The Jim Crow persona is a theater character developed by entertainer Thomas D. Rice (1808–1860) and popularized through his minstrel shows. The character is a stereotypical depiction of African-Americans and of their culture. Rice based the character on a folk trickster named Jim Crow that had long been popular among enslaved black people.[1] Rice also adapted and popularized a traditional slave song called "Jump Jim Crow" (1828).[2]
The character conventionally dresses in rags and wears a battered hat and torn pants. Rice applied blackface makeup made of burnt cork to his face and hands[3] and impersonated a very nimble and irreverently witty African-American field-hand who sang, "Come listen all you galls and boys, I'm going to sing a little song, my name is Jim Crow, weel about and turn about and do jis so, eb'ry time I weel about I jump Jim Crow."[3]
Origin
editThe actual origin of the Jim Crow character has been lost to legend. One story claims it is Rice's emulation of a black slave that he had seen on his travels throughout the Southern United States, whose owner was one Mr. Crow.[4] Several sources describe Rice encountering an elderly black stableman working in one of the river towns where Rice was performing. According to some accounts, the man had a crooked leg and a deformed shoulder. He was singing about Jim Crow and punctuating each stanza with a little jump. According to Edmon S. Conner, an actor who worked with Rice early in his career, the alleged encounter happened in Louisville, Kentucky. Conner and Rice were both engaged for a summer season at the city theater, which at the back overlooked a livery stable. An elderly and deformed slave working in the stable yard often performed a song and dance he had improvised for his own amusement. The actors saw him, and Rice "watched him closely, and saw that there was a character unknown to the stage. He wrote several verses, changed the air somewhat, quickened it a good deal, made up exactly like Daddy, and sang it to a Louisville audience. They were wild with delight..." According to Conner, the livery stable was owned by a white man named Crow, whose name the elderly slave adopted.[5]
A more likely explanation behind the origin of the character is that Rice had observed and absorbed African-American traditional song and dance over many years. He grew up in a racially integrated Manhattan neighborhood, and later Rice toured the Southern slave states. According to the reminiscences of Isaac Odell, a former minstrel who described the development of the genre in an interview given in 1907, Rice appeared on stage at Louisville, Kentucky, in the 1830s and learned there to mimic local black speech: "Coming to New York he opened up at the old Park Theatre, where he introduced his Jim Crow act, impersonating a black slave. He sang a song, 'I Turn About and Wheel About', and each night composed new verses for it, catching on with the public and making a great name for himself."[6]
Jim Crow laws
editRice's famous stage persona eventually lent its name to a generalized negative and stereotypical view of black people. The shows peaked in the 1850s, and after Rice's death in 1860 interest in them faded. There was still some memory of them in the 1870s however, just as the "Jim Crow" segregation laws were surfacing in the United States. The Jim Crow period was later revived by President Woodrow Wilson: after a showing (the first movie viewing in the White House) of the motion picture The Birth of a Nation (1915), which glorified the Ku Klux Klan and portrayed black people as bestial rapists, he signed segregation laws and targeted black people in government. Ida B. Wells, a well known black Republican journalist and a co-founder of the NAACP, bitterly fought against this policy. Jim Crow segregation only ended in the 1960s, when the civil rights movement gained national support for the Civil Rights Act.
Legacy
editThe poem "The Jackdaw of Rheims" by English writer Richard Barham, published in 1837 (and in The Ingoldsby Legends of 1840), concludes "It's the custom, at Rome, new names to bestow, So they canonized him by the name of Jim Crow!".[7]
By 1838, and through to the end of the 19th century, the term "Jim Crow" was used as an abusive term towards black people, well before it became associated with Jim Crow laws.[8]
The "Jim Crow" character as portrayed by Rice popularized the perception of African-Americans as lazy, untrustworthy, unintelligent, and unworthy of social participation.[3] Rice's performances helped to popularize American minstrelsy, in which performers imitated Rice's blackface and stereotypical mannerisms, touring around the United States.[3] Those performers spread the racist depiction of the character across the United States, contributing to white Americans' negative view of African-American character and work ethic.
