
Paul Robeson - United States

Paul Robeson: Standing Tall
by John Pietaroo
www.zmag.org, April 2006
The conception of art as a weapon has been promoted during various
trying times in history. Within the 20th century, the period bridging
the early 1900s and the end of the Great Depression is most often
cited for its protest art. With April being the anniversary of
Paul Robeson's birth, it is a good time to remember one of the
voices that rose to prominence during that time. While there were
many, none experienced the popular adulation and systematic governmental
assault like Paul Robeson. Robeson embodied the "cultural
worker" by choice and necessity as he fought for his civil
rights while struggling for global justice.
Robeson never forgot that his father was
born into slavery and this shaped much of his future philosophy.
He attended Rutgers University (graduating in 1919) and became
an award-winning athlete. His achieved status of All-American
on the sports field, however, did not eclipse his other areas
of study. The young Robeson also became a champion of the Rutgers
debating team, won Phi Beta Kappa honors, and graduated as class
valedictorian. His graduate studies would lead him to law school
but, though he achieved attorney status, his heart led him to
the theater.
Robeson engaged in numerous productions
during his college years, turning professional as an actor and
vocalist by 1925. His breakthrough role was that of Joe in the
operatic Broadway musical Showboat, a work known as much for its
early commentary on race relations as for its brilliant score.
"Old Man River," always the
showstopper in Showboat, became Robeson's signature song. He subsequently
embarked on a series of solo concert tours, usually performing
with piano accompaniment and always taking on a huge range of
material, from opera to spirituals to folk songs. "Old Man
River" remained in his repertoire throughout his career,
albeit adapted to its times. Over the years Robeson would modify
the lyrics to better signify the struggle for the rights of black
Americans, changing "You gets a little drunk and you lands
in jail" to the telling "You show a little spunk and
you land in jail." More to the point, he altered "Tired
of living and fear'd of dying" to the staunchly courageous
"I'll keep on fighting until I'm dying."
Perhaps more than any other figure, Robeson
stood as a model to not only African Americans, but also to the
white population as well. As much as he posed a threat to the
powers that be, his image was that of a highly respected performer
and thinker. The left embraced him as both artist and activist.
Robeson's schooled, classical approach and performance practice
fit into the 1920s and 1930s intellectual left as an American
original.
In contrast to the racial hatred he saw
in the U.S., European audiences, and particularly those in the
Soviet Union, greeted him like royalty. He stood with and performed
for striking British miners and he continued to speak out for
labor and progressive movements all over the world.
It was during these global tours that
Robeson became interested in other cultures and languages. He
learned folk songs in many languages and then made a serious study
of linguistics, eventually having conversational command of many
languages.
Whether on these shores or overseas, Robeson
brought his own culture to his audience. He introduced powerfully
rebellious slave songs to mixed audiences, often interspersing
them with patriotic American works.
From the late 1930s to the early 1940s,
Robeson took on what is viewed as his greatest role, "Othello,"
and also became a film actor of note. Concurrently, he recorded
several songs that became hit records, including compositions
by Earl Robinson, such as, "The House I Live In" and
"Ballad for Americans."
Though the Cold War was dangerous to the
left as a whole, it hurt Paul Robeson in a most profound way.
Opportunistic right-wing zealots pursued him. Immediately after
the war, he began building a committee to sustain peace and was
soon targeted. Within a few years, McCarthyites had something
tangible-a 1949 interview with a French journalist. Robeson's
comments concerned the invalidity of a U.S. government that would
call on its black citizens to fight for freedom when they had
no real rights at home. Reactionaries immediately branded him
as "anti-American."
That same year, he performed at a concert
that would be recalled as the Peekskill Riot. Due to the slander
of his own government, Robeson's presence gave racists, many of
whom were Klansman and American Nazis, a chance to attack him
as a "traitor." The violence that ensued is legendary,
with performers and audience members alike bearing the brunt of
a brutal assault with clubs and rocks. Quickly, Robeson would
see the walls of the blacklist surround him and do what no one
else could-silence him.
What red-baiting, physical assault, and
censorship could not fully achieve, revoking Robeson's passport
could. Beginning in 1950 and continuing for nine years thereafter,
this international voice of the people was prohibited from traveling.
It was this lasting wound that would rupture his contact with
his audience. How insidious the attempt to silence Robeson was
can be seen in the executive order inflicted by President Truman
in 1952, which stated that should Robeson attempt to exit the
country, U.S. border personnel were instructed to apprehend him,
"by any means necessary." It was this same order that
was read aloud to him when, in 1952, he was scheduled to perform
a concert at the Peace Arch in Canada. Unable to cross the border
into British Columbia, he set up a stage on a flat-bed truck,
performing to the Canadians from the edge of Washington State,
while border patrol officers stood with guns cocked and ready.
Robeson remained a fighter and released
his autobiography Here I Stand in 1958. Though systematically
ignored by all U.S. major media, foreign journalists hailed the
book as a great and noble work. He continued intermittent performances
for several more years, though this period saw him struggling
against bouts of major depression and several physical illnesses.
Worn out from years of battle, he left public life in 1964. By
the time of his death in 1976, Robeson was a shadow of his former
self.
Far ahead of his time, he was perhaps
the ultimate victim of a frightened, racist system hell-bent on
maintaining the status quo, suppressing rebellion and preaching
hatred.
John Pietaro is a protest musician, writer,
and labor organizer.
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