Hattie McDaniel: Difference between revisions
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McDaniel was also a member of [[Sigma Gamma Rho]], one of four African-American Greek letter [[sororities]] in the United States. Hattie was a leader in the black community. During [[World War II]], organized entertainments for black soldiers and sailors serving on the military bases throughout California. [[Bette Davis]] also performed for black regiments as the only white member of an acting troupe formed by Hattie McDaniel, that also included [[Lena Horne]] and [[Ethel Waters]].<ref>Spada, James. ''More Than a Woman: An Intimate Biography of Bette Davis'', Little, Brown and Company (1993), pp. 191–192. ISBN 055356868X</ref> She joined Clarence Muse for an NBC radio broadcast to raise funds for Red Cross relief programs for Americans, many of them black, who had been displaced by the year's devastating floods. Within the black community, she gained a reputation for generous giving, often without question feeding and lending money to friends and stranger alike.<ref>Watts, Jill. ''Hattie McDaniel: Black Ambition, White Hollywood'', 2006, p. 126</ref> |
McDaniel was also a member of [[Sigma Gamma Rho]], one of four African-American Greek letter [[sororities]] in the United States. Hattie was a leader in the black community. During [[World War II]], organized entertainments for black soldiers and sailors serving on the military bases throughout California. [[Bette Davis]] also performed for black regiments as the only white member of an acting troupe formed by Hattie McDaniel, that also included [[Lena Horne]] and [[Ethel Waters]].<ref>Spada, James. ''More Than a Woman: An Intimate Biography of Bette Davis'', Little, Brown and Company (1993), pp. 191–192. ISBN 055356868X</ref> She joined Clarence Muse for an NBC radio broadcast to raise funds for Red Cross relief programs for Americans, many of them black, who had been displaced by the year's devastating floods. Within the black community, she gained a reputation for generous giving, often without question feeding and lending money to friends and stranger alike.<ref>Watts, Jill. ''Hattie McDaniel: Black Ambition, White Hollywood'', 2006, p. 126</ref> |
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McDaniel was the Chairman of the Negro Division of the [[Hollywood Victory Committee]], providing entertainment for soldiers stationed at military bases. She also put in numerous personal appearances to hospitals, threw parties, performed at USC shows and war bond rallies, to raise funds to support the war, on behalf of the Victory Committee.<ref>[http://cghs.dade.k12.fl.us/african-american/reconstruct/hattie_mcdaniel.htm Hattie McDaniel and the Negro Division of the Hollywood Victory Committee</ref><ref>Watts, Jill. Hattie McDaniel: Black Ambition, White Hollywood, page 210</ref> generosity |
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===Marriages=== |
===Marriages=== |
Revision as of 18:46, 28 July 2007
Hattie McDaniel | |
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File:Hattie1941.jpg | |
Spouse(s) | George Langford (1922) Howard Hickman (1938) James Lloyd Crawford (1941-1945) Larry Williams (1949-1950) |
Hattie McDaniel (June 10, 1895 – October 26, 1952) was an African American actress. She was the first performer of African descent to ever win an Academy Award. She won the award for Best Supporting Actress for her role of Mammy in Gone with the Wind (1939). McDaniel was also a professional singer-songwriter, comedian, stage actress, radio performer and television star. Hattie McDaniel was in fact the first black woman to sing on the radio.[1] Over the course of her career, McDaniel appeared in over 300 films, although she only received screen credits for about 80. She gain the respect of the African American show business community with her generosity, elegance and charm.
Hattie McDaniel is the first black Oscar winner honored with a US postage stamp.[2]
Background and early acting career
Hattie McDaniel was born June 10, 1895, in Wichita, Kansas, to former slaves and civil war soldier Henry McDaniel and Susan Holbert, a singer of religious music. She was the youngest of thirteen children. In 1900 the family moved to Colorado, living first in Fort Collins and then in Denver, where Hattie grew up. McDaniel dropped out of East Denver High School after her sophomore year to enter show business. She toured with her father's owned Henry McDaniel minstrel, which costarred her two brothers, Sam and Otis. In 1910 she was the only African American participant in a Women's Christian Temperance Movement event in which she won a gold medal for reciting a poem entitled Convict Joe. Winning the award was what started and sparked her dream of becoming a performer. In addition to performing, Hattie was also a songwriter, a skill she honed while working with her fathers minstrel show. After the death of her brother Otis in 1916 the family's minstrel group began to lose momentum, and it wasn't until 1920 that Hattie received another big opportunity. During 1920-25 she appeared with Professor George Morrison's Melony Hounds, a touring black ensemble, and in the mid-1920s she embarked on a radio career, singing with the Melony Hounds on station KOA in Denver.[3] In 1927-1929 she also recorded many of her songs on Okeh Records,[4] and with Paramount Records[5] in Chicago.
