silent Film Director Recalls W.C. FieldsAudio Clip (1:33)
Audio Clip (1:33)
Mack Sennett, creator of the Keystone Kops, shares his memories of what it was like to know and work with the incomparable comedian W.C. Fields.
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