_________________________ Portland Observer June 1 2 ,1991—The Portland Observer—Page 5 ENTERTAINMENT 31 NW First Father’s Day cards designed by local artist Charlotte Lewis 223-9919 W E D N E S D A Y J U N E 12 P e rfe c t 10 ♦ T H U R S D A Y J U N E 13 J o s e p h in e O c e a n ♦ • I L Í LJ i V ' f f l i l i ' i a f l l T d • • r 1 . j 1 1 1 1 9 • • I i •* » ' 11 ■ > 1 I 1 1 1 1 11 ■ • .................................• k PRESENTS ¿Mph SCHOOt F R ID A Y J U N E 14 B od y & Soul ♦ THURS., JUNE 13 THRU SUN., JUNE 16 S A TU R D A Y J U N E 15 B ody & Soul ♦ PORTLAND MEMORIAL COLISEUM S U N D A Y J U N E 16 C ra z y 8s ♦ M O N D A Y J U N E 17 R e a s o n W hy ♦ T U E S D A Y J U N E 18 R u ra l E arl “ADVERTISE PORTLÁ.\D(QBSERVER Thur., Jun 13 Fri., Jun 14 Sat., Jun 15 Sun., Jun 16 ★ 7:30 PM ▲ 10:30 AM • 7:30 PM 11:00 PM ■ 3:00 PM ★ KOIN-TV/FRED MEYER FAMILY NIGHT - Save $3 on all seats. ▲ 2100 JUICE & COOKIES MATINEE All seats $7.50 (no further discounts). Special treat for children after the show. • KPTV/PEPSI WATCH NIGHT - Free souvenir watch for first 1,000 children. ■ DePAUL DUCKY DERBY DAY Portion of proceeds benefits DePaul Treatment Centers.. 1:00 PM 4:30 PM TICKETS: $10 & $8; $1.50 per ticket discount for boys and girls 2-12 courtesy of JCPenney. ON SALE NOW at the Coliseum, Performing Arts Center, Civic Auditorium & all G.l. Joe/Ticketmaster outlets {service charges may be added I. FOR INFO ft CHARGE BY PHONE: 2 4 8 -4 4 9 6 I service charges may apply). FOR GROUP DISCOUNT INFO: 235-8771 Schedule sub/ect to change due to NBA Playoffs. SESAME STREET LIVE M aturino SESAME STREET CHARACTERS is presented bv VEE CORPORATION in rn n n a ra i^ n with CHILDREN S TELEVISION WORKSHOP SESAME STREET c J a R^CTER? C Ï Î Ï Ï Z His Love, Pain ...And All That Jazz BY WALLACE TERRY TAKEN FROM THE PARADE MAGAZINE JU N E 16, 1991 The legendary musician Lionel Hamp­ ton always has lived his life on the upbeat. B u t a tim e came when he was sorely tested. O N E D A Y , a 2 2-Y E A R -O LD D R U M M E R named Lionel Hampton was making a recording w ith his idol, Louis Arm strong, at N BC studios in Los Angeles. Arm strong pointed to an instrument sittin g over in the comer and asked Hampton what it was. “ I t ’ s called a vibraharp,” Hampton said. NBC used it as chimes fo r intermission sig­ nals during radio broadcasts. “ Do you know how to play it?” Armstrong asked. “ Yeah,” Hampton lied. “ Play some­ th in ’ then,” Louis Armstrong said. Never having played a note on the instrument before, Hampton tapped out a solo he’d learned from an Armstrong recording. “ M an, that sounds great,” Arm strong said. “ L e t’s put it on rec­ o rd .” They did. “ Memories o f Y o u ” marked the firs t tim e jazz was played on the vibraharp. Hampton made sweet musical history and found his instru­ ment. I had set out to discover the secret o f Lio ne l Hampton, a musical genius fo r six decades. W hat I uncovered was more than a p ortrait o f a great man. I found a love story. Today, at 83, Lionel H am pton - one o f the last o f the great big-band leaders-gi ves upward o f 200 concerts a year here and abroad, a pace that m ight defeat someone h a lf his age. Although he’s a jazz legend, celebrity is no big deal to him , and he’ s very modest about his accomplishments. His zest for life is infectious. “ I just love everybody, man. T hat’ s how I am ,” he said, that famous grin sweeping across his face. But in 1971, Hampton faced a c ri­ sis that nearly ended his career, he was ; in Toronto on tour w ith his band when : he got a phone call from B ill Titone, his • record producer. “ Lionel, I want you to ; be brave,” Titone said. “ Gladys is dead. 1 Come on home.” Today, 20 years after the loss o f his