OH, FOR PETE’S SAKE!

crying2png

For Pete’s Sake Day (February 26) celebrates one example of a ‘minced oath’, where an offensive word or phrase is substituted by something more acceptable in society. Other examples include ‘For crying out loud!’, and “Sugar!”. Such euphemisms have been used for centuries whenever people hit thumbs with hammers, burn hands on hot plates, or sit on sharp things while in polite company.  Or when having an absolutely sucky day.

Have you ever experienced a day that started out OK, then gradually went downhill until you finally got back home?  I am switching from a desktop computer to a laptop and I decided to go shopping today.  On the bus.  I went the wrong way on the first bus, then I went too far in the opposite direction, then I still had to walk 5 blocks to get to my destination.  Once there, I waited for someone to help me, after one brief encounter, I waited another thirty minutes and gave up.  I did not buy my laptop.   I decided to treat myself to Mexican food for lunch.  Thirty minutes after I ordered, the food had not arrived, so after having eaten on a few chips and salsa, I left to catch the bus back home.  On my way back to the bus (5 blocks), I started crying.  I mean, for Pete’s sake, why is this happening to me?  Only I wasn’t thinking “for Pete’s sake.”

Yesterday, I commented on a post with which I was at odds, and someone replied to my comment by saying, Boo Hoo!

boohooaustinpowers

I thought about this today as I was walking and crying and it made me laugh out loud.  The fact that someone really doesn’t care about my “issues”, and doesn’t mind telling me, is funny.  Which is good for me.  I am reminded that sh*t happens to everyone, and, of course, now that I have laughed, I feel much better.

I have attached a Youtube video of my father, Eddie Green, and a lady by the name of Billie Wilson.  The song “I’m Sorry For It Now”, was written by Eddie in 1924.  I spent a little time researching Billie Wilson, but all I could find out is that she made one recording for Paramount (this one), and that her full name, according to the October 4, 1924 issue of the Chicago Defender, was Zora (Billie) Wilson.  The lady in this song is totally having her own issue.   Enjoy!

Family Oscars

Oscars-red-carpet
Oscars-red-carpet

So, tonight’s the night for the 2015 Oscar Awards.  I am not a big award show watcher, but since I am sans cable, I have not been able to watch TV, and now, of course, I am wishing I had cable again.  But, this means I have an excuse to skip ahead of myself regarding the telling of my father’s story, and also to touch on one of the reasons I am bringing him back into the spotlight.

spotlight

Eddie’s life in the entertainment world included singing, dancing, songwriting, comedy, magic, acting, producing and directing.  As an entrepreneur, he was a music publisher and owned two BarBQ Restaurants in New York and a Music School.    His name was always in the paper.  Even if he was just in town for the weekend.  He knew lots of people.  And lots of well-known people knew Eddie.  If I mentioned these people today, you would know who they were.  But, if I mention Eddie Green, almost nobody knows who he was.  It’s the opposite of that old joke that my step-father used to tell about the guy that everybody knows:

Bob tells his boss he knows everyone, even the Pope.  His boss doesn’t believe him.So off they fly to Rome. Bob and his boss are assembled with the masses in Vatican Square when Bob says, “This will never work. I can’t catch the Pope’s eye among all these people. Tell you what, I know all the guards so let me just go upstairs and I’ll come out on the balcony with the Pope.” And he disappears into the crowd headed toward the Vatican.  Sure enough, half an hour later Bob emerges with the Pope on the balcony.  Bob returns and finds that his boss has had a heart attack, Bob asks his boss what happened and his boss said his heart just couldn’t take anymore when a guy in the crowd jostled him and said “Hey, there’s Bob, but who is that guy standin next to him!”

