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Sadie Alexander came from a family with a rich history of academic achievement. Her father was the first black American ...
05/07/2024

Sadie Alexander came from a family with a rich history of academic achievement. Her father was the first black American to graduate from the University of Pennsylvania Law School. One uncle was the first black American to graduate from the University of Pennsylvania Medical School, and another became the Dean of Education at Howard University. She would follow the lineage, becoming the first black American to earn a Ph.D. in Economics and the first black American woman to earn a law degree from the University of Pennsylvania, among other notable academic achievements.

But while she would achieve many firsts in education, Sadie's lasting legacy stemmed from her impactful work as a lawyer and economist, where she fought for equal rights while taking an ardent, vocal stance on the importance of black Americans' achievements and contributions to the nation's progress. This latter effort came at a particularly important time in U.S. history, as the eugenics movement, which aimed in part to show the inferiority of black Americans, had gained popularity.

Though she wouldn't achieve the same fame, some described Sadie as one of the most important civil rights leaders in modern history, mentioning her amongst people such as Frederick Douglass, Martin Luther King Jr., and Sojourner Truth.

Happy Birthday to Chris Tucker (born August 31, 1971).He is an actor as well being astand-up comedian. He is best known ...
04/07/2024

Happy Birthday to Chris Tucker (born August 31, 1971).

He is an actor as well being a
stand-up comedian. He is best known for his roles as Detective James Carter in Brett Ratner's Rush Hour film series and Smokey in F. Gary Gray's Friday. He became a frequent stand-up performer on Def Comedy Jam in the 1990s.

He appeared in Luc Besson's The Fifth Element, Quentin Tarantino's Jackie Brown, David O. Russell's Silver Linings Playbook, and Brett Ratner's Money Talks.

Portrait of a young girl as she sits in a homemade go-kart on a Harlem sidewalk, New York, New York, 1947.
04/07/2024

Portrait of a young girl as she sits in a homemade go-kart on a Harlem sidewalk, New York, New York, 1947.

Michael Jackson in the studio with his cousin Stevie Wonder, 1975.
04/07/2024

Michael Jackson in the studio with his cousin Stevie Wonder, 1975.

Remembering Isabel Sanford (born August 29, 1917 – July 9, 2004).She was an American stage, film, and television actress...
04/07/2024

Remembering Isabel Sanford (born August 29, 1917 – July 9, 2004).

She was an American stage, film, and television actress and comedian best known for her role as Louise "Weezy" Mills Jefferson on the CBS sitcoms All in the Family (1971–1975) and The Jeffersons (1975–1985).

In 1981, she became the second black American actress to win a Primetime Emmy Award, and the first to win for Outstanding Lead Actress in a Comedy Series.

Born in Joplin, Missouri February 1, 1901 James Mercer Langston Hughes had already spent two years in Paris working as a...
04/07/2024

Born in Joplin, Missouri February 1, 1901 James Mercer Langston Hughes had already spent two years in Paris working as a busboy in a Montmartre restaurant owned by WWI pilot Eugene Jacques Bullard. It was in that club he first heard the music of Black American jazz greats who fled to France following the war. One of the earliest innovators of “jazz poetry”, Hughes is best known as the Poet Lauréat of the Harlem Renaissance. Hughes died May 22, 1967 in NYC

Whoopi Goldberg and her mother, 1986.
04/07/2024

Whoopi Goldberg and her mother, 1986.

George Washington Carver had a difficult start in life. Born sometime around 1864, his father died shortly before George...
04/07/2024