In 1931, McDaniel made her way to Los Angeles to join her brother Sam,[6] sisters Etta[7] and Orlena. When she could not get film work, she took jobs as a maid or cook. Sam was working on a radio program called The Optimistic Do-Nut Hour, and he was able to get his sister a spot. She appeared on radio as 'Hi-Hat Hattie', a bossy maid who often "forgets her place". Her show became extremely popular, but her salary was so low that she had to continue working as a maid. Her first film appearance was in The Golden West (1932), as a maid. In the early years of the 1930's she received roles in several films, often singing in choruses. Hattie's began to attract attention and finally landed larger film roles that began to win her screen credits.
In 1934's Judge Priest, directed by John Ford and starring Will Rogers, was the first film in which she would receive a major role. She had a leading part in the film and demonstrated her singing talent, including a duet with Rogers. McDaniel and Rogers became friends during filming. McDaniel had prominent roles in 1935 with her classic performance as a slovenly maid in RKO Pictures, Alice Adams, and a delightfully comic part as Jean Harlow's maid/traveling companion in MGM's, China Seas, the latter her first film with Clark Gable. She also attracted attention with a fine performance oppostite Paul Robeson in Universal Pictures 1936, Show Boat. She was playing "Queenie" in Show Boat when the stock market crashed, and her company had to shut down. The only work McDaniel could find was as a washroom attendant at Club Madrid in Milwaukee. Despite the owner's reluctance to let her perform, McDaniel was eventually allowed to take the stage, and became a regular. After Show Boat and had major roles in Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, Saratoga (1937), film starring Jean Harlow and Clark Gable, and The Mad Miss Manton (1938), staring Barbara Stanwyck and Henry Fonda.
McDaniel had befriended several of Hollywood's most popular white stars, including Joan Crawford, Bette Davis, Shirley Temple, Henry Fonda, Ronald Reagan, and Olivia de Havilland and Clark Gable, with whom she would star in Gone with the Wind. It was around this time that she began to be criticized by members of the black community for roles she was choosing to take. In 1935's The Little Colonel depicted black servants longing for a return to the Old South. Ironically, McDaniel's portrayal of Malena in RKO Pictures, Alice Adams angered white Southern audiences. She managed to steal several scenes away from the film star, Katharine Hepburn. This was the type of role she would be best known for, the sassy, independently minded, and opinionated.
The competition in Gone with the Wind (1939), for Mammy had been almost as stiff as that for Scarlett O'Hara. Eleanor Roosevelt wrote to film producer David O. Selznick to ask that her own maid, Elizabeth McDuffiebe, given the part.[8] McDaniel did not think she would be chosen, because she was known for being a comic actress. Clark Gable recommended the role to go to McDaniel, and when she went to her audition dressed in an authentic maid's uniform, Selznick knew he had found Mammy. Gable was delighted to be working again with
Hattie.[9]
The Loew's Grand Theatre on Peachtree Street in Atlanta, Georgia, was selected as the theatre for the premiere of Gone with the Wind, Friday, December 15, 1939. When the date of the Atlanta premiere approached, all the black actors were barred from attending, and excluded from being in the souvenir program. David Selznick had at least attempted to bring Hattie McDaniel, but MGM advised him not to because of Georgia's segregationist laws, which would have required McDaniel to stay in a colored-only hotel, and prevented her from sitting in the theater with her white peers.[10] Most of Atlanta's 300,000 population, crowded the route of the seven-mile motorcade that carried the other film's stars, and executives, from the airport to the Georgian Terrace Hotel, where they stayed.[11][12] While the Jim Crow laws kept McDaniel from the Atlanta premiere, she did attend the Hollywood debute on December 28, 1939. This time Selznick's insistence, her picture was featured prominently in the program. (It would also be included in programs for all areas outside of the South.)[13]
It was her role, the sassy-servant, who repeatedly scolds her mistrees, Scarlett O'Hara, Vivien Leigh, and scoffs at Rhett Butler (Clark Gable), that won her the 1939 Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress, making her the first African American to win an Oscar. She was also the first African American ever to be nominated. "I loved Mammy," McDaniel said. "I think I understood her because my own grandmother worked on a plantation not unlike Tara".[14] With her role in Gone with the Wind, scared her Southern audience. In the South there were complaints that in the film she had been too familiar with her white employer.[15]
Oscar night