In Eddie’s case, it’s “Hey, I know those people, but who is that little short guy standing next to them?”  So, tonight, in keeping with the Oscar Night theme I am bringing out my Eddie Green/Hattie McDaniel picture:

eddieandhattie

I know, it’s very small, my transfer skills are not that great yet.  From left to right are my mom, Norma, Eddie, Louise Beavers, a friend, Hattie McDaniel and another friend.  I received this picture from my Godfather, Atty. Walter L. Gordon, who also donated it to the Los Angeles Public Library where it can be viewed in the photo database.  And, speaking of the Oscars, this picture was taken around the time Hattie won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actress in “Gone With The Wind.”  Hattie McDaniel and Eddie had worked together on the radio in the 30s and they also worked together on a radio program during WWII on a show called Jubilee.  Presented by the War Department, Jubilee was broadcast to American fighting men and women overseas and featured a mostly Black cast, including appearances by Louie Armstrong, Eddie “Rochester” Anderson, Nat King Cole, and Heavyweight champion Joe Louis.  You recognize these names, right?  I want the name, Eddie Green to be just as recognizable.

My mother, at the time, was a protege of Hattie McDaniel, as per this article from the The California Eagle, June 22, 1944:

momhattiehorne

The article in the middle of the paper, reads:  “Miss Amato Is The Talented Protege of Miss McDaniel – Representing Miss Hattie McDaniel as a guest of Miss Lena Horne at her “after theater” party closing her headline Orpheum appearance, was Miss Norma Anne Amato and her mother Mrs. Sinclaire White Amato. . . .”  This is the type of information my mother never mentioned.  Well, actually, she did tell me, but not my siblings, that her family knew Hattie McDaniel, but she left out the protege part.  She also left out the Lena Horne part.  As a matter of fact, it’s pictures and articles like these that have filled in my mother’s and my father’s life for me.  This was meant to be.

Well, it’s been fun, but I gotta run.  I hope you have enjoyed tonight’s mini Oscar award/tribute show.  I enjoyed bringing it to you.  Tune in again.

In searching the net, I found a husband and wife who were in the process of selling their business.  They had copies of old radio programs, on CD, that Eddie had done for the Armed Forces Radio Program-Jubilee, that I mentioned above.  The Mrs. sent me five CDs, one with EDDIE GREEN (LIVE EXCERPTS) Comedy Routines (W/ Lena Horne; W/Canada Lee; W/Ernie Whitman) and another with 4 Comedy Routines (W/Hattie McDaniels; And/Ernie Whitman from 1942 and 1945, respectively.  Now if that wasn’t cool, I don’t know what is.

A GOOD MAN IS…….

sophie tucker - a good man

Over the past month, I have been a bit depressed because a friend died, so I have not been so keen on posting.  It is much easier to sit back and contemplate the “why’s” of Life.  However, writing is something I like to do and life goes on, doesn’t it?  My friend was a good man.  According to his wife, he was a good man in her book, too.  As you can see from the above, my father, Eddie Green, wrote the song “A Good Man Is Hard To Find”.  I went online trying to find pictures that I could use in this post along that line, but I only found pictures like:

Benny Goodman - Stage Door Canteen
Benny Goodman – Stage Door Canteen
Pic showing how to find a good man-Tesla-Inventor-Alternating Current (AC)
Pic showing how to find a good man-Tesla-Inventor-Alternating Current (AC)

Then I remembered, I already had a good picture to use, of Miss Sophie Tucker, from 1919, advertising “A Good Man Is Hard To Find”.  This song actually became Sophie Tucker’s signature song for a while.

Sophia Tucker Says
Sophia Tucker Says

The paragraph in the oblong box reads:  “Miss Tucker has sung “A Good Man Is Hard To Find” nightly for 10 consecutive weeks, to thousands, in the Sophie Tucker room at Reisenweber’s and will continue to use it until her engagement terminates.  Hear her and be convinced.  Miss Tucker says:  “A Good Man Is Hard To Find” is the best blue number she has ever used.”  This is saying something, she has used “some good ones.”

