• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Science
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech
Julie Robinson Belafonte, Dancer, Actress and Activist, Is Dead at 95

Julie Robinson Belafonte, Dancer, Actress and Activist, Is Dead at 95

March 23, 2024
What to Know About the Hepatitis A Outbreak in L.A. County

What to Know About the Hepatitis A Outbreak in L.A. County

May 11, 2025
The Tech Guys Are Fighting. Literally.

The Tech Guys Are Fighting. Literally.

May 11, 2025
As Cease-Fire Seems to Hold, India and Pakistan Both Claim Victory

As Cease-Fire Seems to Hold, India and Pakistan Both Claim Victory

May 11, 2025
Koyo Kouoh, Prominent Art World Figure, Is Dead at 57

Koyo Kouoh, Prominent Art World Figure, Is Dead at 57

May 11, 2025
Why America’s ‘Beautiful Beef’ Is a Trade War Sore Point for Europe

Why America’s ‘Beautiful Beef’ Is a Trade War Sore Point for Europe

May 11, 2025
Abel Tesfaye Bids Farewell to The Weeknd in ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ Film

Abel Tesfaye Bids Farewell to The Weeknd in ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ Film

May 11, 2025
U.S. and China Meet for Second Day of Trade Talks

U.S. and China Meet for Second Day of Trade Talks

May 11, 2025
How a Sheep-Herding Cardiologist Spends His Sundays

How a Sheep-Herding Cardiologist Spends His Sundays

May 10, 2025
Teenager Fatally Shot During ‘Ding Dong Ditch’ TikTok Prank

Teenager Fatally Shot During ‘Ding Dong Ditch’ TikTok Prank

May 10, 2025
Live Updates: India and Pakistan Announce Cease-Fire

Live Updates: India and Pakistan Announce Cease-Fire

May 10, 2025
After Allegations, Smokey Robinson Show Goes On as Planned

After Allegations, Smokey Robinson Show Goes On as Planned

May 10, 2025
Trump Suggests Openness to Slashing China Tariffs Ahead of Trade Talks

Trump Suggests Openness to Slashing China Tariffs Ahead of Trade Talks

May 10, 2025
Real Bulletin
  • News
    • All
    • Business
    • Politics
    • World
    As Cease-Fire Seems to Hold, India and Pakistan Both Claim Victory

    As Cease-Fire Seems to Hold, India and Pakistan Both Claim Victory

    U.S. and China Meet for Second Day of Trade Talks

    U.S. and China Meet for Second Day of Trade Talks

    Live Updates: India and Pakistan Announce Cease-Fire

    Live Updates: India and Pakistan Announce Cease-Fire

    ‘Don’t Need a Deal’: Top Trump Economic Adviser Is All In on His China Hardball

    ‘Don’t Need a Deal’: Top Trump Economic Adviser Is All In on His China Hardball

    Judge Temporarily Blocks Trump Plans for Mass Layoffs and Program Closures

    Judge Temporarily Blocks Trump Plans for Mass Layoffs and Program Closures

    2 Men Found Guilty of Felling UK’s Sycamore Gap Tree

    2 Men Found Guilty of Felling UK’s Sycamore Gap Tree

    How the Hit Amazon Show ‘Fallout’ Became a Champion of Made-in-California

    How the Hit Amazon Show ‘Fallout’ Became a Champion of Made-in-California

    Cardinals to Resume Voting for New Pope on Second Day of Conclave: Live Updates

    Cardinals to Resume Voting for New Pope on Second Day of Conclave: Live Updates

    Trump Administration Live Updates: U.S. and Britain Hail Benefits of Trade Framework

    Trump Administration Live Updates: U.S. and Britain Hail Benefits of Trade Framework

    House Votes to Rename Gulf of Mexico as Gulf of America, Taking a Symbolic Step

    House Votes to Rename Gulf of Mexico as Gulf of America, Taking a Symbolic Step

    Trending Tags

    • Donald Trump
    • Future of News
    • Climate Change
    • Market Stories
    • Election Results
    • Flat Earth
    • Business
    • Politics
  • Health
  • Tech
    • All
    • Apps
    • Gadget
    • Gear
    • Mobile
    • Startup
    The Tech Guys Are Fighting. Literally.

    The Tech Guys Are Fighting. Literally.

