Showing posts with label Dick Gregory. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dick Gregory. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 30, 2017

"Not poor, just broke": Deceased Artiste Dick Gregory

Dick Gregory never shut up. When other standup comedians did “safe” comedy about airlines, the “battle of the sexes,” and living in suburbia, Greg (as he was known to his friends and fans; he wrote that “the White press started referring to me as 'Dick' Gregory”) took his place as “the black Mort Sahl,” dissecting issues of the day with pointed humor.

When other comedians avoided civil rights marches (Lenny Bruce, whom Greg considered a “genius,” openly admitted he was wary of attending the marches), Greg put himself in the front lines and always had a fast joke and insight for a nearby news camera. When black celebrities had a choice in the Sixties whether they would keep their career on an even keel or make a statement with their behavior, Greg made it clear where he stood and actually killed his comedic career by being such a committed individual. Greg wouldn't shut up, and for that we should all be grateful.


He may not have been the single best black standup comic of all time (that honor will always go to Pryor, of whom Greg said in his book Callus on My Soul, “Richard Pryor surpassed me in many ways.”) and he never had a fraction of the multi-million dollar success of Bill Cosby or Chris Rock. But because he took the chances he took and because he never stopped talking about injustice, Gregory was arguably the most important standup of his generation and inarguably the first “modern” black standup.


The first thing that strikes you when watching footage of Greg in the early Sixties — of which there is precious little on the Net — is how relaxed he is. It's not a spaced-out calm, it's an impressively low-key attitude he maintains while saying very sharp things. Take, for example, the segment he did on a Merv Griffin Show episode in 1965, which aired recently on Get TV and is sadly represented online by this brief snippet of panel talk rather than standup:


The topics he discussed are sadly timeless, most prominently police brutality in communities of color. He remained concerned and authentic while also being level-headed about the topics under discussion. Greg had the aspect of a reporter (or, more properly, an op-ed columnist) in his standup, someone who is pointing out the absurdity of it all, but also noting the “normalcy” that disguised racist views, the way in which most of the things he opposed were touted simply as “the way it is.” The best early footage of him can be found here at 15:18:


As he got older he became much more outraged. It was a brutal reaction that came about most likely because he had seen so many of his allies from the Movement die violent deaths (many of which were highly suspect and — gosh, can it be? — wound up benefitting our government). So Greg became an old voice calling young people to account, saying in essence that the work his colleagues started isn't done and, most likely, won't be finished for decades to come.

Greg celebrated the Obama presidency but had no delusions about a “post-racial” America, and he said so, which made it impossible for him to get on mainstream TV. Except for Arsenio Hall, who continued to bring on the “old guard” of black standups (Gregory, Mooney, even Dolemite himself, Rudy Ray Moore).


So Greg guested on left-wing programs — not the phony liberal shows on MSNBC, but the shows that are as “Left as is comfortable” in the U.S., like Democracy Now. This tribute episode includes a large chunk of a 2001 interview in which Greg does parts of his act in an interview with Amy Goodman.


There again you've got Greg in his element — talking with an assurance and a wry straightforwardness that never let the viewer lay back and disconnect. When he was in his standup persona, Greg invited you to laugh but he never wanted you to get so comfortable that you'd tune out the fact that the absurdities he was talking about are taken as “normal” in America.

Greg put his life on the line on a regular basis. He kept taking crazy chances with his health (through countless months-long hunger strikes) and his personal safety way into his senior years. In what was a clear challenge to younger people (and the rest of us), he was saying, “here's an old man who won't sit down and be quiet — what about you?” He could, however, still do a calm and straightforward interview.


An ample amount of Greg's comedy is available online in audio form, but his books still need to be read. From the first he shook things up, calling his autobiography nigger (1964), to get the word right out there on bookshelves. He also offered reflections on the Movement in From the Back of the Bus (1962), the story of his write-in run for President (Write Me In!, 1968), a second volume of his autobiography (Up From Nigger, 1976), and a survey of his dietary/health advice (Dick Gregory's Natural Diet for Folks Who Eat, 1973).

All the above (except the diet book) was in my local Jackson Heights, Queens, library when I was growing up and I found them to be great “101s” about the civil rights movement, with the proper amount of somberness and tenacity but also with jokes (it never hurts to teach with a smile).