For those of you who do not know, Sophie Tucker was known as “the Red Hot Momma” in her day, and she took a liking to Eddie’s songs.  Miss Tucker made special orchestra parts of Eddie’s 1921 songs, “The World’s All Wrong” and “You Can Read My Letters, But You Sure Can’t Read My Mind.”  This was in April, of 1921, Eddie had become a music publisher by then, and his business was doing so well that, according to the March 5, 1921 Billboard, Eddie would be moving his office into larger quarters the following April.   In this same Billboard article, it says “Miss Tucker also had Mr. Green write a special version of “You’ve Got What I Like”, another song Eddie wrote in 1921.  Sophie Tucker was famous and now I know that my father actually spoke to her! He probably was not as excited about it as I am.

I feel much better now that I have written this post.  My book is progressing slowly.  The fact that I am going to write something and publish it and then wait for someone to buy it, is daunting.  It seems like such a good idea when I remember that my purpose is to preserve the history of my father’s career, and to show my grandson just what type of stock he comes from.  (Poor English, oh well.)  Have you been inspired to research a relative?

Thanks for stopping by.

CELEBRATE SOMETHING EVERY DAY

Black History Month Display
Black History Month Display

February is Black History Month.  From what I have been hearing and reading there are many opinions out there about whether we should have a Black History Month or not, whether we need a month with a few more days, or whether Black history should even be mixed in with American history.   For myself I live in America and I consider myself to be an American.  A female, black American who lives on Planet Earth.  I think Black History Month is cool.   It gives people a chance to stand out a bit.

My pet peeve has been how Secretaries Week has shrunk to Secretaries Day.    I was a secretary for 35 years, and every year which ever company I was working for celebrated Secretaries Day.  And every year I would protest, because it was actually Secretaries Week, usually during the month of April.

A secretary has to be good with people, tactful, a listener, a coffee-maker, a right-hand man, a greeter, a multi-tasker, etc., etc., etc., did secretaries get a month?  No.  We didn’t even get the whole week and still don’t.

secre1

Every year we get one day.   Oh yea, they actually changed the name of the day though, to Professional Secretaries Day or in some places Administrative Assistant’s Day.

secre2

At least the Black History celebration has been extended from one day to one month.

I mean, for Black History, first we had the second week of February as Negro History Week, announced by Carter G. Woodson.  Then in 1937 and part of 1938, there was the radio program, “The Negro Hour.   My father, Eddie Green, actually wrote a letter to them via the California Eagle newspaper, that stated in part:  “I am writing a letter concerning the much discussed Negro Hour.  To intelligently discuss any subject, one must know something about that subject.  I am known in big time radio circles from coast to coast having appeared many times on major chains and television.  Now to the subject under discussion.  It is terrible”.  Then he went on to discuss his suggestions, and he ended the letter with this:  “Buckle down and put some real perspiration behind the program, because in your hands fate has placed the greatest instrument for the spreading of propaganda the world has every known.”

Finally, in 1976 as part of the United States Bicentennial, the informal expansion of Negro History Week to Black History Month was officially recognized by the U.S. government.  I think it’s a good thing.  Unlike what society has done to Secretaries.  Shrunk us down to one day.

I think we should celebrate all types of events, such as:

Korean Bell of Friendship and Bell Pavillion
Korean Bell of Friendship and Bell Pavillion

This massive and intricately decorated bell and pavilion was donated in 1976 to the people of Los Angeles by the people of the Republic of Korea to celebrate the bicentennial of the U.S. independence, honor veterans of the Korean War, and to consolidate traditional friendship between the two countries.  The bell is rung only four times each year: the Fourth of July, August 15 (Korean Independence Day) and New Year’s Eve, and every September to coincide with bell ringings around the country to celebrate Constitution week.  Until 7 or 8 years ago, I did not know this bell existed.  It is in San Pedro.  It is beautiful and important to the people of this country.  Or, this:

HISPANIC HERITAGE MONTH September 15 - October 15, 2014
HISPANIC HERITAGE MONTH
September 15 – October 15, 2014

Or this:

American Indian Heritage Celebration
American Indian Heritage Celebration

Maybe we could just celebrate Life on good ole planet Earth, every day.

