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Music legend and activist Harry Belafonte visits Seattle Saturday. (AP image)

Celebrating Harry Belafonte's life of music and activism

If the name Harry Belafonte means anything these days, it's most likely for the Banana Boat Song, better known as Day-O. But for lifelong fans like me, that's kind of a shame. As great as that song is, Belafonte's musical repertoire is so much richer and varied than you might expect from someone dubbed "the King of Calypso." His range included everything from blues, folk and gospel to showtunes and American standards. And he had comedic hits too.

It's hard to overstate how big a star Harry Belafonte was in the late 1950's and 60's. His debut album spent 31 straight weeks at number one and was the first LP to sell over a million copies in the U.S. in a single year. Impossibly good-looking and charismatic, Belafonte won a Tony on Broadway and became the first African-American to win an Emmy, for his first TV special.

He also starred in a number of controversial movies, like 1957's "Island in the Sun" in which there are hints of an affair between Belafonte's character and his white co-star.

The black-white tension in a fictional setting simply mirrored real-life for Belafonte. In the 60's, he scandalized television executives, for example, when he dared to embrace Petula Clark during a TV special.

Very much a man of his times, Belafonte became a social activist in the 60's, starting with the civil rights movement - arm in arm with Martin Luther King. (All of this is well-documented in the 2011 HBO film, "Sing Your Song.")

As one of the few black celebrities in the country at the time, Belafonte used his fame to publicize and bankroll much of the civil rights movement. He's been a life-long advocate of human rights ever since.

Belafonte's activism has taken him into some very controversial political waters in recent decades. A longtime critic of much of the U.S.'s foreign policy, Belafonte, during the George W. Bush years, went so far as to call Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice and General Colin Powell "house slaves."

Rather than mellowing with age - by the way, he's now 85 - Belafonte if anything has become more radical - or at least outspoken.

Belafonte had to retire from performing a decade ago, but he has not stopped fighting what he considers the good fight. His appearance at Seattle's Moore Theatre will recount the highlights of his rich life and no doubt throw in an opinion or two about the current state of our country and the world. After all, he's singing his song.

See Mr. Belafonte at The Moore Theatre, Jan. 19 at 7:30 p.m. Visit stgpresents.org for ticket information.

Tom Tangney, KIRO Radio Host
Tom Tangney is co-host of KIRO Radio's Seattle's Morning News and resident enthusiast of...everything. He loves books, movies, TV, art, pop culture, politic, sports, and Husky football.

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Comments (12)


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  • kirklandvinny wrote...
    Harrry B.
    Saw his show at the Sspokane Coliceum in 1993, fantastic! i was 23 at the time, an EWU student. there were as many blue haired gals as there were the rest of us. great show. he wheeled many fans in their wheelchairs down to the stage-very sweet. the man has all but lost his mind in the last few years however. sad, sad.
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  • kirklandvinny wrote...
    Harry B.
    Sorry for the typo, Spokane Coliseum [sic]. however i really did Coli ce-um. and it was cool.
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  • Jason wrote...
    Activism????
    Harry is farther left than Hugo Chavez. He is a disgrace and shouldn't be celebrated for anything. I find his music medium in the talent level and the first loser on American Idol is better. Mr. Belafonte should be living in Cuba, Venezuela, USSR (yes it's still the USSR) and enjoy what it's really like to be against your country. He should give up or have confiscated as part of the 1% all of, read 100%, of his earnings and wealth. He is a disgrace as a human.
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  • AKAF wrote...
    Wonder if Tangney would celebrate Ted Nugent...
    Already the left wing activism would show and it has. The new radio format has proven putting a left wing host with a left wing host is harmful to the show. Tangney would never promote the activism of Ted Negent. The only plus is Dori Monson and his show with a breath of fresh air. This area is more conservative than the KIRO staff believes in placing two liberal, anti-Catholic, commentators for the morning news. For placing Dave in that place I can't listen...I know he believes he is Catholic but he does not keep our beliefs...sorry Kiro, I'll be listening to the red headed step child or the auto tune station from now on from 6-9. After 9...I love to listen to Dave and Luke make idiots of themselves explaining news to everyone else.
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  • cigarfan wrote...
    @AKAF
    Didn't Ted Nugent say he would be dead or in jail by now if Obama got re-elected?
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  • Snout wrote...
    Day-O?
    more like Pink-O.
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  • maplefish wrote...
    Tangency
    Sometimes you are a hack. Harry.B. is a disgrace and his vile views on this country should be considered nothing less than the ravings of a Alzheimer's victim
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  • cigarfan wrote...
    Harry is the conscience of America
    I used to love to see Harry on "The Smother's Brothers" TV show! Remember Steinbeck's 'Grapes of Wrath'? The main Character (Tom Joad) has a quote that always reminds of Harry Belafonte: "I'll be everywhere. Wherever you can look - wherever there's a fight, so hungry people can eat, I'll be there. Wherever there's a cop beatin' up a guy, I'll be there. I'll be in the way guys yell when they're mad. I'll be in the way kids laugh when they're hungry and they know supper's ready, and when the people are eatin' the stuff they raise and livin' in the houses they build - I'll be there, too." Harry is always good at standing up to Racism, injustice and speaking truth to Corporate Greed, Power and Imperialism. Happy EARLY 86th Birthday Harry! (Coming up March 1st)
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  • rational wrote...
    cigarfan
    Harry is the conscience of America

    Only if America were a raving loon. He's just a run of the mill racist with more celebrity than sanity.

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  • cigarfan wrote...
    @rational
    Dr Martin Luther King Jr, Nelson Mandela, Quincy Jones, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and Malcolm X all wanted to associate themselves with Harry. It's too bad you don't have that kind of civil rights record.
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  • rational wrote...
    cigarfan
    Are you honestly attempting to the fallacy of appeal to authority?! Don't look now but your false argument failed.
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  • Mike Hunt wrote...
    Double Standard
    If a non-black person said what he has about the current white house, they would be called a racist. We should not celebrate racists
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