On the Real Side: A History of African American Comedy

On the Real Side: A History of African American Comedy

by Mel Watkins
On the Real Side: A History of African American Comedy

On the Real Side: A History of African American Comedy

by Mel Watkins

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Overview

This comprehensive history of black humor sets it in the context of American popular culture. Blackface minstrelsy, Stepin Fetchit, and the Amos 'n' Andy show presented a distorted picture of African Americans; this book contrasts this image with the authentic underground humor of African Americans found in folktales, race records, and all-black shows and films. After generations of stereotypes, the underground humor finally emerged before the American public with Richard Pryor in the 1970s. But Pryor was not the first popular comic to present authentically black humor. Watkins offers surprising reassessments of such seminal figures as Fetchit, Bert Williams, Moms Mabley, and Redd Foxx, looking at how they paved the way for contemporary comics such as Whoopi Goldberg, Eddie Murphy, and Bill Cosby.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781569767603
Publisher: Chicago Review Press, Incorporated
Publication date: 05/01/1999
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 672
File size: 4 MB

About the Author

Mel Watkins is a former editor at The New York Times Book Review. He is the author of Dancing with Strangers: A Memoir. He lives in New York City.

Read an Excerpt

On the Real Side

A History of African American Comedy


By Mel Watkins

Chicago Review Press Incorporated

Copyright © 1999 Mel Watkins
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-56976-760-3



CHAPTER 1

SLAVERY ••• "don't nobody know my name but me"

WE RAISE THE WHEAT, DEY GIB US DE CORN; WE BAKE DE BREAD, DEY GIB US DE CRUST; WE SIF DE MEAL, DEY GIB US DE HUSS; WE PEAL DE MEAT, DEY GIB US DE SKIN; AND DATS DE WAY DEY TAKES US IN. WE SKIMS DE POT, DEY GIB US DE LIQUOR, AN' SAY, "DAT'S GOOD ENOUGH FER A NIGGER."

— ANONYMOUS

NO MASTER COULD BE THOROUGHLY COMFORTABLE AROUND A SULLEN SLAVE; AND, CONVERSELY, A MASTER, UNLESS HE WAS UTTERLY HUMORLESS, COULD NOT OVERWORK OR BRUTALLY TREAT A JOLLY FELLOW, ONE WHO COULD MAKE HIM LAUGH.

— W. D. WEATHERFORD AND CHARLES S. JOHNSON

THE LINE THAT LEADS TO MOMS MABLEY, NIPSEY RUSSELL, BILL COSBY, AND MYSELF CAN BE TRACED BACK TO THE SOCIAL SATIRE OF SLAVE HUMOR, BACK EVEN THROUGH MINSTRELSY, THROUGH COUNTLESS ATTEMPTS TO CAST OFF THAT FANTASY.

— GODFREY CAMBRIDGE


I


Something peculiar happened on the way to the New World — or, at least, very shortly afterward. Somewhere between their departure from West Africa's shores and the early stages of their arrival as human chattel in the Americas, the African captives transported across the Atlantic underwent a subtle but far-reaching and remarkable psychological transformation.

It may have begun aboard one of the large canoes that snaked along the winding Gambia or Senegal rivers, stopping periodically to take on more human cargo and then moving away from the dense interior toward Africa's western coast. It could have been there that it first took form in the minds of some of those captives as, bound and yoked together in coffles, their destiny now almost certain, they were transported from the familiarity of tribal life to an ominous if, to them, yet unknown fate. Or it may have occurred later, when branded and fettered and, no doubt, still baffled and dismayed, they waited in cattlelike stockades or slave pens at ports such as Britain's Cape Coast Castle on the Gold Coast or the infamous Maison des esclaves on Gorée Island off the coast of Senegal. At these and similar sites, "tens of millions of Africans" were estimated to have last touched their own soil before being forcibly transported overseas.

Or perhaps it happened later, during the Middle Passage (the treacherous three- to twelve-week voyage to the New World), as, surely terrified by now, they lay shackled and longing either for the fraternity of their homelands, or more realistically for a merciful death in the dank, cramped bowels of those typically overcrowded slave vessels; it may have even occurred during the brief daily intervals when male captives were joined with females on the ships' decks to momentarily glimpse daylight, exercise in order to restore their throttled circulation, and ceremoniously entertain their captors. Or it might have surfaced even later, at auction blocks in the West Indies or America, as they were prodded, inspected, and bargained over by prospective buyers, or subsequently when, having been duly purchased and dispatched to their owners, they first began their assigned labor on the farms and plantations to which most would be confined for the rest of their lives.