I recently finished reading Greg's last memoir Callus on My Soul (2000), which was apparently going to be turned into a documentary by actor-filmmaker Bill Duke. There's a short version of the doc (or a long version of the trailer?) on Vimeo:



It was great to “catch up” with Greg's life — he hadn't written in the intervening years about his weight-loss product years and the many (many!) political issues he protested since the Sixties. His process for opposing an event or institution was specific: speaking out, protesting, and getting arrested if necessary. In Callus he dotes wisely on the importance of the “press” a given protest would get – decades before the Internet, he, like Abbie Hoffman and others on the Left, understood that the most important thing is the media coverage of an event. Check out the footage after 34:00 in this assemblage of great clips:




Callus has one curious “thread”: the number of times that Greg felt “something was wrong” and didn't go somewhere, only to later find that one of his friends was killed in the place he didn't go. It is an odd trope — it's almost like he was saying that he was sorry his friends had to die, but that he's glad that he hadn't joined them.


Perhaps, though, this only struck me as odd because of my own atheism — throughout his life, Greg credited two forces for keeping him out of harm: God and his wife, Lil (who survived him; the couple were married for 58 years until Greg's death). In the instances in which he survived a “near-miss” his prayers, he says in Callus, were what kept him alive.

The book has an informal voice, thanks to co-author Sheila P. Moses keeping Greg's own thoughts and reflections on things in the forefront, while offering younger readers historical context for the situations he writes about. One of the things that was always impressive about Greg was the degree to which he credited his writing staff. On his comedy albums he made their names known, and in his books, he put the cowriters' names right below his own, in the same type-size (no invisible ghost writers for him). Here’s a long C-SPAN interview with Greg about Callus:




In a profession like standup comedy, where the younger performers want to appear like “whiz kids” who write all their material, it was refreshingly honest of Greg to acknowledge the presence of the men (and women) who made his act as good as it was.




Sadly, a lot of the videos found on YT consist of Greg as a senior berating his younger interviewers for not being familiar with history he was talking about (real and extrapolated). The very real conspiracies  he had discussed in decades past had transformed into discussions of how each trauma experienced by a black celebrity was a conspiracy — making it seem as if the immaculately talented Prince and Michael Jackson were the targets of state-sponsored “hits” like Medgar Evers, JFK, and Dr. King were.


Those videos show that Greg lost none of his fire as he got older, but he unfortunately went off in a direction that didn't befit his kind of intensity. Of far more importance is the very real situation he talks about near the end of Callus: the CIA's introduction into black communities of a billion dollars’ worth of cocaine, creating the crack epidemic of the Eighties — and funding the Contras in Nicaragua and American activities in El Salvador.

This is the kind of “reporting” we needed and always got from Greg. And if he wasn't as calm and wry as a senior as he was as a young man, he continued to fight the good fight until his last days. A hell of a legacy for man who started out as a nightclub comedian….

*****

A few of his comedy albums can be listened to in their entirety on YT, some track by track (such as his first from 1961, In Living Black and White). Here is one side of East and West:


The Two Sides of Dick Gregory (1963):


The later Greg, from 1969: The Light Side: The Dark Side:


One of his best routines from the later period, “Frankenstein,” finds him conflating a bunch of the Universal monster pics, but creating a nice allegory for the Civil Rights Movement:


A very good interview from 1966, shot in a nightclub:


1968 interview, about presidential candidacy (b&w)


A quite odd program: Friends of… Gloria Swanson from 1977. An apparent lunchtime presentation that lasts two hours, it was produced here in NYC by Metromedia Ch. 5. The discussion centers on food and health. (Greg openly condemned sugar — but would you rather eat sugary food or kelp? That was the main ingredient in his nutrient product called “Formula Four X.”)


As a final shot over the ramparts, here’s Greg and the brilliant Mr. Paul Mooney cutting loose for an hour on the radio in 2012:

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

The Mark Twain Prize to... Tina Fey?: A list of far more deserving candidates for a lifetime achievement award

[The pics used to accompany this blog post are meant to illustrate a point. A pretty obvious one.]

The American Film Institute’s Lifetime Achievement Award shows were really something to watch back in the 1970s and ’80s. The folks receiving the prize were bona fide A-list talents who were without question worthy to get a lifetime achievement award. Two-hour award presentations were made to performers and filmmakers on the order of Ford, Welles, Hitchcock, Capra, Huston, Astaire, Cagney, Gish, Davis, Stanwyck, and Fonda.

In the 1990s, as U.S. culture and entertainment took its precipitous slide toward the utter soulless crap that is extremely popular in today’s mainstream, the AFI Award began going to performers and filmmakers whose careers were still in full flourish, but who could guarantee a solid audience for the TV airing of the award show. What had been amazing about the AFI was that, even though the usual “mavericks” (Ray, Fuller, Sirk, and on and on) were going to be ignored, in the '70s and '80s you were treated to CBS (I believe that was the network) presenting a two-hour show saluting the work of Lillian Gish or John Ford or Orson or some Golden Age star who worked in the era of black and white that network television wants to stay far, far away from (the opening and closing moments of Wizard of Oz aside).