In Nathaniel Hawthorne's The House of the Seven Gables (1851), a young schoolboy buys gingerbread "Jim Crow" cookies for a penny each.[9]
A character in the 1941 Walt Disney animated feature film Dumbo, a literal crow, was originally named "Jim Crow" on the original model sheets, although his name is never mentioned in the film. The character was renamed in the 1950s to "Dandy Crow" in attempt to avoid controversy.[10][11][12][13][14] Floyd Norman, the first African-American animator hired at Walt Disney Productions during the 1950s, defended the character in an article entitled Black Crows and Other PC Nonsense, saying that the original name 'Jim Crow' was "taking a cartoony jab at the oppressive Jim Crow laws in the South".[15][16] [further explanation needed]
In the music video for Childish Gambino's "This Is America", Gambino shoots a man in the head while posing like a Jim Crow caricature.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ Rice, Daddy; W. T., Lhamon; Crow, Jim (2003). Jump Jim Crow Lost Plays, Lyrics, and Street Prose of the First Atlantic Popular Culture. Harvard University Press. p. vii Preface. ISBN 978-0674010628. Retrieved April 7, 2021.
- ^ Padgett, Ken. "Blackface! Minstrel Shows". black-face.com. Ken Padgett. Archived from the original on September 27, 2014. Retrieved December 10, 2014.
- ^ a b c d "Who Was Jim Crow? – Jim Crow Museum". ferris.edu. Ferris State University. Retrieved March 3, 2018.
- ^ Doe, John. "Origin of the term 'Jim Crow'". uic.edu. University of Illinois at Chicago. Archived from the original on December 19, 2008. Retrieved May 24, 2015.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link) - ^ "An Old Actor's Memories: what Mr Edmon S. Conner recalls about his career" (PDF). The New York Times. June 5, 1881. Retrieved July 3, 2020.
- ^ "The Lay of the Last of the Old Minstrels; Interesting Reminiscenses of Isaac Odell, Who Was A Burnt Cork Artist Sixty Years Ago". The New York Times. May 19, 1907. Retrieved September 8, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ Dickens, C.; Ainsworth, W.H.; Smith, A. (1837). Bentley's Miscellany. Richard Bentley. pp. 529–532. Retrieved August 1, 2022.
they canoniz'd him by the name of Jem Crow!
, text online with "Jim Crow". - ^ Woodward, C.V.; McFeely, W.S. (2002). The Strange Career of Jim Crow. Oxford University Press. p. 7. ISBN 978-0-19-514690-5. Retrieved August 1, 2022.
- ^ The House of Seven Gables
- ^ "Dumbo (1941)". AFI Catalog of Feature Films: The First 100 Years 1893–1993. AFI. Retrieved July 3, 2020.
- ^ Hischak, Thomas S. (2011). Disney Voice Actors: A Biographical Dictionary. McFarland. p. 238. ISBN 978-0-7864-8694-6.
- ^ Institute, American Film (1999). The American Film Institute catalog of motion pictures produced in the United States. F4,1. Feature films, 1941 – 1950, film entries, A – L. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-21521-4.
- ^ "Reversal of Roles". July 28, 1997. Archived from the original on July 28, 1997. Retrieved January 29, 2021.
- ^ "Dumbo (film)". D23. Retrieved December 16, 2021.
- ^ Norman, Floyd (April 27, 2019). "Black Crows and Other PC Nonsense". MrFun's Journal. Archived from the original on June 29, 2020. Retrieved November 25, 2019.
- ^ Newsdesk, Laughing Place Disney (April 30, 2019). "Disney Legend Floyd Norman Defends "Dumbo" Crow Scene Amid Rumors of Potential Censorship". LaughingPlace.com. Retrieved May 27, 2020.