I w ife , Lionel Hampton can still recall '■ the pain. “ It fe lt like the w orld was ; coming to an end,” he told me, as we sat in his apartment rising high above Lin coln Center and the Hudson River on New Y o rk’ s West Side. “ I miss her” , he said. “ I miss her.” Hampton had experienced untimely losses o f loved ones before-his father, the grandmother who raised him. He had survived hard times and racial insults along his jo u r­ ney to international stardom. But noth­ ing so tested his faith in music, in the power o f love and in God H im self than the loss o f Gladys. When she died, the music stopped. “ I did n ’t want to play fo r a long tim e,” he recalled. National Black Theatre Festival Hampton is a man who, throughout his life , has deeply entrusted him self to women. Unusual fo r a man o f his gen­ eration, he leaned on them; they guided him . H is w ife was his love, his friend and his mentor. H ow was Hampton able to put his life back together after his loss? To find out, you have to go back to the beginning, to the firs t woman in his life. L io n e l’ s firs t love was his grand­ mother, Mama Louvenia. A n evangelist and healer in the Holiness Church in Birmingham, Ala., she took him to church every day and four times on Sunday. “ She ju st taught me so m uch,” he re­ called. “ She taught me to pray. Have love in your heart. She would be careful about keeping the Commandments. Do not steal. I can’ t take one penny from nobody. I f I fin d out that someone has overpaid me, I tell the agent, ‘ Give it rig h t back.’ And share. When I was little , i f I had fiv e pennies, and you asked fo r one, I w ould give you tw o .” Then a laugh broke from deep in his belly. “ I never w ould share m y drums, though. I ’d keep them, m an.” “ I just loved m y grandmother,” he continued. “ She took me everyplace. And she was everything to m e.” He lifte d a sepia-toned photograph o f a beautiful little g irl from the polished top o f his grand piano. “ T hat’s her, man,” he said. W e walked slow ly across the soft blue rugs o f his liv in g room and sat down at the kitchen table. I asked Hampton what kind o f c h ild he was. “ I was bom w ith m usic,” he said. * * I used to get up in the m orning and beat on the pots and pans. I used the rounds from underneath the kitchen chair fo r my drumsticks. I always had rhythm in me. And I ’ m like that today.” He was bom in Lou isville, where his father had worked on the railroad. His father went o ff to W o rld W ar 1 and didn ’ t return, so Hampton and his mother moved back home to Alabama. When his mother remarried, Hampton went to live w ith her mother, Louvenia Morgan. L it tle H am p became M am a Louvenia's favorite. When he was felled by pneumonia, she prayed over him until the fever broke. When he suffered an attack o f appendicitis, said Hampton, she prayed over him until the symptoms subsided. A t church, he sat next to her in the first pew. One Sunday he made an audacious debut. He had ju s t turned 9. “ They had a te rrific band," he re­ called. “ Trombones, saxophones, gui­ tars. And they had a sister that played bass drum. And she could play, man. When she would get happy, she would start to dance up and down the aisle and start ro llin g w ith the H oly Ghost. When she dropped the drumstick, I picked right up on the beat and started bearin' the bass.” He told Mama Louvenia he wanted 1 to grow up to be a drummer. She d id n ’ t object. Said Hampton: “ She told me, ‘God gave you the talent, so you must manifest it. I f that’ s God’ s w ill and your desire, you w ill be a drum m er.’ ” In 1919 Mama Louvenia decided to fo llo w the black m igration to C hi­ cago. She sent her son Richard ahead to prepare the way. “ When Uncle Richard met us, he took us to this fabulous duplex,” Hampton said. "W e found out later he had hooked up w ith A1 Capone. W e stayed on one side, and they were m akin’ bathtub gin and whiskey on the other. T o give the whiskey color, w e’d pour in brown sugar. T hat’s where the term ‘ bub­ b lin ’ brown sugar’ comes from .” Hampton leaned back in his chair and laughed at the irony o f Mama Lou- venia’s brood liv in g o ff the profits o f bootlegging. “ The family lived good,” he went on. “ Funny thing about it. W e never discussed where the money came fro m .” To escape the mean streets o f their neighborhood, where gangs fought on their way to school, Mama Louvenia sent Hampton to Catholic school-the H oly Rosary Academy, near M ilw aukee. One o f the teachers, Sister Petra, taught him how to play the drums. “ She really learned me too,” he recalled, “ She learned me a ll the 26 rudiments. You had to play them right, or else she would beat your knuckles.” Back in Chicago, his musical education was furtherd by Maj. Nathan Clark Smith, a form er bandmaster for Teddy Roosevelt’s Rough Riders. It was Ham pton’s love fo r Gla­ dys that had helped him through the tough times. It was that love that helped him become world-famous. It was his love fo r Gladys that pulled him through even the shock o f her death. And his love for her has sus­ tained him ever since. ‘ ‘Gladys is still here,” he said. “ N ot a day goes by I don’ t think o f her.” Today, in her memory, he en­ dows scholarships, helps to support a low-incom e housing project in New Y o rk C ity and takes his band to high schools to promote an anti-drug campaign. “ Music makes me happy, and I want to keepplaying for her,” Hamp­ ton told me. “ I don’ t ever intend to retire.” In his bedroom is a set o f drums. Near the front door is a set o f vibes. “ I got up at 3 this m orning to practice,” he said. “ I did some stuff on the vibes that scared me to death.” He flashed that jack-o-lantcm grin, then gave me a w ink. “ Remember what the Bible says: ‘ Blow the trum ­ pet, beat the cym bals.’ T hat’ s all I ever tried to do.” Father’ s Day cards designed by local artist Charlotte Lew is are now available at Jabell’ s Beauty Supply House, the Urban League o f Portland and the Portland Observer. These cards were designed spe­ c ific a lly fo r African Am erican fathers because o f their special attempt to blend a loving message w ith a positive health message which urges dads to take re­ sponsibility fo r their health. This is an especially urgent message since A fr i­ can American men have the shortest life span o f any other segment o f the American population. For it to be de­ livered by the children o f the black comm unity is especially meaningful. The Father's Day card project was developed by the Portland African American Health Coalition. A Mother’s Day card was issued by this group this past M ay. There is no fee charged for the cards, however, donations w ill be accepted at the above mentioned d istri­ bution outlets. Proceeds w ill be used to defray the cost o f future projects. For more inform ation about the coalition and its activities, contact: Theresa W illiam s-Stoudam ire, 248-5183. Bus Tour Offered Through Portland Parks Bureau James W. Johnston, chairman and chief executive officer, R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Company (left), and Larry Leon Hamlin, executive/artistic director of the North Carolina Black Repertory Company, participated in a recent news conference to announce Reynolds Tobacco 's support of one of the most historic and culturally significant events in the history of Black theatre-THE NATIONAL BLACK THEATRE FESTIVAL, which will be held in Winston-Salem, August 5-10. The