Louella Parsons, an American gossip columnist, wrote about Oscar night of 1940: "Hattie McDaniel earned that gold "Oscar", by her fine performance of "Mammy" in Gone with the Wind. If you had seen her face when she walked up to the platform and took the gold trophy, you would have had the choke in your voice that all of us had when Hattie, hair trimmed with gardenias, face alight, and dress up to the queen's taste, accepted the honor in one of the finest speeches ever given on the Academy floor. She put her heart right into those words and expressed not only for herself, but for every member of her race, the gratitude she felt that she had been given recognition by the Academy. Fay Bainter, with voice trembling, introduced Hattie and spoke of the happiness she felt in bestowing upon the beaming actress Hollywood's greatest honor. Her proudest possession is the red silk petticoat that David Selznick gave her when she finished Gone with the Wind". [16]
Hattie McDaniel's Acceptance Speech delivered on January 29, 1940 at the 12th Annual Academy Awards:
"Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, fellow members of the motion picture industry and honored guests: This is one of the happiest moments of my life, and I want to thank each one of you who had a part in selecting for one of the awards, for your kindness. It has made me feel very, very humble; and I shall always hold it as a beacon for anything that I may be able to do in the future. I sincerely hope I shall always be a credit to my race and to the motion picture industry. My heart is too full to tell you just how I feel, and may I say thank you and God bless you."[17][18]
De Havilland remembers ‘Gone with the Wind’: Lost the best-supporting actress Oscar race to Hattie McDaniel
Associated Press
Saturday, November 18, 2004
The actors who played the iconic characters from Gone with the Wind - Rhett, Scarlett, Mammy, Ashley - are all long gone. Sixty-five years later, the lone survivor from the main cast is Olivia de Havilland. De Havilland answered the following question in a interview with Associated Press:
AP: Although you considered yourself one of the leads, you were nominated for best supporting actress. When McDaniel won that award, becoming the first black performer to claim an Oscar, was that a shock?
De Havilland: I was with Vivien, David (and others) and were just having a drink together before the limousines were going to take us from David's house to the Academy Awards at the Ambassador Hotel. The phone rang and David said, "Yes, yes . . . Scarlett, yeah . . . Best picture, hmm . . . Fleming, yes . . ." and he went down the whole list of awards and then said, "Hattie . . ." And my name wasn't mentioned. Of course, he got advance news of who had won. He had some kind of spy.
AP: Then came the ceremony . . .
De Havilland: I decided of course there was no God. (Laughs) Well, I was only 22! At the table, I was able to keep my composure until it was all over and then one tear started down my cheek. (The producer's wife) Irene Selznick saw that and said "Come with me!" and we went into the kitchen and then I really began to cry.
AP: Did McDaniel know in advance?
De Havilland: She didn't know. She was already at the awards. She was seated with her black escort [B. P. Yoder][19][20] and David made sure she was properly seated and he wasn't satisfied at first as to where she was seated. He rearranged things so it was more appropriate, from his point of view.
AP: She was in the back, and he moved her closer?
De Havilland: He arranged a table for two in a very good position for her and her escort and they were perfectly comfortable. In those days, it was still a delicate situation.
AP: Her win was historic. Did your feelings eventually change about losing to her?
De Havilland: Two weeks later, still brooding about the fact that there was no God, I woke up one morning and thought, "That's absolutely wonderful that Hattie got the award!" Hattie deserved it and she got it . . . I thought I'd much rather live in a world where a black actress who gave a marvellous performance got the award instead of me. I'd rather live in that kind of world.[21][22]
Scarlett Fever (1939-1961)
Time Magazine, 1961: "Gable never in later movies topped his performance as Rhett Butler, the man of iron with a heart of caramel. Vivien Leigh, though she seldom shows the tigerish vitality that Author Mitchell wrote into her Scarlett O'Hara, nevertheless makes a fascinating, green-eyed bitch-kitty. And Hattie McDaniel, as Scarlett's hammy old mammy, just about waddles off with the show."[23]
Gone with the Wind was awarded ten Academy Awards, a record that would stand for years, and has been named by the American Film Institute (AFI) as number six among the top 100 American films of all time.[24]
Later acting career
As the 1940s progressed, the servant roles McDaniel and other African American performers had so frequently played were subjected to increasingly strong criticism by groups such as the NAACP. In response to the NAACP's criticism, McDaniel replied, "I'd rather play a maid and make $700 a week than be one for $7."
