Originally published in Truth Out, January 5, 2021
https://truthout.org/articles/graphic-biography-highlights-the-life-of-actor-and-activist-paul-robeson/
Graphic Biography Highlights the
Life of Actor and Activist Paul Robeson
A
Graphic Biography of Paul Robeson: Ballad of an American, Art and Text by Sharon Rudahl, Edited
by Paul Buhle and Lawrence Ware (Rutgers University Press, 2020)
Paul
Robeson, born in 1898 to a father who understood the pains of slavery
firsthand, rapidly developed into a renaissance man the likes of which this
nation had rarely imagined. Scholar, vocalist, athlete, actor and fearless
activist, he was practically disappeared by his own government in the decades
leading to his death when he was all but neutralized at age 76. This story has
been told before, but never in such a visceral manner. With the latest graphic
biography in the Paul Buhle pantheon, A Graphic
Biography of Paul Robeson: Ballad of an American, artist and
writer Sharon Rudahl (a civil rights activist, writer and political cartoonist
of many years) offers the tale of Robeson to a new generation. Rudahl displays
the influence of the young Paul Robeson’s father, William, who fled north to
escape slavery. William fought in the Union Army and then studied at Lincoln
University to become a church pastor and raise a family. His youngest child was
Paul, whose life seemed to have been built of equal parts liberation, education
and self-expression. Robeson’s story is not only moving, particularly when told
in such a manner, but deeply inspiring to people of color, the working class
and oppressed people of any race.
One
gripping fact made evident in this graphic biography is that Robeson’s mother,
who was legally blind, died in an accidental fire when he was but 6 years old,
the flames catching onto her skirts; Robeson apparently never recalled this
traumatic occurrence. The struggle continued as Rev. William Robeson was fired
from his initial employment due to the incorporation of early liberation
theology into his sermons. Rudahl effectively displays the young Paul’s fights
for equality in New Jersey schools and Rutgers University, including the brutal
attempts of white students seeking to injure him on sports fields where he was
an All-American football player. His tenacity in those areas, as well as during
his move into the theatre, with the lead in Simon
the Cyrenian followed by Eubie Blake’s Shuffle
Along and then a tour of England for another theatre work, are movingly
part of this biography. And while Robeson completed his law degree and became
an attorney, the racism he encountered in this profession forced him to
recognize the opportunities awaiting him within a full-time career as a
vocalist and actor.
From
1915, the Provincetown Players -- a Greenwich Village theatre troupe founded by
Eugene O’Neill, John Reed, Susan Glaspell and George Cram Cook (later additions
included Edna St. Vincent Millay and Floyd Dell) -- were writing and producing
vitally important works of a decidedly progressive nature. Robeson soon became
an actor of note within this organization, making an initial statement in
O’Neill’s All God’s Chillun and then, most famously the Emperor
Jones. These roles led to celebrity status for Robeson who then, in 1925,
had a starring role in Body and Soul, a film built around Black
spirituals. The experience led Robeson to focus on this music as important
African American repertoire, and he toured these songs widely, something he
maintained throughout his career as he shared culture and art internationally.
Another
powerful component of Robeson’s life was the role played by his wife, Essie, a
writer and photographer. Even early on she was his adviser and confidant,
acting as his agent for years. Rudahl displays Essie’s importance in Paul’s
attaining an initial recording contract and wider stage and film roles.
Robeson’s involvement in the 1920s Harlem Renaissance, and of course, his role
in Hammerstein and Kern’s Showboat,
are also keen points in this book.
While
Robeson was an artist of the highest order, he was always aware of the racial
injustice in his midst. Rudahl offers vivid details of Robeson’s maturing
recognition of the machinations of racism within capitalism, starting with his
Welsh tour of Showboat and his
solidarity with a local miners’ strike. His commitment to international labor
was maintained from that point on, often placing Robeson into a boldly activist
role. More so, his studies of African heritage, the various nations and languages
of the continent, allowed him to recognize the great contributions Africa
brought to the world. He would of course make a study of various cultures,
focusing ultimately on linguistics and using this skill to not only speak to
the peoples he came into contact with on tour, but learn their songs as well,
thereby reaching audiences on a profound level.
Much
of this book is dedicated to Robeson’s political maturity and actions on behalf
of the earliest civil rights movement. Also, beautifully depicted in the book
is his 1934 visit to the Soviet Union following an invitation from Soviet film
director Sergei Eisenstein. Rudahl tells and shows the reader how Robeson
stared down and confronted Nazi guards in Berlin as he, Essie and friend Mary
Seton anxiously boarded their train into Russia. Though Lenin’s great vision of
the Communist revolution was already becoming torn by Stalin, the advances for
the poor, people of color and women so impressed Robeson, who famously stated,
“Here I am not a Negro but a human being. I walk in full human dignity.” The
Robesons chose to have son Paul Jr. remain in the Soviet Union to attend school
for two terms where he’d be free of racism. And by 1936, Robeson became a
pivotal supporter of the left during the Spanish Civil War, traveling through
war-torn areas and performing for the International Brigade wounded. During
World War II, he became a major anti-fascist voice, working almost exclusively
within the Popular Front and debuting “Ballad for Americans,” composed by CP Earl
Robinson, on national radio.
At
the height of his fame, Robeson lived by his ideals, refusing to perform in
segregated theatres and singing a wide array of works both live and on radio,
including Spanish and Chinese revolutionary material. He also took on the
historic role of Othello in a smash Broadway run. Following the war,
Robeson worked for Henry Wallace’s Progressive Party campaign and was a
featured guest at the Paris World Peace Conference. His bold comments at the
Conference, denouncing that Black people, living within institutionalized
racism, were potentially drafted to fight in a segregated Army against the
Soviet Union was all of the material that the right-wing U.S. reactionaries
needed in a campaign against Robeson. After being openly blacklisted on these
shores, his passport was revoked, and Robeson was unable to travel for
performances as his films and recordings were taken from circulation. His
initial bout with major depression began in this period. Robeson was called
before the brutal House Un-American Activities Committee, powerfully depicted
by Rudahl, where he refused to comply, offering legendary responses to the
Committee. Ultimately able to travel to Europe, he had a massive breakdown and
was in London as the 1963 March on Washington occurred. Robeson desperately
wanted to return home to be a part of what he had helped found decades earlier.
He was largely forsaken by the younger generation of activists and, with
declining health and diminishing performances, he retired and experienced a
slow, sad eclipse. Robeson died in 1976
The
book concludes with a text Afterword by editors Buhle (renowned historian and
author/editor of some 40 volumes) and Lawrence Ware (a professor of Africana
Studies and writer on race and culture for The
New York Times). This section encapsulates Robeson’s vast significance in
history and offers summary of his re-emergence in recent years, including
Rutgers University dedicating a “Paul Robeson Plaza” last year. Martin
Duberman’s sweeping yet equivocal biography of 1989 is acknowledged in the
Afterword while also contemplating the relevance of volumes published since.
More so, Buhle and Ware examine Robeson’s leading role within the Popular Front
as well as the fading memory of this movement in recent decades. Happily, their
depth of knowledge is imparted in this “extended scholarly footnote” for any
reader unfamiliar with the Popular Front’s vital role in global anti-fascism.
The
text closes with a quote by C.L.R. James, a figure Buhle has written on with
passion, proclaiming Robeson as “a man of such magnificent powers and
reputation (that) he gave up everything…such is the quality which signalizes a
truly heroic figure.”
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