    Teenager Fatally Shot During ‘Ding Dong Ditch’ TikTok Prank

    Teenager Fatally Shot During ‘Ding Dong Ditch’ TikTok Prank

    The 2006 Zuckerberg Quote at the Center of Meta’s Antitrust Trial

    The 2006 Zuckerberg Quote at the Center of Meta’s Antitrust Trial

    How to Use A.I.-Powered Writing Tools on Your iPhone and Android

    How to Use A.I.-Powered Writing Tools on Your iPhone and Android

    OpenAI Backtracks on Plans to Drop Nonprofit Control

    OpenAI Backtracks on Plans to Drop Nonprofit Control

    What’s Behind Technology’s Disembodied Female Voices?

    What’s Behind Technology’s Disembodied Female Voices?

    Voters Approve Incorporation of SpaceX Hub as Starbase, Texas

    Voters Approve Incorporation of SpaceX Hub as Starbase, Texas

    How Misinformation and Partisan ‘New Media’ Changed a California Town

    How Misinformation and Partisan ‘New Media’ Changed a California Town

    What Happens to Apple if Trump’s Trade War Forces It to Cut Ties With China?

    What Happens to Apple if Trump’s Trade War Forces It to Cut Ties With China?

    How Google’s Antitrust Case Could Upend the A.I. Race

    How Google’s Antitrust Case Could Upend the A.I. Race

    Trending Tags

    • Flat Earth
    • Sillicon Valley
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Golden Globes
    • Future of News
  • Economy
  • Lifestyle
    • All
    • Travel
    Abel Tesfaye Bids Farewell to The Weeknd in ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ Film

    Abel Tesfaye Bids Farewell to The Weeknd in ‘Hurry Up Tomorrow’ Film

    George Lee, Trailblazing Chinese Ballet Dancer, Dies at 90

    George Lee, Trailblazing Chinese Ballet Dancer, Dies at 90

    A Guide to Bravo’s New Shows, Including “Wife Swap: The Real Housewives Edition”

    A Guide to Bravo’s New Shows, Including “Wife Swap: The Real Housewives Edition”

    Is It Wrong to Date My Friend’s Ex?

    Is It Wrong to Date My Friend’s Ex?

    What to Know about ‘Love Island USA’ Season 7

    What to Know about ‘Love Island USA’ Season 7

    Andre 3000’s Met Gala Piano Was Both a Fashion Statement and an Album Teaser

    Andre 3000’s Met Gala Piano Was Both a Fashion Statement and an Album Teaser

    Inside the Most Politically Charged Met Gala in Years

    Inside the Most Politically Charged Met Gala in Years

    I Prayed After My Friend Was Swept Away on a Lagos Beach

    I Prayed After My Friend Was Swept Away on a Lagos Beach

    Laid Off? This Newsletter Doubles as a Support Group.

    Laid Off? This Newsletter Doubles as a Support Group.

    ‘Modern Love’ Podcast: Miranda July Knew Exactly What She Was Doing

    ‘Modern Love’ Podcast: Miranda July Knew Exactly What She Was Doing

    Trending Tags

    • Golden Globes
    • Mr. Robot
    • MotoGP 2017
    • Climate Change
    • Flat Earth
    • Arts
  • Sports
No Result
View All Result
Real Bulletin
No Result
View All Result
Home Arts

Julie Robinson Belafonte, Dancer, Actress and Activist, Is Dead at 95

by editor
March 23, 2024
in Arts
0
Julie Robinson Belafonte, Dancer, Actress and Activist, Is Dead at 95
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


Julie Robinson Belafonte, a dancer, actress and, with the singer Harry Belafonte, half of an interracial power couple who used their high profiles to aid the civil rights movement and the cause of integration in the United States, died on March 9 in Los Angeles. She was 95.

Her death, at an assisted living facility in the Studio City neighborhood, was announced by her family. She had resided there for the last year and nine months after living for decades in Manhattan.

Ms. Belafonte, who was white and the second wife of Mr. Belafonte, the Black Caribbean American entertainer and activist, had an eclectic career in the arts. At various times she was a dancer, a choreographer, a dance teacher, an actress and a documentary film producer.

Ms. Belafonte traveled the nation and the world with her husband and their children during Mr. Belafonte’s sold-out concert tours in the late 1950s and ’60s, presenting an image of a close interracial family that was otherwise rarely seen on television or in newspapers and magazines.

She was at Mr. Belafonte’s side when they planned and hosted fund-raisers for civil rights groups, including the Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s Southern Christian Leadership Conference and the more militant Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee.