In 1942's Warner Bros., In This Our Life, she once again played a domestic, starring Bette Davis and directed by John Huston; character confronts racial issues as her law student son is wrongly ac sed of manslaughter. The following year, McDaniel was in Warner Bros., Thank Your Lucky Stars, with Humphrey Bogart and Bette Davis. In 1943, Time (magazine) wrote about McDaniel, "Hattie McDaniel, whose bubbling, blaring good humor more than redeems the roaring bad taste of a Harlem number called "Ice Cold Katie" [musical number by Dinah Shore].[25] Hattie McDaniel continued to play maids during the war year, in Warner Bros. 1942, The Male Animal and United Artists 1944, Since You Went Away, but her feistiness was toned down.
She made her last film appearances, Mickey and Family Honeymoon (1949), but was still quite active in her final years on radio and television, becoming the first major African American radio star with her comedy series Beulah. She starred in the ABC television version, taking over for Ethel Waters after the first season. It was a hit, earning McDaniel $2,000 a week. But after filming a handful of episodes, McDaniel learned she had breast cancer. By the spring of 1952, she was too ill to work and was replaced by Louise Beavers.
Off-camera
Legal case: Victory on "Sugar Hill"
Time Magazine, December 17, 1945:
Their story was as old as it was ugly. In 1938, Negroes, willing and able to pay $15,000 and up for West Adams, Los Angeles, California, Heights property, had begun moving into the old colonial mansions. Many were movie folk—Actresses Louise Beavers, Hattie McDaniel, Ethel Waters, etc. They improved their holdings, kept their well-defined ways, quickly won more than tolerance from most of their white neighbors. But some whites, refusing to be comforted, had drawn up a racial restriction covenant among themselves. For seven years they had tried to sell it to the other whites, but failed. Then they went to court. Superior Judge Thurmond Clarke decided to visit the disputed ground—popularly known as "Sugar Hill." Next morning, Judge Clarke threw the case out of court. His reason: "It is time that members of the Negro race are accorded, without reservations or evasions, the full rights guaranteed them under the 14th Amendment to the Federal Constitution. Judges have been avoiding the real issue too long." Said Hattie McDaniel, of West Adams Heights: "Words cannot express my appreciation." [26]
Community service
McDaniel was also a member of Sigma Gamma Rho, one of four African-American Greek letter sororities in the United States. Hattie was a leader in the black community. During World War II, organized entertainments for black soldiers and sailors serving on the military bases throughout California. Bette Davis also performed for black regiments as the only white member of an acting troupe formed by Hattie McDaniel, that also included Lena Horne and Ethel Waters.[27] She joined Clarence Muse for an NBC radio broadcast to raise funds for Red Cross relief programs for Americans, many of them black, who had been displaced by the year's devastating floods. Within the black community, she gained a reputation for generous giving, often without question feeding and lending money to friends and stranger alike.[28]
McDaniel was the Chairman of the Negro Division of the Hollywood Victory Committee, providing entertainment for soldiers stationed at military bases. She also put in numerous personal appearances to hospitals, threw parties, performed at USC shows and war bond rallies, to raise funds to support the war, on behalf of the Victory Committee.[29][30] generosity
Marriages
While her career was advancing in the 1920's, her husband, George Langford, died soon after she married him in 1922, and her father died the same year. She married Howard Hickman in 1938 but divorced him later the same year. In 1941, she married James Lloyd Crawford, real estate salesman. In the book Bright Boulevards, Bold Dreams, by Donald Bogle, it's referenced that in 1945, McDaniel happily informed gossip columnist Hedda Hopper that she was pregnant. McDaniel began buying baby clothes and setting up a nursery. Her plans were shattered when the doctor informed her she had a false pregnancy; McDaniel fell into a depression. She divorced Crawford in 1945, after four and a half years of marriage. She said he was jealous of her career, once threatened to kill her.[31]
In Yuma, Arizona, June 11, 1949, she married Larry Williams, interior decorator. Divorced him in 1950, after she testified that their five months together had been marred by "arguing and fussing." Ms. McDaniel broke down in tears when she testified that her husband tried to create dissension among the cast of her radio show and otherwise interfered with her work. "I haven't got over it yet," she said. "I got so I couldn't sleep. I couldn't concentrate on my lines."[32][33]
Death
McDaniel died at age 57, in the hospital on the grounds of the Motion Picture House in Woodland Hills, on October 26, 1952. She was survived by a brother, Sam "Deacon" McDaniel, a film actor. Thousands of mourners turned out to remember her life and accomplishments. It was her wish to be buried in the Hollywood Cemetery on Santa Monica Boulevard in Hollywood, along with her fellow movie stars, Douglas Fairbanks, Rudolph Valentino, and others. The owner, Jules 'Jack' Roth, refused to allow her to be interred there, because they did not take blacks. Her second choice, Angelus Rosedale Cemetery also had a similar policy, but it was waived and the actress became the first African American buried there.