George Washington Carver had a difficult start in life. Born sometime around 1864, his father died shortly before George's birth, likely from an accident when he was out hauling wood. And only weeks after birth, slave traders kidnapped George and his mother. Rescued would not be an apt term; recovered is more appropriate. But the group sent out to find him and his mother exchanged a horse for the young boy. His mother, however, was lost to the traders. Less than two months old, and George was already an orphan.
Often sick, frail, he was not expected to live. But live he did, and from a young age, he showed much devotion to work and a desire for learning. He was curious, and as he'd roam the woods near the Carver home, exploring flowers, trees, rocks, and birds, he began asking questions about their purpose.
While much of his education early on was self-motivated, he began formal schooling at ten. He learned of a school about eight miles from the Carver home. And without any money or a new home, he left the Carver's to attend this school, living in an old barn while doing odd jobs to earn money to survive. Eventually, he was adopted into a family there.
Education for George would continue through completing a Master's Degree in agriculture from Iowa State University in 1896. After which, he took a job as Head of the Agricultural Department at the Tuskegee Institute in Alabama.
George was also an artist. At the age of 30, Carver gained acceptance to Simpson College in Indianola, Iowa, where he was the first Black student. Carver studied piano and art.
As an agricultural scientist and inventor, his goal was to help farmers improve their lives by earning more from their crops. He found hundreds of uses through his research of peanuts in particular and other products such as sweet potatoes and pecans. His work was instrumental and impactful. Between 1915 and 1918, acreage for peanut cultivation grew from half a million to over four million acres.
After George passed away in 1943, Franklin D. Roosevelt sent a message that said: "All mankind are the beneficiaries of his discoveries in the field of agricultural chemistry. The things which he achieved in the face of early handicaps will for all time afford an inspiring example to youth everywhere."

Happy Birthday to Mario Barrett (born August 27, 1986).Known mononymously as Mario, he is an singer, songwriter, actor, ...
03/07/2024

Happy Birthday to Mario Barrett (born August 27, 1986).

Known mononymously as Mario, he is an singer, songwriter, actor, dancer, and model. He is known for his singles "Just a Friend" (2002) and "Let Me Love You" (2004), which won him two Billboard Music Awards. He has released four studio albums: Mario (2002), Turning Point (2004), Go (2007), and D.N.A. (2009).

At the end of the 2000s decade, Mario was ranked No. 98 by Billboard on their "Artist of the Decade" list. His fifth album Dancing Shadows, released in 2018, saw him in a more introspective sound.

His 2020 single "Closer" was released and has since started the Closer Challenge on the social media platform TikTok.

In 1893, Frederick Douglass invited Ida B. Wells to lunch. She noted a place across the street, but indicated they would...
03/07/2024

In 1893, Frederick Douglass invited Ida B. Wells to lunch. She noted a place across the street, but indicated they would not receive service there. “Mr. Douglass, in his vigorous way, grasped my arm and said, ‘Come, let’s go there.’” Together, they “sauntered in...as if it were an everyday occurrence, cocked and primed for the fight if necessary.” Douglass grabbed a table and chair for him and Wells, as “paralyzed” staff looked on. A stand-off ensued with wait staff until the proprietor realized it was Frederick Douglass, and warmly welcomed him while sharing stories of a time past when Douglass visited his hometown. “When [the proprietor] finally went to another part of the room, Mr. Douglass turned to me with a roguish look and said, ‘Ida, I thought you said that they didn’t serve us here. It seems we are getting more attention than we want.’”

Frederick Douglass spent his life fighting for justice and equality. He never knew the date of his birth. This is something he struggled with throughout his lifetime. Douglass believed that he was born in the month of February in 1817. In fact, records show that Douglass was born in February of 1818. He chose the 14th of February for his birthday because his mother would call him her “little Valentine." Unfortunately, Douglass never knew much about his parentage. His mother, Harriet, was sold off when Douglass was but a child, and he only met her a few times before she passed away. Though born enslaved in Maryland, he escaped as a young man and became a leading voice in the abolitionist movement.

Actor, dancer, director Billie Allen was born Wilhelmina Louise Allen on January 13, 1925 in Richmond, Virginia.Allen wa...
03/07/2024

Actor, dancer, director Billie Allen was born Wilhelmina Louise Allen on January 13, 1925 in Richmond, Virginia.

Allen was one of the first black actors and performers to appear on television and stage in the United States, at a time when those venues were largely closed to African Americans. During the 1950s, Allen became one of the first black entertainers to have a recurring role on network television when she was cast as a WAC on staff on the CBS army base comedy The Phil Silvers Show, from 1955 to 1959. She was one of the first African Americans to appear on television commercials in the U.S. She was also one of the earliest African American actors on daytime soap operas as she appeared in the mid-1950s as the character Ada Chandler on the popular daytime soap opera The Edge of Night. Allen was also known for her work on Broadway and off Broadway.

Happy Birthday to Evan Ross (born August 26, 1988).He made his acting debut in the comedy-drama film ATL (2006), and has...
03/07/2024

Happy Birthday to Evan Ross (born August 26, 1988).

He made his acting debut in the comedy-drama film ATL (2006), and has since starred in the films Pride (2007), According to Greta (2009), Mooz-lum (2010), 96 Minutes (2011), Supremacy (2014), The Hunger Games: Mockingjay – Part 1 (2014) and Part 2 (2015).

