From Broadway To 52nd Street

It’s now May 9, 1928 and the crowd is anxiously awaiting the rise of the curtain in the Liberty Theatre to witness The Blackbirds of 1928 – the first of four American editions incorporating a series of revues with Black casts produced by Lew Leslie in London and New York. This revue starred Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, Adelaide Hall and Aida Ward with music composed by Jimmy McHugh and Dorothy Fields. This first offering ran for 518 performances and gave the world the classic standard “I Can’t Give You Anything But Love”

The Story: The shows, relatively simple in mounting, emphasized song and dance and the small amount of comedy present represented the stereotypical black humor of the era.

Jazz History: One may wonder where the name “speakeasy” originated. Well it is said that the term comes from a patron’s manner of ordering alcohol without raising suspicion – a bartender would tell a patron to be quiet and “speak easy”. Though an integral part of Prohibition, the term predates the era by some thirty years. Samuel Hudson, a newspaperman, said he heard the word used for the same purpose in Pittsburgh in the 1880’s by an old Irish woman who sold liquor without a license.

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