Celebrate World's Greatest Tap Dancer, Bill 'Bojangles' Robinson, with His Re-released Biography
Contact: N.R. Mitgang, Linus Multimedia, 718-739-3436, NRMitgang@AOL.com
JAMAICA ESTATES, N.Y., Feb. 27, 2014 /Christian Newswire/ -- Bill Robinson -- "Mr. Bojangles" -- is a name synonymous with tap dancing. He invented the "stair dance," starred in movies and on Broadway, broke the color barrier for dancers in vaudeville and performed for kings and presidents. His career in American dance was unprecedented. Even today, those unfamiliar with his work know his name from the song "Mr. Bojangles" and Fred Astaire's classic dance routine "Bojangles of Harlem." And if you've ever used the word "copasetic," you can thank Robinson -- he coined it.
The first, and only, full-length biography of Bill Robinson ever published came out in 1988. After receiving stellar reviews, it eventually fell out of print and became a prized find on eBay. That's about to change. "Mr. Bojangles: The Biography of Bill Robinson" by Jim Haskins and N.R. Mitgang has just been re-released to celebrate the dancer.
With access to much primary source material -- people who knew Bojangles, his scrapbooks and his personal papers -- Haskins and Mitgang create a vivid portrait of the man behind the myth, from his birth in Richmond, Virginia, to his death and the star-studded funeral where he was eulogized by Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., and Ed Sullivan.
As Mitgang notes, "Robinson was called the Mayor of Harlem. During a time when too few African-American voices shouted for justice, Bill Robinson's whispers were heard by presidents, governors, kings, queens, and countless others."
In addition to his dazzling career in dance, the book documents how Robinson:
- helped break the color barrier in vaudeville, Broadway, radio, television and Hollywood
- was responsible for Miami’s first integrated audience
- was responsible for the hiring of the first African-American on the Dallas police force
- asked FDR to make changes for African-American soldiers during World War II
In eulogizing Robinson in 1949, the Reverend Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., pastor of the Abyssinian Baptist Church in the Harlem, observed, "Bill wasn't a credit to his race, meaning the Negro race. Bill was a credit to the human race. He was not a great Negro dancer; he was the world's greatest dancer. In some way the legend got around that Bill Robinson was an 'Uncle Tom.' Oh, no! You didn't know Bill if you heard of that story!"
Paperback: $14.99
www.amazon.com/Mr-Bojangles-Biograpsahy-Bill-Robinson/dp/0615909248
Kindle: $6.99
www.amazon.com/Mr-Bojangles-Biography-Bill-Robinson-ebook/dp/B00I3O8HBO/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&sr=&qid=