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Gregory Hines
1946 - 2003 |

The Last Song and Dance Man: Gregory Hines
By Mark Anthony Neal
SeeingBlack.com Music and Cultural Critic
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When Gregory Hines died on 9 August, he left a legacy
of artistic accomplishment in the fields of pop music, film, stage,
and, of course, "hoofing." Born in New York City in February
1946, Gregory Hines initially made his mark as a member of a tap-dancing
family act with his brother Maurice Hines Jr. The duo broke through
with acclaimed roles in the Broadway productions, Eubie (1978)
and Sophisticated Ladies (1981), which celebrated the music
of the legendary musicians Eubie Blake and Duke Ellington. Hines
won a Tony Award in 1992 for Jelly's Last Jam, a musical
devoted to another legendary back composer/musician Jelly Roll Morton.
But Hines was likely best known for his film roles,
most notably opposite Mikhail Baryshnikov in White Nights
(1985) and Billy Crystal in the cop-buddy film, Running Scared
(1986). In 1986, he also recorded a pop album produced by Luther
Vandross, featuring the hit single, "There's Nothing Better
Than Love." In the best sense of the word, Gregory Hines was
a renaissance man.
Gregory Hines, like Maurice and fellow song and dance
man Ben Vereen (remember Tenspeed and Brown Shoe [1980]),
was part of the generation of Black male performers directly influenced
by the crossover success of Sammy Davis, Jr. in the 1950s and '60s.
At his best, Davis was the equivalent of "five-tool" baseball
players like Willie Mays, Roberto Clemente, and Mickey Mantle; when
on stage, he could do it all. But for Davis and his peers, as well
as those who came after him, like Hines, the drive to sing, dance,
compose, choreograph, and act had less to do with "the hustle"
and more to do with maximizing their opportunities in an entertainment
industry that rivaled the political apartheid in South Africa throughout
much of the 20th century. In an era when prominent Black ministers
write cookbooks and record R&B CDs as little more than a side
hustle, and every rent-a-rapper has a role in an action film to
go with his clothing line and porn site, Gregory Hines is a reminder
of a time when the hustle was literally a matter of survival. And
hustle he did.
After making his mark 25 years ago on Broadway, Hines
began his film career as Josephus in Mel Brooks' History of the
World, Part 1 (1981), a memorable comic role (originally intended
for Richard Pryor); he also had a minor rap hit with the song "It's
Good to Be the King" (1982). He was set to appear opposite
Nick Nolte in 48 Hours (1982), but scheduling conflicts due
to his role as Sandman Williams in Francis Ford Coppola's The
Cotton Club (1984). Though 48 Hours became the springboard
for Eddie Murphy's emergence as the dominant Black crossover star
of the 1980s, and The Cotton Club was a commercial and artistic
dud, the ambitious Sandman Williams embodied the big time crossover
dreams Hines harbored. In fact, early in their careers, Gregory
and Maurice fell out because Gregory didn't just want to be a Black
crossover star; he wanted to be a mainstream pop star, surpassing
even his hero, Sammy Davis, Jr.
White Nights and Running Scared brought
Hines some level of this success (though clearly less than Murphy,
Michael Jackson, and even Lionel Ritchie), but perhaps it was his
role as Max Washington, in Tap (1989) that allowed him to
put his dreams in perspective. Written and directed by Nick Castle,
Tap was a cross-generational celebration of the tap dance
tradition that produced stars like Bert Williams, Bill "Bojangles"
Robinson, and again, Sammy Davis, Jr. In one of his last screen
appearances, Davis and other hoofer legends like Howard "Sandman"
Sims, Bunny Briggs, and Harold Nicholas all got the chance to get
their "hoof" on for the film. Tap also introduced the
"next generation" in the figure of young Savion Glover.
Though Hines continued to act in films throughout
his career—for examples, A Rage in Harlem (1991), Renaissance
Man (1994), and The Tic Code (1998)—he reconnected
with his dance background during the last decade of his life. Thus,
his Tony Award-winning role in Jelly's Last Jam, in many
ways found Hines coming full circle.
Because so much of Hines' crossover success went against
the afro-pomo cultural nationalism championed by Spike Lee, Public
Enemy, and Eddie Murphy to some extent, Hines was often perceived
as outside of the "Black by popular demand" loop of the
late 1980s and early 1990s. Much of that changed with Hines' performances
in the Whitney Houston vehicles, Waiting to Exhale (1996)
and The Preacher's Wife (1996).
This success may have inspired him to attempt a television sitcom,
The Gregory Hines Show (1997), in which he played a single
father raising his son (played by Soul Food's Brandon Hammond).
Like so many Black shows from that period, if it didn't border on
minstrelsy, it didn't get the support from the network or Black
audiences. Hines went on to win a daytime Emmy award for his voice
work as "Big Bill" in the Bill Cosby-produced animated
program, Little Bill, and was nominated for an Emmy for his
starring role as Bill Robinson in the Showtime production, Bojangles
(2001).
It's worth noting that Sammy Davis, Jr. often closed his late career
concerts with "Bojangles," a song written by Jerry Jeff
Walker and recorded by numerous artists. The song is about a down
and out hoofer, an apt metaphor for the aging Davis. But it doesn't
match up with the life and career of Gregory Hines. He remained
a vital and respectful link to a previous generation of Black male
performers, long gone, along with public consciousness of the art
form they championed. Some would call them "song and dance"
men. Gregory Hines was the last of the Song and Dance Men.
— September 12, 2003

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