Good Ole Planet Earth
Good Ole Planet Earth

YES! Just What I Needed To See.

yes

I watched a video yesterday from the Arsenio Hall late night television show, of a young black woman answering someones comment on her speaking voice.  She put into words an idea I have been trying to project via my blog and, eventually, my book.  One of the things she did was to champion women who had come before her.  Women who were just ordinary women, but did extraordinary things.  Like Dorothy Height, The President of the National Council of Negro Women for 40 years.  Born in 1912, Dorothy Height she was an educator and an organizer.  She was on committees and commissions.  In the 1960’s she organized Wednesdays in Mississippi, which was a group of black and white women who came together to create a dialogue of understanding.  In 2004 Dorothy Height was awarded the Congressional Gold Medal.  She fought for civil rights and women’s rights.  Dorothy Height even has a building named after her.

Dorothy I. Height Building Pennsylvania Ave. Washington, D.C.
Dorothy I. Height Building
Pennsylvania Ave. Washington, D.C.

For that young lady to communicate positivity by championing who we are as black people, people like Dorothy Height, made me wish I could hug her.   I thought, this is how you encourage people to achieve their goals, as opposed to focusing on how others may have held you back.  The thing is, I want to reach, not just people of color, but anyone who feels they “can’t” do this or that, because of what others may say.  Encouragement is what we need in this world.  Television was the perfect place for her to be able to express herself and reach millions of people.

That young woman I saw put her passion into something positive, as opposed to projecting anger, she projected pride in those who came before her and paved the way.  And she was young.  Meaning she is able to reach an audience that I may not attract.  I want our young people to remember the folks who struggled for the freedoms we enjoy today.  To remember them and to use them as examples of perseverance and dedication and pride.

On June 26, 1948 there was an article in the New York Age newspaper about my father and his thoughts on television:

Eddie Greens Firm Aids Show Business Through Television. The fast growing field of television offers a fertile one for Negro performers, is the opinion of radio comedian, Eddie Green, who revealed that because of this fact his motion picture firm has interested advertising agencies in having their sponsors products sold to the millions who view television via the singing and dancing route.

Designed to catch and hold the attention of the millions who want entertainment on video, Green asserted that instead of the hackneyed manner of selling national consumer goods to the public, his firm will “Deliver the message in a way to keep viewers from turning the dial”. Organized two months ago in Los Angeles with the famed comedian as president, Sepia Productions has already lined up five three-minute skits which they plan to lease or sell outright to ad agencies.

Backstage at the Strand Theatre here, where he’s a member of the “Duffy’s Tavern” radio show,  Green said that colored performers save(sic) their niche in the television picture and they should demand that their agents establish contacts with those that handle the shows In order not to be left out in the cold when the infant industry attains maturity. He pointed out that the decline of vaudeville witnessed many good Negro acts going out of business and little hope for the birth of new talent was anticipated until television offered vast potentialities!

Two years earlier, Eddie told the Baltimore AFRO: “I have little doubt that there will be more roles for colored entertainers in radio and although it may still be sometime away, I believe the day will come when at least one of the major networks will offer a chance to some young artist to head his own show.”  Eddie may not necessarily have been talking about television networks, but I bet he had them in mind.  Eddie knew what he was talking about.  Though he was not the first person of color to be on a major network, Arsenio Hall did have  his own show back in 1989 and now, once again, he is back and providing some very uplifting entertainment.

One last thing.  My father was an electronics wiz.  He liked to tinker with radios and television sets.  He had ideas.  My mom told me that Eddie was the way ahead of his time regarding television.  One day in 1945,  Eddie decided to cut a hole in the wall between the kitchen and the living room so that he could put the TV in the wall.  Mom said that the fact that people have their TV on their walls these days is nothing new.  She said the only problem was, that the back of the TV stuck out into the kitchen and was really ugly.