It is nearly impossible to determine exactly where and when it happened — few confirmed testaments of the thoughts of these African captives were sought or recorded during the three and a half centuries of the trans-Atlantic slave trade. Indeed, initially very few slaves could converse or write in the language of their European captors, and it is doubtful, given the express purpose of the endeavor, that their captors would have heeded any such expressions.

But during their transformation from Africans to African-American slaves, a remarkably resilient and inventive manner of behaving and observing both themselves and the external world began to emerge. It would be nurtured and shaped by their interaction with America's social customs and the "peculiar institution" of slavery, be passed on to subsequent arrivals and, eventually, become a key factor in African America's rich and expansive under- or subculture. As one historian put it: "Herded together with others with whom they shared only a common condition of servitude and some degree of cultural overlap, enslaved Africans were compelled to create a new language, a new religion, and a precarious new lifestyle." Later, that black lifestyle or subculture would become quite probably the most formidable influence on American popular culture.

It is in music, of course, that this impact has been most significant. There is also plentiful evidence of the impact on, among other pursuits, dance, sports, colloquial speech, and fashion. But it is the expressive manner of African-American humor that, second to music, has most influenced mainstream America's popular culture. And although bondage and oppression hardly seem to favor the development of a comic tradition, slavery was, ironically, the primary factor in molding the style and content of both private and public black humor. From the beginning it combined cultural elements of traditional African societies with the new language, social institutions, and behavioral patterns of antebellum America. Since then it has taken a course that is as labyrinthine, ironic, and melodramatic as the work of some of our most darkly inventive Southern Gothic fiction writers.


What might have been going through the minds of those African captives when they arrived in the Americas?

Some, no doubt, still entertained thoughts of escaping or destroying themselves. The recorded instances of suicides, attempted breakaways, and rebellions attest to the numbers who chose death or the slimmest opportunity for freedom over the safety of serfdom. At the height of the transatlantic trade, epidemics, futile escape attempts, and suicides claimed 6 to 25 percent of the captives; the British Privy Council, after examining records of slave ships, concluded that, on the average, of the African captives who began the Atlantic journey, 12.5 percent perished.

Statistics, however, convey little of the reality. The story related by a South Carolina black man who had endured the Middle Passage offers a more vivid description:

Dey been pack in dere wuss dan hog in a car when dey shippin' 'em. An' everyday dem white folks would come in dere an' ef a nigger jest twist his self or move, dey'd cut de hide off him wid a rawhide whip. An' niggers died in de bottom er dat ship wuss dan hogs wid cholera. Dem white folks ain' hab no mercy. Look like dey ain' known wha' mercy mean. Dey drag dem dead niggers out an' throw 'em overboard. An' dat ain' all. Dey th'owed a heap er live ones wha' dey thought ain' guh live into de sea.


In addition, there were numerous reports of insurrections and suicides, sometimes before the slave vessels ever left port. According to the captain of the British ship Hannibal:

Negroes are so wilful and loth to leave their own country, that they have often leap'd out of the canoos, boats and ship, into the seas, and kept under water till they were drowned to avoid being taken up and saved by our boats, which pursued them; they having a more dreadful apprehension of Barbadoes than we have of hell...."


Other less obstinate Africans undoubtedly initially consoled themselves with the thought that the servitude they faced in America would be similar to what many of them had seen or experienced directly in tribal Africa. Slavery, after all, had existed in Africa since recorded times, although major slave regimes, especially in the west, were "relatively few and of limited longevity in the period prior to the arrival of the Christian Europeans." As in Europe, domestic servitude was common in most of the early, more complex African societies, and caravan routes across the Sahara Desert had facilitated Africa's commercial export of slaves to the Mediterranean area even before the emergence of the Roman Empire.

After the onset of the trans-Atlantic trade, commercial use of slaves within the African interior increased. And more African states, reacting to the European demand for slaves, resorted to intertribal warfare and detainment of criminals as a means of acquiring the human chattel that was fast becoming Africa's chief export. Still, slaves or "wageless workers" in the inland regions of Africa, which were generally isolated from Muslim and eventual European influences, functioned primarily within a comparatively amiable system. They were "seldom or never men without rights or hope of emancipation" and were not "outcasts in the body politic," writes the British historian Basil Davidson. "On the contrary they were integral members of the community. Household slaves lived with their masters, often as members of the family. They could work themselves free of their obligations. They could marry their master's daughters. They could become traders, leading men in peace and war, governors and sometimes even kings."