Then, with the sole exception of Robert Wise, the AFI turned to honoring only those who would attract TV ratings and a roster of current-day Hollywood names to salute him/her. Nicholson, Eastwood, Spielberg, Scorsese, Streep, and others whose careers were still moving along at a steady clip were then honored, and the result was similar to the many, many moments in the Oscar ceremony when Hollywood slaps itself on the back and reminds us all what wonderful movies used to be made, and how the pap that comes out these days is the obvious continuation of what came before. The most interesting thing about the list of winners that can be found here is that the recipients have gone from being in their 70s and 80s to 45 for the extremely charming but oh-SO-non-versatile Tom Hanks (45).

I bring up all this about the valuelessness of the AFI awards, and the shameless grab for TV ratings (or even a network to air the event — for a bit it was relegated to cable from its original network home), to bring up the subject of yet another valueless encomium, the Mark Twain Prize for Humor. The Kennedy Center presents this honor, and it has been sort of dubious since its inception — what makes the Kennedy Center board experts on humor in America? Whatever their qualifications are or aren’t, the award has followed the same trajectory as the AFI award, except it has been even more singularly pathetic in its choice of honorees, its ignoring comic legends who deserve appreciation, and its craving for viewers (especially since the show airs on PBS, and not a commercial network).

The prize jumped the shark when it made its first fourth honoree, and its first female, Whoopi Goldberg, in 2001. I’m not going to debate Goldberg’s comic pedigree — she did do great accents and voices back when she did standup, but that was a very long, long time ago. In any case, they leapfrogged over the first modern female standup, Phyllis Diller, the second, Joan Rivers, and the many women who populated variety television (never mind the women comedy writers) to move on to Whoopi, after having saluted two national treasures and comic innovators — Richard Pryor and Jonathan Winters — and one gent who had a good run in the Fifties and Sixties, Carl Reiner.

Probably the next horrific honoree was Lorne Michaels in 2004. Michaels spearheaded a show that was brave, bold, and innovative for five years, and has been a walking-dead example of everything that is dull, boring, and formulaic in TV sketch comedy since then (with the exception of the sterling 1984-85 season, which was cast almost entirely with “ringers,” meaning people who were already proven commodities as sketch/character comedians). There have been others whose contribution to American comedy is indisputable (Neil Simon, Bill Cosby, George Carlin, Lily Tomlin), but the obvious mandate is to interest TV viewers in the ceremony, and so this year the winner of the prize is none other than the pin-up of snarky sketch and fake-news comedy, Tina Fey.

I am not going to debate the merits of Tina Fey as a comedian here. I find her stuff pleasant but not memorable. The hubbub that surrounded her Sarah Palin imitation in 2008 was fascinating, in that there were other comic actresses on the Web doing equally good impressions of the Brainless One, and Fey’s “material” was essentially direct quotes from Palin’s own verbal missteps. Fey is a good-looking woman (never let that slip out of the equation), and she is currently a powerhouse to be reckoned with in terms of reputation, paycheck, and drawing power. But is she the 2000s equivalent of Dorothy Parker? Not on your life. Except, of course, to those who consume only contemporary mainstream culture, and are not familiar with anything old, foreign, or even slightly "alternative."

In any case, since the Mark Twain Prize has now irredeemably jumped the shark, I would like to submit for public view a list of the people they’ve forgotten to honor (in case you haven't been looking at the pics I've scattered throughout this post). Maybe they feel these people wouldn't be “ratings bait” — then again, on PBS you’d think an older name would be ratings bait, but PBS is as dull and lifeless as the rest of American broadcasting these days.

I’m leaving out the names of such folk as Professor Irwin Corey and Bob Elliott, as I think that, though they richly deserve the prize, a mainstream board like the Kennedy Center’s would never be that hip. I also leave out the solid gold name of Woody Allen (who was without doubt in the top rank of American humorists of the second half of the 20th century), since I have the feeling that he has already turned the honor down. I can’t help but feel that they’ve never asked Mel Brooks, though, since I don’t think he would turn it down (not a man who revisits an item like Spaceballs). I know that they’re probably already prepping the Twain Prizes for Adam Sandler, Will Ferrell, and Jack Black, so let me remind everyone who is still alive and deserves the Prize. If it really had any meaning.


  • SID CAESAR
  • Mort Sahl
  • Shelley Berman
  • Nichols and May
  • Dick Gregory
  • The Smothers Brothers
  • Mel Brooks
  • the aforementioned grandma of women standups, Phyllis Diller


And after all that, I’m not even going to mention that Mark Twain was a WRITER for fuck’s sake, and that breed of humorist hasn’t even been given a second thought. Then again, when your comedy prize is little more than a joke, well… it writes itself, doesn't it?