That’s all for now.  Thanks for stopping by.

THE ADVENTURE CONTINUES…..

1923 Feb 16, In Egypt the burial chamber of King Tutankhamen’s recently unearthed tomb was unsealed by archeologist Howard Carter.  In June, 1923 my father, Eddie Green, had his song, “King Tut Blues” copyrighted.  It’s really small, but you can see his name right in front.

king tut blues 78 album

SOMEone who reads my blog sent this picture to me.  So cool.  I posted a few days ago about this song that was written by my father in 1923, and I have received information which is going to help me in my quest to locate the copyright documents.  I call it a quest because I know where the documents may still be, but in order to get them I must have lots of money to pay the Copyright Office for searches.  I have received the words to this song and it turns out that King Tut’s blues had something to do with his mother-in-law.

In 1923, Clarence Williams had just moved into New York, when he became the publisher for “King Tut Blues” and another song titled  “The Right Key, But The Wrong KeyHole”, words and melody by my father.  Along with writing these songs, Eddie was also performing in a couple of plays in New York,  “Plantation Days”, at the Lafayette Theater,  after which he did a play titled “All In Fun” , for which he wrote his own songs, at the Yorkville theater.  Then it was on to the Palace in Baltimore, to Toledo and to Ohio, then back to New York by 1924.

The  Schnectady Gazette,  April 8, 1924, stated in part,

“For pep and go the “All In Fun” burlesque show which opened at the Van Curler yesterday for a three-day stay is recommended to the patrons of the theater”.  “Eddie Green, late star of “Plantation Days,” as he was billed on the program was  exceptionally good.  His talking song, “Previous”  was enjoyed.”

The performance at the Van Curler was a song and dance skit that also featured this young lady, Momi Kalama., seems she was known as “the Anna Pavlova of Hawaii.”

momikalama2 momi kalama girls de looks
Somewhere along in here, my father got married for the first time and had a daughter.  His daughter was born about 1923.  I have no memory of her as I only saw her once when she came to my Eddie’s funeral in 1950.  My mom told me that she and Eddie’s daughter were the same age, and they did not get along.  I actually found an article with a little blurb about Eddie Green’s daughter rushing to his side.  If she is still alive, she would be about 91 years old today.

I have not had much luck in finding my half-sister, nor have I been able to locate any information about Eddie’s parents.  It is difficult to locate folks from 1950, not to mention trying to find someone from the late 1800’s.  Since Eddie was born in 1891, records from that time may be forever lost.

I do, however, have some information about my maternal grandmother, she who became my father’s mother-in-law in 1945.  Her name was Sinclaire White Murdock when she met my father.  Sinclaire was born in 1896, in Chicago.  She came to Los Angeles in 1920.  In researching my father, I have also included my mother and her history and while checking out my grandmother, I found this article in “The Crisis” magazine, A Record of the Darker Races, started by W. E. B. Dubois in 1910 and which is the official magazine of the NAACP,  Vol. 4 No. 4:

sinclaire white

I have been able to follow Sinclaire up to her death here in Los Angeles, thanks to newspaper articles and my mom, of course.  Sinclaire became a violin teacher and started her own Music Arts Association in the 1920’s.  She started my mom on the violin and piano at around age 7.  There will be a chapter or two about my mom in the book I am writing about Eddie, so I want to incorporate some of her story here into this blog.  I do not remember my grandmother and I have only seen one picture of her.  One of those black and white pictures where she has on a high neck white dress and her hair is piled on top of her head, very victorian looking and very stern.  Later, in 1945 when Sinclaire and Eddie met, and Eddie began to court my mother, he discovered that he, too, might wind up with mother-in-law problems.

