Gertie Brown
Gertie Brown | |
---|---|
A black man in a suit smiles and holds the hand of a black woman, who looks at the camera and smiles. Both are dressed in clothes from 1898. | |
Born | Gilberta Gertrude Chevalier August 23, 1878 |
Died | February 24, 1934 (aged 55) New York City, New York, U.S. |
Other names | Gertie Brown, Gertie Brown Moore, Gertie Moore, Gertrude Brown, Gertrude Brown Moore, Gertrude Moore |
Occupation | Actress |
Spouse |
Gertie Brown Moore (born Gilberta Gertrude Chevalier, August 23, 1878 – February 24, 1934) was a vaudeville performer and one of the first African-American film actresses. Brown is most famous for her part in the 1898 silent film Something Good – Negro Kiss, which went viral in 2018.
Biography
According to the 1900 United States federal census, Gertie Brown, then aged 22, was born in 1878. According to her obituary, she began her career on the stage at the age of nine.[1] In the 1890s, she performed alongside well-known composer and entertainer Saint Suttle (1870-1932) in vaudeville and minstrel shows in the Chicago area and nationally.[2][3][4][5] Suttle, Brown, and John and Maud Brewster performed as a group called "The Rag-Time Four" that was responsible for popularizing a variation of the cakewalk dance.[4] In 1899, Suttle and Brown were billed in vaudeville as "Two Real Ragtime Coons."[6] From about 1906 to 1915, Gertie Brown was one of the stock players at Chicago's Pekin Theatre.[7] Her performances there included such roles as "an Indian" in the show Coffey and Girls of All Nations in 1915. Brown married comedian and actor Tim Moore in September 1915, and he introduced her to a new career which took her throughout the country and abroad. Billed as Tim & Gertie Moore, the couple toured vaudeville circuits across the United States, New Zealand, the Hawaiian Islands,[8] and Australia and received acclaim as an "exceptionally clever" pair.[9][10] From 1920 to 1924, they toured the Dudley and T.O.B.A. vaudeville circuits in their own stock company, The Chicago Follies. In 1923, they acted in the lost silent film His Great Chance.[11] She died in 1934 of double pneumonia at Harlem Hospital.[1]
Something Good – Negro Kiss
Rediscovered in 2017, Something Good – Negro Kiss stars an African-American couple embracing, kissing, and dancing. Research by scholar Allyson Nadia Field identified the actors as Suttle and Brown.[5] Film historians believe that Something Good was an impromptu film shot in Chicago's South Loop district, possibly while Suttle and Brown were at William Selig's film studio to film a cakewalk dance.[3][4] In 2022 it was included in the exhibition Regeneration: Black Cinema 1898 - 1971 at the Academy Museum of Motion Pictures in Los Angeles, USA.[12]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 "Gertie Moore Passes Away: Comedian's Wife Dies of Pneumonia Attack," p. 1, New York Amsterdam News, Feb. 28, 1934
- ↑ "Saint Suttle and Gertie Brown", Saint Louis Post-Dispatch, Oct. 8, 1899, https://www.newspapers.com/clip/63602175/st-louis-post-dispatch/
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Bowean, Lolly. "Tracing Chicago origins of 'Something Good,' a recently discovered film clip depicting first onscreen kiss between two African-Americans". chicagotribune.com. Retrieved 2020-07-24.
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 "Library Of Congress Honors Groundbreaking 1898 Film Depicting Black Joy: Lulu Garcia-Navarro interviews Allyson Nadia Field". National Public Radio. December 16, 2018. Retrieved 2020-07-24.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Wang, Jack (Jun 10, 2019). "Academy honors UChicago scholar who identified historic on-screen kiss". University of Chicago News. Retrieved 2020-07-24.
- ↑ "Columbia Continuous Vaudeville," St. Louis Post-Dispatch, Oct. 8, 1899, https://www.newspapers.com/image/137659663/?terms=%22Ragtime%20Coons%22&match=1
- ↑ The Pekin: The Rise and Fall of Chicago's First Black-Owned Theatre Thomas Bauman, University of Illinois Press, 2014
- ↑ "Vaudeville Show Featuring Gertie and Tim Moore," Honolulu Star-Bulletin, Jan. 3, 1918, https://www.newspapers.com/clip/14712231/honolulu-star-bulletin/
- ↑ "Tim Moore, Comic in Blackbirds". The New York Age. 1928-07-14. p. 6. Retrieved 2020-07-24.
- ↑ "His Majesty's Theater". Papers Past. May 28, 1917. Retrieved 2020-07-24.
- ↑ Albright, Alex (1993). "Micheaux, Vaudeville & Black Cast Film" (PDF). Black Film Review. 7: 4: 8.
- ↑ Deng, Jireh (2022-08-19). "Exhibit reveals role of Black Americans in shaping film industry: 'This history has never been shown'". the Guardian. Retrieved 2022-08-19.
- 20th-century African-American actresses
- American film actresses
- American vaudeville performers
- 1878 births
- 1934 deaths
- 20th-century American actresses
- Deaths from pneumonia in New York City
- People from Guernsey County, Ohio
- Actresses from Ohio
- African-American child actresses
- American child actresses
- 19th-century American actresses
- 19th-century African-American women
- The Rag-Time Four members