Ms. McDaniel wrote: "I desire a white casket and a white shroud; white gardenias in my hair and in my hands, together with a white gardenia blanket and a pillow of red roses" I also wish to be buried in the Hollywood Cemetery".[34]
In 1999, Tyler Cassity, the new owner of the Hollywood Cemetery, who had renamed it Hollywood Forever Cemetery; wanted to right the wrong and have Miss McDaniel interred in the cemetery. Her family did not want to disturb her remains after the passage of so much time, and declined the offer. Hollywood Forever Cemetery then did the next best thing and built a large cenotaph memorial on the lawn overlooking the lake in honor of McDaniel. It is one of the most popular site for visitors.[35]
Her Will
The "Oscar" that Hattie won was placed in the keeping of Howard University in Washington. The last will filed for probate disposing of less than $10,000 to a few relatives and friends. She left $1 to her former husband, Larry C. Williams.[36]
Legacy and recognitions
Hattie has two stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame in Hollywood: one for her contributions to radio at 6933 Hollywood Boulevard, and one for motion pictures at 1719 Vine Street.[37]
In 2002, the legacy of pioneering actress Hattie McDaniel is recalled when American Movie Classics (AMC) delves into her life in the film Beyond Tara, The Extraordinary Life Of Hattie McDaniel (2001), produced and directed by Madison D. Lacy, Ph.D., and hosted by Whoopi Goldberg. The one-hour special shows the struggles and triumphs of how McDaniel, in spite of racism and adversity, knocked down the doors of Hollywood and made her presence known. The film won the 2001–2002 Daytime Emmy Award, presented on May 17, 2002, for Outstanding Special Class Special.[38]
McDaniel was featured as the 29th inductee on the Black Heritage Series by the United States Postal Service. She is the first black Oscar winner honored with a stamp. The 39-cent stamp was released on January 29, 2006. This stamp features a very special image of Hattie McDaniel. It is a 1941 photograph of McDaniel in the dress she wore on February 29, 1940, when she received the Oscar for Best Supporting Actress in Gone with the Wind.
The ceremony took place at the Margaret Herrick Library of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, where the Hattie McDaniel collection includes photographs of McDaniel and other family members, as well as scripts and other documents. "She was a most special lady," McDaniel's Gone with the Wind co-star Ann Rutherford told AP Television News. Rutherford recalled how McDaniel thought some of her friends looked down on her for playing a maid "But (McDaniel) said, I'd rather play a maid than be a maid", Rutherford said.[39]
Filmography
Features:
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Short Subjects:
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Radio
The Optimistic Do-Nut Hour (1931)
Beulah (1947-1952)
References
- ^ MTV: Hattie McDaniel Biography
- ^ "Hattie McDaniel, First African American To Win An Academy Award®, Featured On New 39-Cent Postage Stamp", Press Release for US Postal Service, 25 January 2006.
