[Dixielandjazz] Ethel Waters biography reviewed

Robert Ringwald rsr at ringwald.com
Sat Jan 8 15:46:23 PST 2011


"Heat Wave: The Life and Career of Ethel Waters." Donald Bogle, Harper, $26.99 (624p).
ISBN 978-0-06-124173-4.
Publishers Weekly, December 20, 2010
In this powerful biography, Bogle recovers the rich fullness of singer Ethel Waters's
life (1896-1977). In vivid though often exhausting detail, Bogle traces Waters's
rise from the poverty of her surroundings in Chester, Pa., through her early musical
successes in Harlem in the 1920s and 1930s to her film and Broadway career and her
later religious conversion as her health declined. Waters started singing very early,
and worked the clubs and chitlin' circuit with ribald and sexy songs; she soon made
her name as both black and white audiences flocked to hear her sing songs such as
"Am I Blue?," "Stormy Weather," and "Shake That Thing" in Harlem clubs. As Bogle
notes, Waters's records helped to create a new record-buying public, and she ushered
in a style of popular singing that later singers like Diana Ross would try to imitate.
Bogle chronicles her intimate relationships with both men and women as well as her
stormy relationships with other artists, like Josephine Baker and Lena Horne. Bogle's
thorough and unflinchingly honest look at Waters's brilliant and flawed life will
undoubtedly be the definitive biography of this great woman. -30



--Bob Ringwald
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