2008
DOI: 10.1353/scr.2008.0013
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Performing "Stormy Weather": Ethel Waters, Lena Horne, and Katherine Dunham

Abstract: "Performing 'Stormy Weather': Ethel Waters, Lena Horne, and Katherine Dunham": This essay demonstrates how an African-American modernist impulse and racial critique could be posed and circulated through the sounds, movements, and mises-en-scène of popular and mass performance. Examining the dramaturgical dimensions of the song "Stormy Weather" in key performances in the first half of the twentieth century reveals expressions of African-American modernism in some unlikely places: Tin Pan Alley standards, Cotton… Show more

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Cited by 17 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…We move from the set of the cabaret stage into a city street. We have traveled from the imaginative world of the theater into a real‐world scene outside—a scene “that could not possibly be behind the flat on the cabaret platform,” as Shane Vogel notes (106).…”
Section: The Black Dream Balletmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We move from the set of the cabaret stage into a city street. We have traveled from the imaginative world of the theater into a real‐world scene outside—a scene “that could not possibly be behind the flat on the cabaret platform,” as Shane Vogel notes (106).…”
Section: The Black Dream Balletmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Sharpe (2016): 106.10 The 1933 song has lyrics by Ted Koehler and music by Harold Arlen. For a detailed history of the song and its performances, seeVogel (2008).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%