Ross is the son of Supremes lead singer Diana Ross and brother of Tracee Ross.

Katherine Jackson holding her son Michael Jackson.......
03/07/2024

Katherine Jackson holding her son Michael Jackson.......

February 29, 1948 - Willi Donnell Smith was a Black American fashion designer, regarded at the time of his death as one ...
03/07/2024

February 29, 1948 - Willi Donnell Smith was a Black American fashion designer, regarded at the time of his death as one of the most successful young Black American designers in the industry was born in Philadelphia, PA, on this date in 1948.
His company Williwear Ltd. sold $25 million worth of clothing a year. He studied commercial art at Mastbaum Technical High School and attended Philadelphia College of Art for fashion illustration.
He then moved to New York to go to Parsons the New School for Design, the art and design College of The New School University.
In 1967, Smith quit Parsons to pursue a career designing on his own. In 1969 he designed a label for Digits, a sportswear company. In 1973, Smith, along with his sister Toukie Smith, founded their own clothing company that soon failed.
Smith continued to design and in 1976 he went into business with Laurie Mallet and called the company "Williwear." He designed the wedding dress worn by Mary Jane Watson when she married Peter Parker in the Spider-Man comic book and comic strip in 1987, and the suits for Edwin Schlossberg and his groomsmen when he married Caroline Kennedy in 1986.
Smith also designed the uniforms for the workers on Christo's 1985 wrapping of the Pont Neuf Bridge in Paris and clothes for Spike Lee's film School Daze (1987).
Smith worked with many other designers and artists during his time at Williwear including Antthony Mark Hankins, James Mischka, Julia Santos-Solomon, Jon Coffelt, John Bartlett and Andre Walker among many others.
Smith partnered with Jhane Barnes on some of his earlier shows. Smith was the costume designer for "Secret Pastures" which premiered at Brooklyn Academy of Music's Next Wave Festival in 1984, one of Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company's first major works.
Smith died in 1987 after contracting shigella and pneumonia while on a trip to India, apparently as a result of AIDS. It is suspected that Smith himself did not know he had the disease, although those around him knew he was fragile in his last days.
Most thought it was just that Smith had pushed himself so hard, being such a perfectionist with his work. John Bartlett, who was working at the time of Smith's untimely death, took over design operations and remained until 1993.
Smith, who was openly gay, has a panel in the original NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt and is also lamented in a poem Speak: A Poem for the Millennium March by Keith Boykin, read by its author for the Millennium March on Washington for Equality on April 29, 2000.
Smith earned two scholarships to attend Parsons School of Design in 1965. In 1994 he won an American Fashion Critics' Coty Award for women's fashion. Smith won a Cutty Sark Award for Men's Fashion in 1985. He was honored with a bronze plaque for Fashion Walk of Fame along Seventh Avenue in 2000-2002.

Reri Grist is an internationally acclaimed lyric and coloratura soprano noted for her “silvery tone, flawless technique ...
03/07/2024