I have discovered that I enjoy writing.  I don’t have any lofty aspirations in this regard, I simply want to get down on paper the accomplishments of those family members who have contributed much to society, but have pretty much been forgotten.  I appreciate my readers because they let me know that I can, in fact, write a book that people will find interesting and, perhaps, inspiring.

To me:

“Don’t let the fear of striking out, hold you back”- Babe Ruth

Two Tremendously Inspiring Gentlemen

Courtesy Google Advanced Image Search

Jimmie Fallon

Not since Johnny Carson have I actually thoroughly enjoyed late night television as much as I enjoy Jimmie Fallon on The Tonight Show.  To me, Mr. Fallon is an example of a person doing exactly what they want to do and liking what they do.  He seems to get such a kick out of his life.  He is energetic and fresh.   He looks like he is having fun.  I feel like I am having fun when I watch him on television.   He is putting in the work and it is paying off.  Mr. Fallon is a singer, songwriter, actor and comedian. He puts me in mind of my father.  Tremendously inspiring.

Eddie Green, my father, was a singer, songwriter, actor and comedian.  Eddie found what he liked to do, put in the work and became a prominent entertainer.  Eddie was enamored of the radio world and appeared on a variety of programs which led to his biggest radio role, movie and television work.   Also, tremendously inspiring.

new eddie
new eddie

Today, Mr. Fallon is “trending” on social media.  He’s good.  Back in Eddie’s day, actors got their names in the paper.  Below is an article from the Brooklyn Eagle, 1939, in the Trend! section about Eddie’s radio interests, and, it also mentions Eddie’s own involvement with television.

TREND! BROOKLYN EAGLE SUNDAY , JULY 9 , 193 9

By ROBERT FRANCIS
Most of you know Eddie Green at
least by ear. He’s been around show
business a long time, but for the
last couple of years you’ve been
laughing at his quaintly plaintive
Napoleons, John Alderis and Jonahs
over the airwaves.
He’s
got his work, his radio to tinker
with—and he’s the proud possessor
of the first television set in Harlem.

1939_GE_HM171
1939 GE

See ya!

EXPANDING MY MIND

350px-Tam_o'_Shanter_and_Souter_Johnny_at_Kirkton_Jean's

Tam and his Cronies drinking at Kirkton Jean’s-Courtesy Wikipedia

Hey there, welcome back.  Researching my father, Eddie Green, is proving to be so much fun and is also teaching me to broaden my mind-set.  Today, while trying to arrange my hard copy documents in a way that would allow me to make sure what I write is correct, I came across an article written in 1927 or 1928,  which introduces Eddie as the star in a play titled “Tam O’Shanter” at the Alhambra Theater.  (I have pictures of Eddie on some of my other posts, I just haven’t figured out how to incorporate them into current posts, in case you are new to my blog and wonder what Eddie looks like, and I think one shows up on my landing page at the bottom.)

By GERALDINE DISMOND , Eddie Green, who is famous for his ‘A Good Man is Hard To Find” and “Don’t Let No One Man Worry Your Mind” will appear all next week at the Alhambra,. playing the lead in “Tam O’ Shantcr,’ love story set to music – . ‘ “: .’. – ‘ ‘. – Mr. Green has been in the show business practically all his life. He was born in Baltimore and began his career as the “Boy Magician” playing small towns and ‘packing the “”entertainment halls….   He worked in burlesque four years for Columbia and has the distinction of having produced and managed for a year. ‘.’All in Fun, for Barney Gerard. Then followed a year with the Schuberts, and three ‘ years at the Apollo. He comes  to star in Tam O” Shanter. This week at the Alhambra.