Mr. Belafonte died last April at 96, and during a memorial service for him on March 1, at Riverside Church in Manhattan, Ms. Belafonte’s efforts were remembered by their son, David Belafonte. “She marched, she endured racial hatred and abuse through the years,” he told the crowd, “when a high-profile relationship between a Black man and a white woman was seriously risky business.”

Julia Mary Robinson was born on Sept. 14, 1928, in the Washington Heights section of Manhattan to Clara and George Robinson, both of whom had Russian Jewish roots. She was raised in what she called “an interracial environment,” reared by liberal parents and going to school with both Black and white children, she told the magazine Redbook in 1958. She attended the High School of Music and Art in Manhattan (now the Fiorello H. LaGuardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts), where she was an art student.

Around the age of 16, Ms. Robinson won a scholarship to the newly opened Katherine Dunham School of Dance in Manhattan and dropped out of high school to pursue a dance career. (She later earned her General Education Diploma.) She soon worked her way up to student-teacher at the school; among her students were Marlon Brando and Alvin Ailey, who was to gain fame as a dancer, choreographer and director.

When an opening came up at Ms. Dunham’s renowned all-Black dance company in the mid-1940s, Ms. Robinson auditioned in Philadelphia and was hired as its first white member.

“I never thought she’d integrate her company,” she recalled in an interview with the New York radio station WBAI in 2015, “but I knew I was a good dancer.”

Ms. Robinson, recognizable for her dark eyes, olive skin and black hair, which she wore in a distinctive ponytail or in pigtails that fell nearly to her waist, toured the world with the Dunham dancers, sometimes rooming with her fellow dancer Eartha Kitt, before Ms. Kitt became a celebrated singer and actress.

When the company was barred from hotels because of race, a not infrequent occurrence in the United States and abroad, Ms. Robinson insisted on staying wherever the other dancers stayed. She remained with the company for seven years.

By the early 1950s, her parents had moved to Los Angeles, and Ms. Robinson wound up in Hollywood, helping to choreograph dance sequences in at least one film and later obtaining small parts in a few others, including “Mambo,” a 1954 drama set in Italy and produced by Dino De Laurentiis and Carlo Ponti, and “Lust for Life,” the 1956 film biography of Vincent van Gogh starring Kirk Douglas and Anthony Quinn. By then she was going by Julie rather than Julia.

She met Mr. Belafonte on the set of the 1954 movie musical “Carmen Jones,” in which he starred opposite Dorothy Dandridge, introduced to him by Mr. Brando, a good friend of Mr. Belafonte’s. She had dated Mr. Brando off and on for several years after appearing with him in a touring production of “A Streetcar Named Desire.”

Ms. Robinson and Mr. Belafonte became lovers, although Mr. Belafonte was still married to Margurite Belafonte, a Black schoolteacher and psychologist. He and Margurite (her given name has also appeared as Marguerite) separated shortly after, though in public they maintained the trappings of a happy marriage for the sake of his skyrocketing career.

Their marriage ended in divorce, in Las Vegas, in February 1957. Eight days later, Mr. Belafonte, about to turn 30, and Ms. Robinson, who was pregnant at 28, married in Mexico, Mr. Belafonte wrote in his 2011 book, “My Song: A Memoir of Art, Race, and Defiance.”

They had sought at first to keep the marriage a secret to protect Mr. Belafonte’s two young daughters, Adrienne and Shari, with his first wife, he wrote. But white gossip columnists and the Black press were hot on their trail, forcing his publicist to announce the marriage.

Interracial marriage was uncommon in America then — half the states still legally barred it — and the fact that Mr. Belafonte had divorced a Black woman and so quickly married a white one carried the whiff of scandal. While the liberal entertainment circles in which the Belafontes traveled largely accepted the union, Mr. Belafonte faced harsh criticism elsewhere, especially in the Black press, where some columnists disparaged him as a rich, successful Black man who was no longer content with a Black wife.

Mr. Belafonte, by then a well-known supporter of civil rights and integration, took to the pages of Ebony, the leading African American magazine, to write an essay proclaiming that race had nothing to do with the marriage. “I believe in integration and work for it with all my heart and soul,” he wrote. “But I did not marry Julie Robinson to further the cause of integration. I married her because I was in love with her and she married me because she was in love with me.”

The commotion eventually died down, and Ms. Belafonte put her career aside to start a family in Manhattan. But racial animus still trailed them. When their first child, David, was born in the fall of 1957, Ms. Belafonte received racist hate letters. “My first child,” she recalled in the WBAI interview. “Can you imagine?”