Reri Grist is an internationally acclaimed lyric and coloratura soprano noted for her “silvery tone, flawless technique and stupendous acting.” Beginning her singing career as Consuelo in Leonard Bernstein’s musical “West Side Story” in 1957, she introduced the song “Somewhere” to the public. After that performance she flowed gradually into a thirty-year career in opera, singing countless roles in opera houses across Europe and America. She also concertized and has passed on her insights through teaching voice in several countries.
Born in New York on February 29, 1932, to West Indies immigrant parents who encouraged her talent and self-discipline, Grist acted as a young teen in several musicals. She attended the High School of Music and Art and received a degree in music from Queens College, New York in 1954. Singing with Bernstein’s New York Philharmonic, she gained recognition that led to her official operatic debut at the Santa Fe Opera in 1959, as Adele in Die Fledermaus. Igor Stravinsky met her there and invited her to perform in his Le Rossignol in 1963.
During a sightseeing trip to Europe in 1960, Grist auditioned for the Opernahaus Köln in Germany, and was immediately offered her European debut singing the Queen of the Night in Mozart’s Die Zauberflöte. She then became the first African American woman to become a permanent member of the Zurich Opera, 1960-1966 in Switzerland. This led to debuts at the Royal Opera House, Covent Garden, and Glyndebourne Festival Opera, in all in Great Britain, and at the Vienna State Opera in Austria where she performed through twenty-five consecutive seasons. In 1963 she first appeared with the San Francisco Opera, and continued through twelve seasons with that company. Grist debuted at the Metropolitan in 1966, singing there throughout twelve years. Her singing career has encompassed every major soprano role in opera repertoire. Through the years Grist has also performed concert works by classical and contemporary composers with major orchestras and conductors.
In 1991 Grist ended her operatic career at De Nederlanse Oper Amsterdam in the Netherlands in the one-woman tour de force Neither by Morton Feldman/Samuel Beckett. In 2007 she joined the original cast in a 50th anniversary celebration of “West Side Story,” singing “Somewhere,” the song that showcased her early beginnings in the musical world. Her awards include a Legacy Award from the American Opera Association, in 2001, a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Licia Albenese Foundation, 2003, and awards from Queens College.
As Professor of Voice, Grist taught at the School of Music, Indiana University, Bloomington, Indiana and in Munich. She has been on numerous international juries and her Master Classes have been held in Santa Fe, New York, San Francisco, Zurich, and Madrid, Spain.
Rene Grist has lived for many years in Hamburg, Germany. She is married to Dr. Ulf Thomson, artistic administrator and general manager of symphony orchestras in Hamburg and Berlin. The couple has one daughter.
On her 80th birthday Grist was honored by professional and personal accolades. She stated that she appreciates her past accomplishments but lives in the excitement of the present.

Happy Birthday to Demetria McKinney (born August 27, 1979).She is an actress and singer-songwriter. She starred in the T...
02/07/2024

Happy Birthday to Demetria McKinney (born August 27, 1979).

She is an actress and singer-songwriter. She starred in the TBS sitcom Tyler Perry's House of Payne, a BET revival of the show was announced for 2020. Her other series regular roles include TV One sitcom The Rickey Smiley Show, Bounce TV prime time soap opera Saints & Sinners and Syfy horror drama Superstition.

Her stage credits include playing Coretta Scott King in the Rhythm and Blues Opera I Dream (2010), and well as role of Deena Jones in Dreamgirls (2012). In 2017, McKinney played Whitney Houston in the TV One film Bobbi Kristina. She released her debut album Officially Yours in 2017.

RARE PHOTO OF A YOUNG ROBERT GUILLAUMERobert Guillaume (born Robert Peter Williams; November 30, 1927 – October 24, 2017...
02/07/2024

RARE PHOTO OF A YOUNG ROBERT GUILLAUME
Robert Guillaume (born Robert Peter Williams; November 30, 1927 – October 24, 2017) was an American actor and singer, known for his role as Benson DuBois in the ABC television series Soap and its spin-off Benson, as well as for voicing the mandrill Rafiki in The Lion King and related media thereof. In a career that spanned more than 50 years he worked extensively on stage, television and film. For his efforts he was nominated for a Tony Award for his portrayal of Nathan Detroit in Guys and Dolls, and twice won an Emmy Award for his portrayal of the character Benson DuBois, once in 1979 on Soap and in 1985 on Benson. He also won a Grammy Award in 1995 for his spoken word performance of an audiobook version of The Lion King. He was also in the 1989 movie Lean on Me as Dr. Frank Napier.

He studied at Saint Louis University and Washington University in St. Louis. He joined the United States Army in 1945, where he served until 1947.

After leaving university, Guillaume joined the Karamu Players in Cleveland and performed in musical comedies and opera. In 1964, he portrayed Sportin' Life in a revival of Porgy and Bess at New York City Center. He adopted the surname Guillaume (French for William) as his stage name. His other stage appearances included Golden Boy (with Sammy Davis Jr.), Tambourines to Glory, Guys and Dolls, for which he received a Tony Award nomination, Jacques Brel is Alive and Well and Living in Paris, and Purlie! His additional roles included Katherine Dunham's Bambouche and in Fly The Blackbird.

Guillaume was a member of the Robert de Cormier Singers, performing in concerts and on television. He recorded an LP album, Columbia CS9033, titled Just Arrived as a member of The Pilgrims, a folk trio, with Angeline Butler and Millard Williams. Columbia records producer, Tom Wilson, had set out to create the Pilgrims as an answer to the popular folk trio, Peter, Paul and Mary.