- ^ Lyman, Darryl. Great African American Women, Jonathan David Company, 2005 - ISBN 0824604598
- ^ Laird, Ross. Discography of Okeh Records, 1918-1934, Praeger/Greenwood, pp. 392, 446, 2004 - ISBN 0313311420
- ^ Vladimir, Bogdanov. All Music Guide to the Blues: The Definitive Guide to the Blues, Backbeat Books, p. 274, 2003 - ISBN 0879307366
- ^ Sam McDaniel at the Internet Movie Database
- ^ Etta McDaniel at the Internet Movie Database
- ^ Watts, Jill. Hattie McDaniel: Black Ambition, White Hollywood, HarperCollins, 2005, p. 151
- ^ Harris, Warren G. Clark Gable: A Biography, Harmony, (2002), page 203 - ISBN 0307237141
- ^ Harris, Warren G. Clark Gable: A Biography, Harmony, (2002), page 211
- ^ Time Magazine: Gone with the Wind Premiere, article dated Monday, December 25, 1939
- ^ Bridges, Herb. Gone With the Wind: the Three-day Premiere in Atlanta, Mercer University Press, 1999 - ISBN 086554672X
- ^ Watts, Jill. Hattie McDaniel: Black Ambition, White Hollywood, 2005, page 172 - ISBN 0060514906
- ^ Lyman, Darryl. Great African American Women, Jonathan David Company, 2005, p. 161 - ISBN 0824604598
- ^ Lotchin, Roger W. The Way We Really Were: The Golden State in the Second Great War, University of Illinois Press, 1999, page 36 - ISBN 025206819X
- ^ Hattie McDaniel Expresses Gratitude of Her Race for Recognition, at the Academy Awards, 1940
- ^ See and hear Hattie McDaniel acceptance speech at the end of this video.
- ^ Jackson, Carlton. Hattie: The Life of Hattie McDaniel, page 52
- ^ Hattie and escort at Academy Award
- ^ Watts, Jill. Hattie McDaniel: Black Ambition, White Hollywood. New York, NY: HarperCollins, 2005, page 176
- ^ Associated Press: De Havilland remembers 'Gone with the Wind': Lost the best-supporting actress Oscar race to Hattie McDaniel, MSNBC.com, November 18, 2004
- ^ Associated Press: Actors gone, but legends swirl around 'Gone with the Wind' 65 years later, The Chronicle Telegram, Elyria, Ohio, Sunday, November 21, 2004, page 89
- ^ Time Magazine, Scarlett Fever (1939-1961)
- ^ American Film Institute
- ^ Time Review: Thank Your Lucky Stars (Warner), Monday, October 4, 1943
- ^ Time Magazine, Victory on Sugar Hill, Monday, December 17, 1945
- ^ Spada, James. More Than a Woman: An Intimate Biography of Bette Davis, Little, Brown and Company (1993), pp. 191–192. ISBN 055356868X
- ^ Watts, Jill. Hattie McDaniel: Black Ambition, White Hollywood, 2006, p. 126
- ^ [http://cghs.dade.k12.fl.us/african-american/reconstruct/hattie_mcdaniel.htm Hattie McDaniel and the Negro Division of the Hollywood Victory Committee
- ^ Watts, Jill. Hattie McDaniel: Black Ambition, White Hollywood, page 210
- ^ Time Magazine article, Monday, December 31, 1945
- ^ Time Magazine article, Monday, December 18, 1950
- ^ Long Beach Press-Telegram, Long Beach, California, Wednesday, December 6, 1950
- ^ Associated Press, First black to win Oscar to get part of final wish, The Frederick Post, Frederick, MD, Monday, October 25, 1999
- ^ The Memorial to Actress Hattie McDanial, at Hollywood Forever Memorial Park in Hollywood, California
- ^ Associated Press: Hattie McDaniel Leaves "Oscar" to University, Corpus Christi Times, Corpus Christi, Texas, Tuesday, November 4, 1952
- ^ Gone with the Wind: Hollywood Walk of Fame Stars
- ^ 2001–2002 Daytime Emmy Awards
- ^ CBSNEWS.com: First black Oscar winner honored with stamp, Thursday, January 26, 2006
Sources
- The Life and Struggles of Hattie McDaniel (author Jill Watts audio interview), hear the voice of Hattie McDaniel
- Hopper, Hedda. Hattie Hates Nobody. Chicago Sunday Tribune, 1947.
- Jackson, Carlton. Hattie: The Life of Hattie McDaniel. Lanham, MD: Madison Books, 1990. ISBN 1568330049
- Mitchell, Lisa. More Than a Mammy. Hollywood Studio Magazine, April 1979.
- Salamon, Julie. The Courage to Rise Above Mammyness. New York Times, 6 August 2001.
- Watts, Jill. Hattie McDaniel: Black Ambition, White Hollywood. New York, NY: HarperCollins, 2005. ISBN 0060514906
- Young, Al. I’d Rather Play a Maid Than Be One. New York Times, 15 October 1989.
- Zeigler, Ronny. Hattie McDaniel: ‘(I’d). . . rather play a maid.’ N.Y. Amsterdam News, 28 April 1979.
- Access Newspaper Archive - search for "Hattie McDaniel"
External link
Hattie McDaniel Photos
Hattie McDaniel at IMDb