Josephine Baker

568 pages

English language

Published Dec. 3, 2017

ISBN:
978-1-910593-29-5
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OCLC Number:
956623683

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1 star (2 reviews)

Josephine Baker (1906--1975) was nineteen years old when she found herself in Paris for the first time in 1925. Overnight, the young American dancer became the idol of the Roaring Twenties, captivating Picasso, Cocteau, Le Corbusier, and Simenon. In the liberating atmosphere of the 1930s, Baker rose to fame as the first black star on the world stage, from London to Vienna, Alexandria to Buenos Aires. After World War II, and her time in the French Resistance, Baker devoted herself to the struggle against racial segregation, publicly battling the humiliations she had for so long suffered personally. She led by example, and over the course of the 1950s adopted twelve orphans of different ethnic backgrounds: a veritable Rainbow Tribe. A victim of racism throughout her life, Josephine Baker would sing of love and liberty until the day she died.

1 edition

Obvious and clunky

1 star

This is the first graphic biography I've read that was an absolute slog to get through. Whenever new characters or situations are introduced, the dialog goes all clunky and obvious, like that scene in "Walk Hard" where Dewey Cox can't believe he's going to be meditating with the Beatles. "Your innovations are going to change jazz forever," pages and pages of bullshit like that.

Read the excellent "Agent Josephine : American Beauty, French Hero, British Spy" by Damien Lewis instead.

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rated it

1 star

Subjects

  • African American entertainers
  • Dancers
  • Biography
  • Comic books, strips

Places

  • France

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