By early 1964, the Pilgrims had recorded a handful of songs and Wilson was looking for the right song for the group's debut single when then unknown singer/songwriter named Paul Simon arrived for a meeting with Wilson and eventually pitched his new composition, "The Sound of Silence".

Later in his stage career, he was cast in the lead role in the Los Angeles production of The Phantom of the Opera, replacing Michael Crawford.

Guillaume made several guest appearances on sitcoms, including Good Times, The Jeffersons, Sanford and Son, Saved By The Bell: The College Years and in the 1990s sitcoms The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air and A Different World. Guillaume also played Dr. Franklin in season 6, episode 6 ("Chain Letter") of the series All in the Family, in which he coyly referenced Marcus Welby, M.D., a TV series in which he had guest-starred in 1970.

His voice was employed for characters in television series Captain Planet and the Planeteers, Fish Police, and Happily Ever After: Fairy Tales for Every Child. He was known for the voice of Rafiki in the movie The Lion King and its sequels and spin-offs. He lent his deep tenor voice as Mr. Thicknose in The Land Before Time VIII: The Big Freeze. He also supplied the voice for Eli Vance in the 2004 video game Half-Life 2 and its immediate episodic sequels.

HONORS

Guillaume has a star on the St. Louis Walk of Fame. On November 28, 1984, Guillaume received a star on the Hollywood Walk of Fame for his work in the television industry.

AWARDS

▪1979 Soap Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Supporting Actor in a Comedy Series

▪1985 Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Lead Actor in a Comedy Series

▪1995 The Lion King Read-Along Grammy Award for Best Spoken Word Album for Children

Happy Birthday to Valerie Simpson (born August 26, 1946).She is known for being part of the husband-and-wife songwriting...
02/07/2024

Happy Birthday to Valerie Simpson (born August 26, 1946).

She is known for being part of the husband-and-wife songwriting-production team, Ashford & Simpson, with husband, Nickolas Ashford.

As performers, Ashford & Simpson's best-known duets are "Solid" (1984) and "Found a Cure" (1979). The duo were inducted into the Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2002. They are also recipients of The Rhythm & Blues Foundation's Pioneer Award, ASCAP Founders Award, and the Grammy Trustee Award.

The great poet, novelist and playwright Paul Laurence Dunbar was born on June 27, 1872. His parents who were enslaved in...
02/07/2024

The great poet, novelist and playwright Paul Laurence Dunbar was born on June 27, 1872. His parents who were enslaved in Kentucky and freed after the American Civil War moved to Dayton, Ohio. Dunbar began to write stories and verse as a child and published his first poems at the age of 16 in a Dayton newspaper. He was also president of his high school's literary society.
Much of Dunbar's more popular work in his lifetime was written in the "Negro dialect" associated with the antebellum South, though he also used the Midwestern regional dialect of James Whitcomb Riley. Dunbar was one of the first Black writers to establish an international reputation. He wrote the lyrics for the musical comedy “In Dahomey”, the first all Black musical produced on Broadway in New York in 1903. The musical later toured in the U.S. and the United Kingdom.
Dunbar also wrote in conventional English in other poetry and novels. Since the late 20th century, scholars have become more interested in these other works. Suffering from tuberculosis, which then had no cure, Dunbar died in Dayton, Ohio at the age of 33 on February 9, 1906.

James Brown sacked his backing band in March 1970 after they complained about his system of fining anyone who played a b...
02/07/2024