So despite the suicides, insurrections, and barbaric conditions of the Middle Passage, some African captives must have clung to the hope that the treatment awaiting them in the Americas would be less hostile and dehumanizing than what they had experienced since their capture. Those who arrived anticipating a system of bondage even remotely resembling the comparatively benevolent form that some had experienced in the interior of their homeland, however, were quickly and bitterly disappointed. What they actually found was what Davidson describes as a "deep soil of arrogant contempt for African humanity." That contempt was quite possibly the most destructive consequence of the transatlantic slave trade.

Africans dispatched to the New World found themselves in a perplexing if not devastating position. The possibility of successfully escaping and returning to their native land was practically nonexistent. And they faced not only a cruel and, for the most part, inflexible system that governed practically every aspect of their lives, but also a community of people who placed little or no value on their humanity. What were they to do?

Some, overwhelmed and sensing the futility of any type of resistance, quite probably succumbed to melancholy and despair and dolefully submitted to the status of mere chattel — becoming, in effect, Uncle Toms, harmless darkies, or Sambos. As the historian Stanley M. Elkins has suggested, these slaves, like many concentration camp victims in the 1940s, accepted their dependent status and internalized the social role demanded of them by their masters. But Sterling Stuckey and numerous other historians have pointed out that many others avoided "being imprisoned altogether by the definitions the larger society sought to impose." They neither desperately sought an immediate, violent solution to their condition nor entirely capitulated psychologically; instead, they chose deception and subterfuge as a primary survival tactic.

"The first line of defense for any vanquished or occupied nation, as for any camp of war-prisoners," writes James Pope-Hennessy, "is calculated cunning and deceit."

Accordingly, many slaves adopted an obsequious social mask as an essential survival apparatus. "Slaves who behaved like Sambos," contends Ronald T. Takaki, "might not have actually been Sambos, for they might have been playing the role of the loyal and congenial slave in order to survive. ... Sambo-like behavior may have been not so much a veil to hide inner emotions of rage and discontent as an effective means of expressing them." In effect, this behavior may have demonstrated "resistance to efficiency, discipline, work, and productivity. Where the master perceived laziness, the slave saw refusal to be exploited ... the same action held different meanings, depending on whether one was master or slave."

To maintain respect for themselves or preserve any remnants of their native culture, subterfuge and lying were absolutely necessary for the Africans brought to America's shores. In addition to the primary tasks of tilling the fields of cane, cotton, and tobacco plantations and providing domestic and skilled craft services, survival in the New World depended to a great extent upon appeasing slaveholders' demands for an ingratiating demeanor and the eradication of nearly all vestige of Africanisms.

The response of most blacks to these demands was both rational and effective. As one social historian puts it: "Over many generations the slave developed techniques of deception that were, for the white man, virtually impenetrable." Numerous comments from slaveholders or white observers affirm the existence as well as the effectiveness of black duplicity: "So deceitful is the Negro," one explained, "that as far as my own experience extends I could never in a single instance decipher his character. ... We planters could never get at the truth." Another claimed: "He is never off guard. He is perfectly skilled at hiding his emotions. ... His master knows him not."

Obviously, the pragmatically adopted policy of "puttin' on massa" and thereby making deceit part of their lifestyle had negative long-term consequences for slaves and their descendants. But it did solve some immediate problems presented by bondage. Slaves also used subversion and sabotage — work delay, theft, arson, and destruction of crops — as a means of resistance. In addition, they often feigned ineptitude and ignorance to achieve their own ends.