For months the Belafontes were unable to obtain a larger apartment in Manhattan because landlords and real estate agents refused to rent to an interracial couple, a predicament that made headlines. They eventually found an apartment on West End Avenue, where they lived for decades.

Their daughter, Gina, was born in 1961, and the family was frequently photographed as they arrived at airports during concert tours, took vacations or posed for newspaper and magazine profiles, helping to destigmatize interracial marriage in the United States.

As Mr. Belafonte’s role in the civil rights movement deepened, so did Ms. Belafonte’s. She planned fund-raisers for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, also known as SNCC, hosting events at their home and at hotels for New York’s liberal moneyed class. She founded, with the actress Diahann Carroll, SNCC’s so-called women’s division, and stuck with the organization even after it began to lose favor among many white Americans during the Black Power era.

At the Selma-to-Montgomery civil rights march in 1965, in which both Belafontes participated, it was Ms. Belafonte who told orange-jacketed private security forces that the ordinary citizens of Selma deserved to be at the front of it, ahead of the celebrities and dignitaries, and that’s where they were placed.

During her 50-year marriage to Mr. Belafonte, she sat in with him on strategy meetings with Dr. King at the couple’s apartment, dined with presidents at the White House and with foreign leaders abroad, including Nelson Mandela and Fidel Castro. At a time when Cuba and the United States had no official channels of communication, she passed messages from the government in Havana to American officials, according to a declassified State Department memo.

Ms. Belafonte pushed her own causes apart from her husband’s; in one case she helped to organize, with Coretta Scott King, Dr. King’s wife, a women’s march against the Vietnam War in Washington in January 1968. In advance of the event she placed an ad in The New York Times asking women to “Make Womanpower Political Power.”

She occasionally joined Mr. Belafonte’s tours as a dancer and, when their children were older, acted in a few more movies, including “Buck and the Preacher” (1972), in which she appeared with Mr. Belafonte and Sidney Poitier (who directed) as the wife of an Indian chief, earning critical praise. She had learned a Native American dialect for the role.

The Belafontes divorced in 2007, and Ms. Belafonte kept a lower profile thereafter. In her later years she produced two documentaries: “Ritmo del Fuego” (2006), about African cultural heritage in Cuba and the Caribbean, and “Flags, Feathers and Lies” (2009), about the resilience of the Mardi Gras Indian tradition in New Orleans.

Following Margurite Belafonte Mazique’s death in 1998, Ms. Belafonte assumed the role of family matriarch, not only to her own children but to those from Mr. Belafonte’s first marriage, Adrienne Belafonte Biesemeyer and Shari Belafonte. All of the children survive her, as well as three grandchildren.

“She was a real aggregator of types and created an atmosphere of diversity that was our home growing up,” David Belafonte said in an interview. “She opened the home to just a bouquet of people — it was staggering. And Julie was the social glue that held that stuff together. There was no person too big or too small whom she wouldn’t wrap her arms around and make them feel like they were part of the crew.”


Source: nytimes.com

Share196Tweet123Share49
editor

editor

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Maine Coon kitten is so huge individuals mistake it for a canine

Maine Coon kitten is so huge individuals mistake it for a canine

January 20, 2022
Fury as partying council boss Kate Josephs clings on to £190k job

Fury as partying council boss Kate Josephs clings on to £190k job

January 20, 2022
Rihanna showcases rising child bump

Rihanna showcases rising child bump

February 14, 2022
What to Know About the Hepatitis A Outbreak in L.A. County

What to Know About the Hepatitis A Outbreak in L.A. County

0

With 150 million daily active users, Instagram Stories is launching ads

0

Washington prepares for Donald Trump’s big moment

0
What to Know About the Hepatitis A Outbreak in L.A. County

What to Know About the Hepatitis A Outbreak in L.A. County

May 11, 2025
The Tech Guys Are Fighting. Literally.

The Tech Guys Are Fighting. Literally.

May 11, 2025
As Cease-Fire Seems to Hold, India and Pakistan Both Claim Victory

As Cease-Fire Seems to Hold, India and Pakistan Both Claim Victory

May 11, 2025
Real Bulletin

Copyright © 2024

Navigate Site

  • About Us

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • News
    • Business
  • Health
  • Tech
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Economy
  • Lifestyle
    • Arts

Copyright © 2024

Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?