From An Accident Comes a Legend
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Billie Holiday ca. 1933 |
Billie Holiday was born Eleanora Fagan in Baltimore on April
7, 1915, the illegitimate child of Sadie Fagan, a domestic and Clarence
Holiday, a musician who abandoned Sadie and the young Eleanora for the grind
and glory of the road. It is said that he referred to his adoring daughter as
an “accident” and “something I stole when I was fifteen.”
Young Eleanora stayed with relatives in Baltimore while her
mother labored as a domestic in New York City.
The girl spent a good portion of her time at a neighborhood brothel
where she would spend hours listening to the music of Bessie Smith and Louis
Armstrong on its Victrola. After almost being raped at the tender age of 10,
Eleanora was sent away to an institution ran by Catholic nuns as punishment for
allegedly enticing the man who almost stole what little innocence she had.
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'Lady Day' ca. late 1930s |
An Extraordinary Career Begins
When she was 18 in 1933, Eleanora Fagan became Billie Holiday and made
her first recordings for Columbia Records.
John Hammond, the legendary record producer who first signed her said that
Billie “sang popular songs in a manner that made them completely her own. She
was absolutely beautiful . . . She was the best jazz singer I had ever heard.” By the age of 15, Eleanora had joined her mother in New York.
She worked first as a maid and then as a prostitute until meeting her natural
calling as a singer in small Harlem nightclubs.
Strange Fruit
Billie worked with an impressive list of the most prominent
musicians of her time, including Benny Goodman, Teddy Wilson, Fletcher
Henderson, Arte Shaw, Count Basie and good friend Lester Young, who gave her
the nickname “Lady Day.” In 1935, Billie made her debut at Harlem’s Apollo
Theatre, THE place for black entertainers and where she became one of its most
popular attractions. In 1939, she recorded “Strange Fruit,”its title referring
to lynched black bodies hanging from the limbs of trees. Billie once said “There are a few songs I feel
so much, I can’t stand to sing them, but that’s something else again.” Doubtless,
“Strange Fruit” was one of those songs, but it was the one which solidified her
career. According to Apollo Theatre owner Jack Schiffman, who objected to the
song’s inclusion said that when she finished, “a moment of oppressively heavy silence followed, and then a kind of
rustling sound I had never heard before. It was the sound of almost two
thousand people sighing.”
The End of an Era
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Billie Holiday ca. 1940s |
The career of Lady Day was extraordinary -- there were amazing highs and
tragic lows, all well-documented. In 1959, after addictions to both alcohol and
drugs, Billie Holiday died of lung congestion and other ailments in New York’s
Metropolitan Hospital. Billie's storied life was depicted on screen in
Lady Sings the Blues, released in 1972 and starring Diana Ross, whose portrayal of ‘Lady Day’ won for the singer/actress both critical acclaim and a
Best Actress Oscar nomination.
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Diana Ross as 'Lady Day'
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