Ethel Waters
Ethel Waters
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The child of a teenage rape victim, Ethel Waters grew up in the slums of
Philadelphia and neighboring cities, seldom living anywhere for more
than a few weeks at a time. "No one raised me, " she recollected, "I
just ran wild." She excelled not only at looking after herself, but
also at singing and dancing; she began performing at church functions,
and as a teenager was locally renowned for her "hip shimmy shake". In
1917 she made her debut on the black vaudeville circuit; billed as
"Sweet Mama Stringbean" for her tall, lithe build, she broke through
with her rendition of "St. Louis Blues", which Waters performed in a
softer and subtler style than her rivals, Ma Rainey and Bessie Smith.
Beginning with her appearances in Harlem nightclubs in the late 1920s,
then on the lucrative "white time" vaudeville circuit, she became one
of America's most celebrated and highest-paid entertainers. At the
Cotton Club, she introduced "Stormy Weather", composed for her by
Harold Arlen: she wrote of her performance, "I was singing the story of my
misery and confusion, the story of the wrongs and outrages done to me
by people I had loved and trusted". Impressed by this performance,
Irving Berlin wrote "Supper Time", a song about a lyncing, for Waters to
perform in a Broadway revue. She later became the first
African-American star of a national radio show. In middle age, first on
Broadway and then in the movies, she successfully recast herself as a
dramatic actress. Devoutly religious but famously difficult to get
along with, Waters found few roles worthy of her talents in her later
years.
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