James Brown sacked his backing band in March 1970 after they complained about his system of fining anyone who played a bum note. In their place he pulled in a young Cincinnati act named The Pacesetters, led by brothers Phelps "Catfish" Collins and Bootsy Collins, aged 27 and 19 respectively, and renamed them The JB's. Their first recording was "Get Up (I Feel Like Being A) S*x Machine." Their first LP, S*x Machine, is cited as one of the greatest and most important soul records of all time.
The original J.B.'s played on some of Brown's most intense funk recordings, including "Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) S*x Machine", "Bewildered (1970)", "Super Bad", "Soul Power", "Talkin' Loud and Sayin' Nothing", and two instrumental singles, the much-sampled "The Grunt" and "These Are the J.B.'s". In regards to his tenure working for James Brown, Bootsy Collins stated:
"He treated me like a son. And being out of a fatherless home, I needed that father figure and he really played up to it. I mean, Good Lord. Every night after we played a show, he called us back to give us a lecture about how horrible we sounded. [Affects James Brown voice] "Nah, not on it, son. I didn't hear the one. You didn't give me the one." He would tell me this at every show. One night, we knew we wasn't sounding really good – we were off – and he calls us back there and said, "Uh huh, now that's what I'm talkin' about. Y'all was on it tonight. Y'all hit the one." My brother and I looked at each other like, "This mother has got to be crazy." We knew in our heart and soul that we wasn't all that on that show. So then I started figuring out his game, man. By telling me that I wasn't on it, he made me practice harder. So I just absorbed what he said and used it in a positive way."
After parting ways with James Brown, Collins moved to Detroit, Michigan, after Philippé Wynne suggested joining The Spinners, for whom Wynne had been singing. However, following the advice of singer and future Parliament member Mallia Franklin, Collins made another choice. Franklin introduced both Collins brothers to George Clinton, and in 1972, both of the Collins brothers, along with Waddy, joined Funkadelic. Collins played bass on most of Funkadelic and Parliament albums through the early 1980s, garnering several songwriting credits as well.
In 1976 Collins, Catfish, Waddy, Joel Johnson (1953–2018), Gary "Mudbone" Cooper, Robert Johnson and The H***y Horns formed Bootsy's Rubber Band, a separate touring unit of Clinton's P-Funk collective.
The group recorded five albums together, the first three of which are often considered to be among the quintessential P-Funk recordings. The group's 1978 album Bootsy? Player of the Year reached the top of the R&B album chart and spawned the #1 R&B single "Bootzilla". Like Clinton, Collins took on several alter egos, from Casper the Funky Ghost to Bootzilla, "the world's only rhinestone rockstar monster of a doll".

Harold Melvin (The Blue Notes) was born on June 25, 1939 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.He became one of the driving forc...
02/07/2024

Harold Melvin (The Blue Notes) was born on June 25, 1939 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.
He became one of the driving forces behind Philadelphia soul, leading his group the Blue Notes. The group formerly known as The Charlemagnes took on the name “The Blue Notes” in 1954, with a lineup consisting of Harold as lead singer, Bernard Wilson, Roosevelt Brodie, Jesse Gillis, Jr., and Franklin Peaker.
The 1960 single “My Hero” was a minor hit and 1965’s “Get Out (and Let Me Cry)” was an R&B hit.
In 1970, Harold recruited Teddy Pendergrass as the drummer for his backing band. When that same year Teddy took over as lead singer from John Atkins, he became the undeniable superstar of the group.
By 1975, Pendergrass and Harold Melvin were at odds, mainly over financial issues and personality conflicts. Despite the fact that Pendergrass sang most of the group's songs, Melvin was controlling the group's finances.
At one point, Pendergrass wanted the group to be renamed "Teddy Pendergrass and the Blue Notes" because fans kept mistaking him for Melvin.[citation needed] Pendergrass left the group in 1975, and the Blue Notes struggled with his replacements.[7] They eventually left Philadelphia International and toiled in relative obscurity, until Melvin's death
The group had a string of hits “If You Don’t Know Me By Now”, “I Miss You”, “The Love I Lost”, and “Don’t Leave Me This Way”, and socially conscious songs such as “Wake Up Everybody” and “Bad Luck” which holds the record for longest-running number-one hit on the Hot Dance Music/Club Play chart.

Happy Birthday to Mike Colter (born August 26, 1976).He is best known for his role as Luke Cage in Marvel's Luke Cage (2...
01/07/2024

Happy Birthday to Mike Colter (born August 26, 1976).

He is best known for his role as Luke Cage in Marvel's Luke Cage (2016–2018), The Defenders (2017), and Jessica Jones (2015; 2019), all set in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. He has also appeared as Lemond Bishop in the television series The Good Wife (2010–2015) and The Good Fight (2017-present), Malcolm Ward in Ringer (2011–2012), Jameson Locke in the Halo franchise (2014–2015) and Agent J's father in Men in Black.

Colter's first role was in the film Million Dollar Baby, as boxer Big Willie Little. He has also guest starred on Law & Order: Trial By Jury, Law and Order: Criminal Intent, The Good Wife, ER, and The Parkers, as well as several TV movies. He also starred in the series Ringer.

Colter is married to Iva Colter, as of 2016. He also confirmed on the September 27, 2016, segment of The Wendy Williams Show that he has a daughter with her.

He is a second cousin of actress Viola Davis. Colter resides in Los Angeles.

