| Paul Robeson was a famous African-American athlete, singer,
actor, and advocate for the civil rights of people around the world. He rose
to prominence in a time when segregation was legal in the United States, and
Black people were being lynched by racist mobs, especially in the South.
Born on April 9, 1898 in Princeton, New Jersey, Paul Robeson was the
youngest of five children. His father was a runaway slave who went on to
graduate from Lincoln University, and his mother came from an abolitionist
Quaker family. Robeson's family knew both hardship and the determination to
rise above it. His own life was no less challenging.
In 1915, Paul Robeson won a four-year academic scholarship to Rutgers
University. Despite violence and racism from teammates, he won 15 varsity
letters in sports (baseball, basketball, track) and was twice named to the
All-American Football Team. He received the Phi Beta Kappa key in his junior
year, belonged to the Cap & Skull Honor Society, and graduated as
Valedictorian. However, it wasn't until 1995, 19 years after his death, that
Paul Robeson was inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame.
At Columbia Law School (1919-1923), Robeson met and married Eslanda
Cordoza Goode, who was to become the first Black woman to head a pathology
laboratory. He took a job with a law firm, but left when a white secretary
refused to take dictation from him. He left the practice of law to use his
artistic talents in theater and music to promote African and
African-American history and culture.
In London, Robeson earned international acclaim for his lead role in
Othello, for which he won the Donaldson Award for Best Acting
Performance (1944), and performed in Eugene O'Neill's Emperor Jones
and All God's Chillun Got Wings. He is known for changing the lines
of the Showboat song "Old Man River" from the meek "...I'm tired of
livin' and 'feared of dyin'....," to a declaration of resistance, "... I
must keep fightin' until I'm dying....". His 11 films included Body and
Soul (1924), Jericho (1937), and Proud Valley (1939).
Robeson's travels taught him that racism was not as virulent in Europe as in
the U.S. At home, it was difficult to find restaurants that would serve him,
theaters in New York would only seat Blacks in the upper balconies, and his
performances were often surrounded with threats or outright harassment. In
London, on the other hand, Robeson's opening night performance of Emperor
Jones brought the audience to its feet with cheers for twelve encores.
Paul Robeson used his deep baritone voice to promote Black spirituals, to
share the cultures of other countries, and to benefit the labor and social
movements of his time. He sang for peace and justice in 25 languages
throughout the U.S., Europe, the Soviet Union, and Africa. Robeson became
known as a citizen of the world, equally comfortable with the people of
Moscow, Nairobi, and Harlem. Among his friends were future African leader
Jomo Kenyatta, India's Nehru, historian Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois, anarchist Emma
Goldman, and writers James Joyce and Ernest Hemingway. In 1933, Robeson
donated the proceeds of All God's Chillun to Jewish refugees fleeing
Hitler's Germany. At a 1934 rally for the anti-fascist forces in the Spanish
Civil War, he declared, "The artist must elect to fight for Freedom or for
Slavery. I have made my choice. I had no alternative." In New York in 1939,
he premiered in Earl Robinson's Ballad for Americans, a cantata
celebrating the multi-ethnic, multi-racial face of America. It was greeted
with the largest audience response since Orson Welles' famous "War of the
Worlds."
During the 1940s, Robeson continued to perform and to speak out against
racism, in support of labor, and for peace. He was a champion of working
people and organized labor. He spoke and performed at strike rallies,
conferences, and labor festivals worldwide. As a passionate believer in
international cooperation, Robeson protested the growing Cold War and worked
tirelessly for friendship and respect between the U.S. and the USSR. In
1945, he headed an organization that challenged President Truman to support
an anti-lynching law. In the late 1940s, when dissent was scarcely tolerated
in the U.S., Robeson openly questioned why African Americans should fight in
the army of a government that tolerated racism. Because of his
outspokenness, he was accused by the House Un-American Activities Committee
(HUAC) of being a Communist. Robeson saw this as an attack on the democratic
rights of everyone who worked for international friendship and for equality.
The accusation nearly ended his career. Eighty of his concerts were
canceled, and in 1949 two interracial outdoor concerts in Peekskill, N.Y.
were attacked by racist mobs while state police stood by. Robeson responded,
"I'm going to sing wherever the people want me to sing...and I won't be
frightened by crosses burning in Peekskill or anywhere else."
In 1950, the U.S. revoked Robeson's passport, leading to an eight-year
battle to resecure it and to travel again. During those years, Robeson
studied Chinese, met with Albert Einstein to discuss the prospects for world
peace, published his autobiography, Here I Stand, and sang at
Carnegie Hall. Two major labor-related events took place during this time.
In 1952 and 1953, he held two concerts at Peace Arch Park on the
U.S.-Canadian border, singing to 30-40,000 people in both countries. In
1957, he made a transatlantic radiophone broadcast from New York to coal
miners in Wales. In 1960, Robeson made his last concert tour to New Zealand
and Australia. In ill health, Paul Robeson retired from public life in 1963.
He died on January 23, 1976, at age 77, in Philadelphia. |