This is exactly the type of article I need to help me stay organized.  My problem was, however, that every time I looked at this article, I wondered what he, Eddie, a black man, was doing in a play in 1927 with an Irish theme. The play, directed by R. E. Jefrey is about a man who recites a poem in a village inn.  The poem, I finally noticed, was written by the Scottish poet, Robert Burns, and it was titled “Tam o’Shanter”.  I realized that, of course, I had heard of Robert Burns but not the poem, so I looked it up.  The poem is about a man named Tam who spends a lot of time getting drunk with his friends, neglecting his wife.  It begins like this:

“When chapman billies leave the street, And drouthy neibors, neibors, meet; as market days are wearing late, and folk begin to tak the gate, while we sit bousing at the nappy, an’ getting fou and unco happy, we think na on the lang Scots miles, the mosses, waters, slaps and stiles, that lie between us and our hame, where sits our sulky, sullen dame, gathering her brows like gathering storm, nursing her wrath to keep it warm.”  

The actor sits in a chair and recites this play, which takes about 90 minutes.  It is one of Mr. Burns longer plays.  There are different versions if you care to look them up, or maybe unlike me, you have already done so.

I have just made the discovery that this is an extremely well known poem.  There has been an overture named after this poem.  There has been a hat named after this poem.  More recently, there has been an adaptation of this poem by a British heavy metal band.  Readers of history, painters and builders have made use of this poem.  The poem even mentions Cutty Sark, though not in the way I know Cutty Sark.  (It means “short shirt”, not hard liquor).  My point is, I have had a sort of narrow-mindedness due to a lack of knowledge in certain areas.

My father was a well read man.  As a former Burlesque comedian, Eddie probably used satire in his sketches.  At the time, satire was used to ridicule dignified works.  That the audience had a high degree of literacy was taken for granted, therefore the actor had to know his business.   Eddie read, he studied.  He prepared himself.  He did the work.   He was an Actor, period.  He acted in plays, period.  My vision of life and my mind is expanding, thanks to my father.

It has to be very freeing to simply decide what you want to do and proceed to do it.  Sounds simple.  I tended to proceed out of necessity most of my life.  The need and desire for additional life knowledge is providing me the impetus to continue going forward with this project.  It is absolutely stimulating.  Thanks for stopping by.   Do come back.

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Research-Extremely Satisfying

king tut papers

One of the things I did not count on when I decided to research my father’s life, was the amount of paperwork I would have to browse through to verify my writing.  I started out at the central library in downtown Los Angeles.  I had to search the Catalogue of Copyright Entries and I had no idea how to read these catalogues.  But I learned.  Eventually, I learned to peruse these catalogues on-line, but since I only had a cell phone at the time, it was slow going.  I ended up at the local family history library where I was able to print whatever information I found on Eddie Green.  Which brings me to this document regarding the song “King Tut Blues” written by my father.

This is a copy of the catalogue entry for my father’s song, “King Tut Blues”, (listed at the top of the third column) written back in 1923, showing Eddie as the Author of words and music and showing also that he renewed this song in 1950, about six months before he died.  I was able to locate this last piece of information with the help of one of the readers of my blog posts, which just goes to show that we can and do participate in each other’s progress through our posts.  Which is something else I never expected when I was stressing over whether I could even maintain a blog.  Even if my book flops, this experience will totally be worth the time and effort.

Eddie was about 22 when he wrote this song in 1923.  My mother, Eddie’s third wife, was born November 17, 1923.  Her parents at the time lived in Los Angeles, California on Jefferson Street.  They lived very close to the Triple A Automobile Club which was located on Adams Boulevard and Figueroa Street and is still there today.  As a matter of fact, after living all over Los Angeles County, my mom died while living back on Adams Boulevard about 5 minutes from the Automobile Club.

Auto_Club_ca1926

My mom’s mother, Sinclaire White-Murdock was, in 1923, the President of The Music Arts Association,  which held regular weekly meetings at the Sojourner Truth Home, in Los Angeles.   Sinclaire was a violinist, so I guess it was bound to happen that when Eddie got to Los Angeles years later, he and Sinclaire would meet through musical venues.  But that wouldn’t happen for another 20 years.

I encourage you, out there, to consider researching someone in your family, it really is extremely satisfying.  Thanks for stopping by.