And I'm Steve Ember with the VOA Special English program PEOPLE IN AMERICA. Today, we tell about Paul Robeson. He was a singer, actor, and civil rights activist. In the nineteen thirties, he was one of the best known
and most widely honored black Americans. Later in his life he was condemned for supporting communism and the Soviet Union.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
Paul Robeson
Paul Robeson was born in Princeton, New Jersey in eighteen ninety-eight.
His father was a former slave who became the religious leader of a Protestant church. Paul was an excellent student and athlete. Rutgers University in New Jersey gave him money so he could study there. He played four different sports while at Rutgers.
He also was the top student in his class. Members of
his class believed Paul Robeson would become the leader of black people in America.
VOICE TWO:
Paul Robeson graduated from Rutgers in nineteen
nineteen. He attended law school at Columbia University in New York
City. He was only the third black person to attend Columbia Law
School. On the weekends, he earned money by playing professional football. He also
acted in plays. He married Eslanda
Cordoza Goode while he was in law school. After he graduated in nineteen twenty-three, he got a job with a group of
lawyers in New York.
However, he left when he experienced unfair treatment because he was black.
He decided not to work as a lawyer. Instead, he wanted to use his ability in theater and
music to support African American history and culture.
VOICE ONE:
Robeson became a professional actor. He joined the Provincetown Players, an acting group linked to American playwright
Eugene O'Neill. Robeson
was the star in two famous productions by Eugene O'Neill in the nineteen twenties. They were "All God's Chillun Got Wings" and "The Emperor
Jones." Critics praised his performances.
Robeson became the most recognized black actor of his time.
VOICE TWO:
Paul Robeson as Othello
In London, he earned international praise for his leading
part in William Shakespeare's great tragic play,
"Othello." That was in Nineteen thirty.
Thirteen years later, he played "Othello" on Broadway in New York.
It was very popular. In
"Othello," Robeson played an African general in ancient Venice. He is married to a young white woman. Othello kills his wife after being tricked into believing that she loves someone
else. This is how Paul Robeson sounded in "Othello."
(SOUND: from "Othello")
VOICE ONE:
Paul Robeson also was famous for appearing in the popular American musical play "Show Boat." He performed the play in London in nineteen twenty-eight and on Broadway four
years later. He played a riverboat worker. Jerome Kern wrote the music for "Show Boat."
Paul Robeson sang the song "Ol' Man River."
(MUSIC: "Ol' Man River")
VOICE TWO:
Paul Robeson appeared in eleven movies in the nineteen
twenties and nineteen thirties.
However, he realized that his acting was limited by the small number of parts for black
actors. He criticized the American movie industry for not showing
the real lives of black people in America. He stopped making movies and decided to sing professionally instead.
Robeson sang many kinds of music. He sang folk music from many countries. He
sang songs to support the labor and social movements of his time.
He sang songs for peace and justice. And, he sang African American spiritual music. One of his famous songs was this spiritual, "Balm in Gilead."
(MUSIC:"Balm in Gilead")
VOICE ONE:
Paul Robeson was recognized around the world for his
fight for civil rights for black Americans. Separation of black people and white people was legal in the United States. Black people did not have the same rights as white people. They were not treated equally. For
example, Robeson could not be served in some eating places in the United States. Violence against black people was common. Angry
mobs of whites sometimes killed black people, especially in the southern United States.
VOICE TWO:
In the late nineteen thirties, Paul Robeson became
involved in national and international movements that sought peace
and better labor conditions.
He also supported independence for African colonies from their European rulers. He learned the languages and folk songs of other cultures. He said these folk songs expressed the same feelings that were in African American
music. He learned to speak, write and sing in more than twenty languages.
VOICE ONE:
Robeson traveled a great deal in Europe during the nineteen thirties.
He found that black people were treated better in Europe than in the United States. He met members of liberal political organizations, socialists and African nationalists. He
also met many working people and poor people.
For many years, he performed in concerts in many
countries. The songs he sang supported the struggle for racial justice
for black Americans, and for civil rights and economic justice for
people around the world.
He refused to perform at concerts where the people were separated by race. He said: "The idea of my concerts is to suggest that all men are brothers because of their
music."
VOICE TWO:
In nineteen thirty-four, Paul Robeson made the first of
many trips to the Soviet Union. In the Soviet Union, he said, he was treated as an equal of whites for the first time in his
life. He declared his friendship for the Soviet Union. And he spoke about the need for peaceful co-existence between the United
States and the Soviet Union.
Conservative groups in the United States strongly opposed his friendship with the Soviet Union and
his support for other liberal issues.
VOICE ONE:
Paul Robeson went to Spain in nineteen thirty-eight
during the Spanish Civil War.
He sang for Spanish civilians.
And he sang for the Loyalist forces fighting for the Spanish
republic. One of the songs he sang was this Spanish Loyalist song,
"The Four Insurgent Generals."
(MUSIC: "The Four Insurgent Generals")
VOICE TWO:
In the nineteen forties, many people in the United States
were strongly opposed to Paul Robeson's political
beliefs. They said he was too liberal or extreme. Next week, we will tell you about how opposition to his political beliefs affected the last
part of his life.
(MUSIC)
VOICE ONE:
This PEOPLE IN AMERICA program was written by Shelley
Gollust and produced by Lawan Davis.
I'm Shirley Griffith.
VOICE TWO:
And I'm Steve Ember.
Join us again when we finish the story of Paul Robeson in Special English on the Voice of
America.