Coralie Franklin Cook was born on this date in 1861. She was a Black activist, suffragist, orator and scholar.Descended ...
01/07/2024

Coralie Franklin Cook was born on this date in 1861. She was a Black activist, suffragist, orator and scholar.
Descended from slaves owned by President Thomas Jefferson, Coralie Franklin was born in Lexington, Virginia the younger of two daughters from Albert Barbour Franklin and Mary Elizabeth Edmondson. Her parents were enslaved by Southern First Families of Virginia (FFV). She was a descendant of Elizabeth "Betty" Hemings, an enslaved mixed-race woman, whose children and many descendants occupied the most valued household and tradesman positions at the President's home, the Monticello. Franklin's maternal great grandfather, Brown Colbert, was a former slave at the Monticello estate. Colbert was the son of Betty Brown and the grandson of Elizabeth (Betty) Hemmings. Franklin had one older sister named Mary Elizabeth.
In 1870, their father, Albert Franklin placed his two daughters in the Storer Normal School at Harpers Ferry. She graduated from Storer Normal School in 1880. While attending college, Franklin was an honorary member of the Delta Sigma Theta sorority, a member of the Red Cross, the NAACP, the Book Lovers Club and the Juvenile Protective Society. In 1881, Franklin continued her education through institutions in Boston and Philadelphia where she studied elocution. After a few years of teaching at her alma mater, she also taught a year of school in Hannibal, Missouri. She and colleague Mary Church Terrell moved to Washington, D.C. to seek careers in education.
Franklin taught elocution at Howard University and was a professor at the Washington Conservatory of Music. She served on the Board of Education in Washington D. C., the second Black woman after Terrell to hold that appointment. Additionally, she spent five years as Director of the Home for Colored Children and Aged Women in Washington, D. C. Franklin and Terrell became prominent leaders among elite Black women and the Black Women's Club movement. They were early members of one of the oldest Black women's clubs, the Colored Women's League of Washington, which eventually merged with other groups to form the National Association of Colored Women's Clubs (NACWC) in 1896.
She also served as the head of the Home for Colored Orphans and Aged Women for five years. On August 31, 1898, Franklin married George William Cook, a professor and dean of the school at Howard University and NAACP member, and joined the faculty at Howard University. The Cook's had one son named George William Cook Jr. on Dec. 15, 1901. She became the second Black woman appointed to the D.C. school board. Franklin Cook was active in the woman's suffrage movement. She and Terrell were active members of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA) and part of the association's inner circles.
She was also a member of the Coleridge Taylor Choral Society and was elected president of the Washington Artists' Association. She spent five years as head of the Home for Colored Orphans and Aged Women in Washington D. C. Franklin Cook was a powerful public speaker. She was the only Black woman invited to give an official statement at Susan B. Anthony's 80th birthday celebration in 1900. Her address praised the movement for encouraging women to recognize their potential political power and their responsibility to one another and emphasized the necessity of in*******al empathy. She stated, "no woman and no class of women can be degraded, and all womankind suffers thereby."
She was disheartened, however, because she felt as if the cause of Black women was not a priority among white women active in the suffrage movement. She insisted that the elite white women do not ignore the political rights of those that were less fortunate. In fact, she addressed Anthony directly, stating, "...and so, Miss Anthony, on behalf of the hundreds of colored women who wait and hope with you for the day when the ballot shall be in the hands of every intelligent woman; and also, on behalf of the thousands who sit in darkness and whose condition we shall expect those ballots to better, whether they be in the hands of white women or Black, I offer you my warmest gratitude and congratulations."
In a speech entitled "Votes for Mothers," Franklin Cook again stressed the importance of enfranchisement for both women and people of color. She stated, "Disfranchisement because of s*x is curiously like disfranchisement because of color. It cripples the individual, it handicaps progress, it sets a limitation upon mental and spiritual development." Franklin Cook spoke at the Colored Women's League convention in Atlanta, Georgia in 1895 and gave a presentation on "Negro Poets" at the First Race Amity Convention in 1921.
In 1884, Franklin Cook purchased a home in Harpers Ferry at 509 Fillmore Street. Franklin purchased the home from Storer College where she was teaching at that time. Franklin Cook and her husband were married for thirty-three years until George died on August 20, 1931. Franklin Cook's sister Mary Franklin was married to attorney J. R. Clifford, a civil rights leader associated with the Niagara Movement. Coral Franklin Cook died in 1942, at eighty-one years of age.

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