The dynamics of this strained interaction, with its contradictory goals and clandestine motives — a methodically fashioned maze of non-communication and misdirection from the black perspective — are largely responsible for the convoluted interpersonal relationship of black and white Americans to this day. The reaction of one Louisiana physician to slave duplicity and subversiveness not only points out the extent to which slaves duped many of their masters but, in retrospect, is also quite humorous. In the mid-ninetenth century Dr. Samuel Cartwright wrote an essay on diseases peculiar to the Negro, among them, DYSAESTHESIA AETHIOPICA:

From the careless movements of the individuals affected with this complaint they are apt to do much mischief, which appears as if intentional, but is mostly owing to the stupidness of mind and insensibility of the nerves induced by the disease. Thus they break, waste, and destroy everything they handle; abuse horses and cattle; tear, burn, or rend their own clothing. ... When driven to labor by the compulsive power of the white man, he performs the task assigned to him in a headlong, careless manner, treading down with his feet or cutting with his hoe the plants he is put to cultivate; breaking the tools he works with, and spoiling everything he touches that can be injured by careless handling.


The chicanery and deception established in the initial contacts between black slaves and white masters added a note of comic absurdity and dissemblance that, as one would expect, still surfaces frequently in jokes about interracial confrontations emerging from the African-American community. For instance, there is the tale of a black maid who worked in a home near an Army camp during World War II. Her employer, displeased with her work, asks: "Do you suppose we'll be able to get more work out of you girls now that they've moved all the colored soldiers away from this camp?" Unruffled, the black woman replies: "I don't know, ma'am. They ain't moved none of the white fellows away." A tale popularized by Dick Gregory in the sixties is even more pointed: A black man enters a Southern restaurant and is told, "Sorry, we don't serve colored folks here." His reply, "Fine, I don't eat them, just bring me a medium rare hamburger."

When they adopted subterfuge and the masking of real feelings as the central means of coping with slavery, African-Americans set in motion a social and psychological dynamic that has had far-reaching consequences. Most obviously, it established a split in their social behavior; alternate forms of deportment for integrated settings (public) and in gatherings among trusted blacks (private) became a reality in slave communities. This is reflected with typical folk pointedness in the following slave aphorism:

Got one mind for white folk to see

'Nother for what I know is me.


The deepseated distrust of white America and codification of a deceptive approach to racial interchanges laid the foundation for a culture that the German historian Berndt Ostendorf aptly described as "double-edged, indirect and ambivalent"; one that "will not yield meaningful answers to the positivist who is preoccupied with surface phenomena."

Along with subterfuge, the irony, contradiction, and distortion that are fundamental to the comic spirit became a central element in American racial relations. But the psychosocial dynamics that shaped African-American humor would, until the second half of the twentieth century, create an almost unassailable barrier to mainstream America's exposure to it in its authentic form.


II

Secrecy and subterfuge molded black American humor's indirect manner and also helped slaves perpetuate the African customs that gave their humor a distinctive cast. As Sterling Stuckey points out, slave deception aggressively "worked against whites acquiring knowledge of slave culture that might have been used to attempt to eradicate that culture."


(Continues...)

Excerpted from On the Real Side by Mel Watkins. Copyright © 1999 Mel Watkins. Excerpted by permission of Chicago Review Press Incorporated.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Table of Contents

Contents

INTRODUCTION,
PROLOGUE: Black Humor ... what it is,
PART ONE: ANTECEDENTAS,
CHAPTER ONE: Slavery ... "don't nobody know my name but me",
CHAPTER TWO: Minstrelsy ... the die is cast,
CHAPTER THREE: Black Minstrelsy to Vaudeville ... black on black,
PART TWO: THE OUTSIDE African-American Comedy on Stage, Screen, and Radio,
CHAPTER FOUR: Vaudeville and Early Twentieth-Century Black Humor ... the blackening of America,
CHAPTER FIVE: Hollywood's Silent Years ... the curse of a nation,
CHAPTER SIX: The New Negro: Harlem and Hollywood ... exotics, imposters, and other misshapen identities,
CHAPTER SEVEN: Radio and Early Television ... racial ventriloquy, black soaps and servants,
PART THREE: THE REAL SIDE Invisible Lives and Clandestine Humor,
CHAPTER EIGHT: Race Records and Black Films ... sounds and visions in black and blue,
CHAPTER NINE: The Theatre Owners Booking Association and the Apollo Theatre ... changing the joke and slipping the yoke,
CHAPTER TEN: Literary Reflections of African-American Humor ... depictions of things unseen,
CHAPTIR ELEVEN: Folklore and Street Humor ... "if you grinnin, you in 'em",
CHAPTIR TWELVE: The New Comics ... what you see is what you get,
CHAPTIR THIRTEEN: Pryor and Thereafter ... on the real side,
NOTES,
SELECTED BIBLIOGRAPHY,
INDEX,

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