Watch Beah: A Black Woman Speaks on the Documentary Channel

 

 

BEAH: A BLACK WOMAN SPEAKS, the directorial debut of actress LisaGay Hamilton, celebrates the life of legendary African American actress, poet and political activist Beah Richards, best known for her Oscar nominated role in GUESS WHO’S COMING TO DINNER. While Richards struggled to overcome racial stereotypes throughout her long career onstage and onscreen in Hollywood and New York, she also had an influential role in the fight for Civil Rights, working alongside the likes of Paul Robeson, W.E.B. DuBois and Louise Patterson.

WOMEN MAKE MOVIES | Beah: A Black Woman Speaks.

Remembering Paul Robeson (April 9, 1898 – January 23, 1976)

via Black Agenda Report.

Paul Robeson was the son of an escaped slave, who became an all-American athlete, and one of the first three black graduates of Columbia University Law School. After discovering that he would only be allowed to research the cases white lawyers presented, he began a career as an actor on stage and movies, a singer, and political activist. Robeson wrote and spoke more than a dozen languages fluently, and sang in ten more. While earning six and seven figures a year in the Depression as an artist, he began openly raising money for political causes, and by the late 1940s he was a full time fighter for the rights of black and oppressed people. Robeson was severely punished for his activism, but remained defiant and unrepentant to the end of his days.

Listen to a radio broadcast of Jazz and Justice hosted by Dr. Jared Ball