Ethel Waters Stormy Weather

Ethel Waters Stormy Weather by Stephen Bourne, published by Bloomsbury Publishing PLC on March 9, 2007, is a biography that explores the life and career of Ethel Waters, a prominent African American actress, singer, and entertainer. This edition spans 146 pages and is presented in English. The book details Waters’ journey from her challenging childhood to her rise as a groundbreaking figure in American entertainment, particularly during the Harlem Renaissance and her impactful presence on Broadway.
Readers will find a comprehensive account of Waters’ contributions to music and theatre, highlighting her transformation of classic songs into enduring standards and her role in elevating Black Theatre to mainstream audiences. The biography also examines her influence on future generations of artists and her pioneering achievements as one of the first African American women to gain equal recognition alongside white stars. With fourteen photographs included, this work sheds light on the legacy of a significant yet often overlooked figure in 20th-century performing arts.
Official synopsis Publisher
Ethel Waters overcame her disadvantaged childhood to become the most famous African American actress, singer, and entertainer of her time. Her critically acclaimed move to Broadway in the mid 1920s-after having first triumphed in Black vaudeville during the Harlem Renaissance-brought the startlingly innovative and subtle character of Black Theatre into the mainstream. Ethel transformed such songs as “Dinah,” “Am I Blue?,” “Stormy Weather,” and Irving Berlin’s “Heat Wave” into classics and inspired the next generation of Black female vocalists. She gave sophistication and class to the blues and American popular song, and she influenced countless singers including Judy Garland and Frank Sinatra.
Tough, uncompromising, courageous, and ambitious, Ethel Waters became one of the first African American women to be given equal billing with white stars on the Broadway stage. In 1943, the film version of her Broadway success, Cabin in the Sky, established her as Hollywood’s first Black-leading lady. In such plays as Mamba’s Daughters and films including The Member of the Wedding, she shattered the myth that Black women could perform only as singers. For her work in Pinky, she received an Academy Award nomination for Best Supporting Actress, the second African American to be so honored.
Although she was arguably the most influential female blues and jazz singer of the 1920s and 1930s, as well as a major Black figure in 20th century theatre, cinema, radio, and television, she is now the least remembered. In Ethel Waters: Stormy Weather, Stephen Bourne documents the career of this monumental figure in American popular culture, offering new insights into the work of this forgotten legend. Supplemented by fourteen photographs, this biography leaves little doubt as to why-for decades-no other Black star was held in such high regard.
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