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07 أكتوبر 2012

" Ol'

 Paul Robeson in Showboat, 1951

Ol’ Man River”...“Make Believe”...
You Are Love”...“Bill”...
Can’t Help Lovin’ Dat Man”...

And so then they did invite Mr. Robeson and his party to better seats, but he was deeply hurt. But they then made a big fuss over him. They asked him if he would like to sing in the dining room. There was a beautiful balcony where sometimes a passenger who was talented would go up and in this beautiful balcony area and sing down to the people dining. And there were some beautiful opera singers, especially Jews fleeing from Germany, people of wealth, getting out before the war broke out at that 
time… and Paul absolutely refused to sing.

And I said to him, “I’m the ship’s chairman. Will you sing to the crew?” And he accepted. And of 
course anyone who heard that will always remember it. He sang so beautifully

PAUL ROBESON AND THE NMU


From an oral history interview with Rolfs recorded by Joe Doyle on February 8, 1984. Courtesy of Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives, New York University 


here’s an old man called the Mississippi
That’s the old man I don’t like to be
What does he care if the world’s got troubles?
What does he care if the land ain’t free?

You and me, we sweat and strain
Body all achin’ and racked with pain
Tote that barge
And lift that bale
You show a little grit
And you lands in jail
But I keeps laughin
Instead of cryin
I must keep fightin
Until I’m dyin

And old man



Ah gits weary
An' sick of tryin'
Ah'm tired of livin'
An' skeered of dyin',
But ol' man river,
He jes'keeps rolling' along.river

MGM Show Boat " Ol' Man River "



Moving from 1890s Mississippi to Chicago to “Roaring 20s” Broadway, Show Boat follows the lives of a company of theater folk — deeply involving us in their triumphs and sorrows, while illuminating the racial and social changes that were shaping the country.



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