company's contribution of $100,000 will sponsor the festival's opening night gala, where Denzel Washington will be the featured guest. Other celebrities attending the festival are Avery Brooks, Glenn Turman, Esther Rolle, Moses Gunn, Danny Glover, Bill Duke, Beah Richards and Juanita Moore. The National Black Theatre Festival was first held in 1989, when celebrity participants included Oprah Winfrey, Lou Gossett, Jr., Cicely Tyson, Ruby Dee and Ossie Davis, Roscoe Lee Browne and Antonio Fargas. The festival is a national outreach program of the North Carolina Black Repertory Company, one of America's leading professional Black theatres. Camp Fire Day In The Park! Come to Day Camp in the park. Camp F ire’ s Camp Tolinda is close to home this summer in beautiful Colum ­ bia Park (at Lombard and Chautauqua). It is easily accessible to North, N orth­ east and Northwest Portland. A t Day Camp kids w ill hike, swim, sing, learn camp and nature crafts and meet w ith friends their own age. Parents who volunteer as a day camp counselor receive training, learn new skills and their children, ages 3 and above attend fo r free. Volunteer positions are open to 8th graders through adults. Many more volunteer counselors are needed to make day camps available to more children. T w o eight-day sessions are avail­ able running July 8-18 and July 22- August 1. Each session is affordably priced at $40 per child and is open to al 1 boys and girls entering grades 1-7. Call Portland Camp Fire at 224-7800 for a counselor application or camp brochure and set o ff on a summer experience to remember. The Portland Parks Bureau’s Out­ door Recreation department is offering an extensive program o f bus tours exploring some o f the highlights o f summer in the Northwest. The tours, led by Outdoor Recreation Tour Direc­ tor Bruce W atkins, are focused on the outdoors and require no extended w alk­ ing. On July 28 there w ill be a bus tour that boards the Stemwheeler Columbia Gorge at Cascade Locks fo r a buffet Sunday brunch w hile cruising the river. The fee is $44 including the bus trip, Stemwheeler cruise and brunch. ACTORS, SINGERS, and DANCERS Retired actors, singers and dancers are being sought as cast members in the Oregon Senior Theatre. Interested persons must be 55 and older. Auditions will be held at the Hollywood Senior Center, 1820 N.E. 40 on Thursday, June 20 from 3:00 - 6:00 p.m. For more information, call 281-6141. State Fair Announces Entertainment The Oregon State Fair has booked the m ajority o f its big name entertain­ ment for the 1991 Fair. A ll acts w ill perform in the L .B . Day Amphitheatre on the fairgrounds. The acts scheduled are: Paul Re­ vere and The Raiders, Aug. 24; the True Value/GMC Truck Country Show­ down w ith B.J. Thomas, Aug. 28; K .T. O slin, Aug. 29; Stevie B., Aug. 30; B a illie and The Boys, Aug. 31; The Kingston T rio , Sept. 1; and Fats D om ­ ino, Sept. 2. These acts are free w ith the price o f fa ir admission. The acts planned fo r August 22 and 23 w ill be announced at a later date. A ll scheduled acts are subject to change. The Oregon State Fair w ill run August 22 through September 2. James Williams Just James Fashions Presents MEGA FATHER’S DAY SALE Item Regular Sale Silk Dress Shirt Silk Ties Silk Tee Sets 2 pc Silk Short Sets Docker Jeans Rayon Shirts Leather Short Pants Ennesi Shoes sizes 13 to 16 $38.95 38.95 44.95 94.95 37.95 36.95 149.95 30% Off $31.20 31.20 35.96 75.20 30.40 29.60 99.95 Spcl Special Men’s Suit Sale Featuring Ferrini San Remo San Georgio Italuomo Adolpho Others * 10% Off Ladies m erchandise if purchased with m en's goods Sale ends 6/15/91 Hours: Tue - Fri 12 noon to 8 pm Sat -11 am to 6 pm Sun/M on Closed 1405 NE Broadway • 287-7230