| That's Black Entertainment | |
|---|---|
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| Directed by | William Greaves | 
| Written by | G. William Jones | 
| Produced by | Norm Revis, Jr. David Arpin  | 
| Distributed by | Video Communications | 
Release date  | 1989 | 
Running time  | 60 minutes | 
That's Black Entertainment is a 1989 documentary film starring African-American performers and featuring clips from black films from 1929–1957, narrated and directed by William Greaves.[1] The clips are from the Black Cinema Collection of the Southwest Film/Video Archives at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, Texas.[2] It is 60 minutes long and was distributed by Video Communications of Tulsa, Oklahoma.[2]
Film clips included
The film contains more than 29 clips,[1] including:
- Paul Robeson (in Song of Freedom)[3]
 - Bessie Smith (in St. Louis Blues)[1]
 - Eubie Blake, Nina Mae McKinney, and The Nicholas Brothers (in Pie, Pie Blackbird)
 - Lena Horne (in The Duke Is Tops)
 - Nat 'King' Cole and Moms Mabley (in Killer Diller)
 - Sammy Davis, Jr. and Ethel Waters (in Rufus Jones for President)[1]
 - Cab Calloway (in Cab Calloway's Jitterbug Party)
 - Ethel Waters (in Carib Gold)
 
Not only musical clips were shown, but dramatic clips as well, like Murder in Harlem (1935),[3] Juke Joint (1947),[3] Four Shall Die (1940), and Souls of Sin (1949).[3] The film also includes clips from white films stereotyping blacks, including D.W. Griffith's The Birth of a Nation, and a blackfaced Bing Crosby in Crooner's Holiday (1932).[3]
Appearances
- Billie Allen
 - Louis Armstrong
 - Albert Ammons
 - Eubie Blake
 - Clarence Brooks
 - Cab Calloway
 - Nat 'King' Cole[2]
 - Bing Crosby[3]
 - Dorothy Dandridge
 - Sammy Davis, Jr.[1]
 - Duke Ellington
 - Francine Everett
 - Stepin Fetchit
 - William Greaves
 - Alfred Hawkins
 - Billie Holiday
 - Lena Horne
 - Pete Johnson
 - July Jones
 - Moms Mabley
 - Nina Mae McKinney
 - Oscar Micheaux[3]
 - Clarence Muse
 - The Nicholas Brothers
 - Jesse Owens
 - Paul Robeson[2]
 - Bill Robinson[2]
 - Frank 'Sugar Chile' Robinson
 - Bessie Smith[2]
 - Fredi Washington
 - Ethel Waters
 - Spencer Williams[3]
 
References
- 1 2 3 4 5 "Documentary offers look at early black films". The Jackson Sun. 1990-06-08. p. 37. Retrieved 2023-06-20 – via Newspapers.com.
 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 Nichols, Peter (1990-01-14). "Home Entertainment/video: Fast Forward; Another Disk Revolution In the Offing?". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2023-06-20.
 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Film bonanza adds a chapter to black history". The Atlanta Constitution. 1990-02-19. p. 15. Retrieved 2023-06-20 – via Newspapers.com.
 
External links
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