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Revision as of 20:26, 26 April 2006 by Marine 69-71 (talk | contribs) (→Biography: edit)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)Sammy Davis, Jr. (December 8, 1925 – May 16, 1990) was an American entertainer. He was a dancer, singer, multi-instrumentalist (playing vibraphone, trumpet, and drums); impressionist, comedian, and actor.
Biography
He was born in Harlem, New York City to Elvera Sanchez, who is commonly believed to have been a Puerto Rican dancer, (according to the book: "In Black and White" - The Life of Sammy Davis, Jr. by Wil Haygood, the author claims that she was of Cuban descent), and Sammy Davis, Sr., an African-American entertainer. The couple were both dancers in vaudeville. As an infant, he was raised by his paternal grandmother. When he was three years old, his parents split up. His father, not wanting to lose custody of his son, took him on tour.
As a child he learned how to dance from his father, Sammy Davis, Sr. and his "uncle" Will Mastin, who led the dance troupe his father worked for. Davis joined the act as a young child and they became the Will Mastin Trio. Throughout his long career, Davis included the Will Mastin Trio in his billing.
Mastin and his father had shielded him from racism. Snubs were explained as jealousy, for instance, but during World War II, Davis served in the United States Army, where he was first confronted by strong racial prejudice. As he said later, "Overnight the world looked different. It wasn't one color anymore. I could see the protection I'd gotten all my life from my father and Will. I appreciated their loving hope that I'd never need to know about prejudice and hate, but they were wrong. It was as if I'd walked through a swinging door for eighteen years, a door which they had always secretly held open."
While in the service, however, he joined an entertainment unit, and found that the spotlight removed some of the prejudice. "My talent was the weapon, the power, the way for me to fight. It was the one way I might hope to affect a man's thinking," he said.
After he was discharged, he rejoined the dance act and began to achieve success. He suffered a setback on November 19, 1954, when he almost died in an automobile accident in San Bernardino,California on a return trip from Las Vegas to Los Angeles and lost his left eye. The accident occurred on a bend in U.S. Highway 66 at a railroad bridge. While in the hospital, his friend Eddie Cantor told him about the similarities between the Jewish and black cultures. Davis converted to Judaism after reading a history of the Jews in the hospital. One paragraph about the ultimate endurance of the Jewish people intrigued him in particular: "The Jews would not die. Three centuries of prophetic teaching had given them an unwavering spirit of resignation and had created in them a will to live which no disaster could crush". The next year, he released his second album.
The next move in his growing career was to appear in the Broadway show Mr. Wonderful in 1956. In 1959 he became a charter member of the Rat Pack, which was led by his old friend Frank Sinatra. After he achieved success he refused to work at venues which would practice racial segregation. His demands eventually led to the integration of Miami Beach nightclubs and Las Vegas, Nevada casinos.
In 1960, Davis caused controversy when he married white Swedish-born actress May Britt. Davis received hate mail when he was cast in the Broadway musical adaptation of Golden Boy in 1964, but that did not bother his fans. The play was (at first) a success, but closed quickly. At the time Davis starred in the play, interracial marriages were forbidden by law in 31 US states out of 50, and only in 1967 were those laws abolished by the US Supreme Court. The couple had one daughter and adopted two sons. They divorced in 1968, after Davis admitted to having had an affair with singer Lola Falana.
That year Sammy Davis, Jr. started dating Altovise Gore, a dancer in "Golden Boy". They were wed in 1970 by Jesse Jackson. They remained married until Sammy Davis, Jr.'s death in 1990.
In 1973, in appreciation for his balanced approach to Satanism in the film Poor Devil, the Church of Satan made Davis an Honorary Warlock II°. The award was presented to Davis on stage during one of his performances at the Circle Star Theater in San Carlos, California by Michael Aquino and Karla LaVey.
In Japan, Davis appeared in television commercials for coffee.
Sammy Davis, Jr. was one of the first male celebrities to admit to watching television soap operas, particularly the shows produced by the American Broadcasting Corporation. This admission led to him making a cameo appearance on General Hospital and playing the recurring character Chip Warren on One Life to Live for which he received a Daytime Emmy nomination in 1980.
In his autobiography, Davis describes his swinger lifestyle which included alcohol, cocaine, and women. He also chronicles his financial difficulties.
He died in Beverly Hills, California on May 16, 1990 (the same day as Jim Henson) of complications from throat cancer at the age of 64. Davis is interred in the Forest Lawn Memorial Park Cemetery in Glendale, California.
Filmography
- Seasoned Greetings (1933) (short subject)
- Rufus Jones for President (1933) (short subject)
- Sweet and Low (1947)
- Meet Me in Las Vegas (1956)
- Anna Lucasta (1959)
- Porgy and Bess (1959)
- Ocean's Eleven (1960)
- Pepe (1960) (cameo)
- Three Penny Opera (1962)
- Sergeants 3 (1962)
- Convicts 4 (1962)
- Of Love and Desire (1963)
- Johnny Cool (1963)
- Robin and the 7 Hoods (1964)
- Nightmare in the Sun (1965)
- A Man Called Adam (1966)
- Salt and Pepper (1968)
- Sweet Charity (1969)
- One More Time (1970)
- Elvis: That's the Way It Is (1970) (documentary)
- Save the Children (1973) (documentary)
- Gone with the West (1975)
- Sammy Stops the World (1978)
- The Cannonball Run (1981)
- Heidi's Song (1982) (voice)
- Cracking Up (1983)
- Broadway Danny Rose (1984) (cameo)
- Cannonball Run II (1984)
- That's Dancing! (1985)
- The Perils of P.K. (1986)
- Knights of the City (1986) (scenes deleted)
- Moon Over Parador (1988)
- Tap (1989)
Performances on Broadway
- Mr. Wonderful (1957), musical
- Golden Boy (1964), musical - Tony Nomination for Best Actor in a Musical
- Sammy (1974), special performance featuring Davis with the Nicholas Brothers
- Stop the World - I Want to Get Off (1978) musical revival
Autobiographies
- Yes I Can (with Burt and Jane Boyar) (1965) ISBN 0374522685
- Why ? (with Burt and Jane Boyar) (1980) ISBN 0446360252
- Sammy (with Burt and Jane Boyar) (2000) ISBN 0374293554 Consolidates the two previous books and includes additional material.
Trivia
- Sammy Davis Jr.'s voice can be heard in the theme to ABC's 1975-1978 crime series Baretta, starring Robert Blake.
- Davis is mentioned by Alice Cooper in the 1980 song "Model Citizen", in the lines "I might be the saviour, here to save us / I'm a friend of Sammy Davis' / Casually".
- Michael Jackson wrote a song for Sammy Davis titled, "You Were There".
- "You were there, before we came / You took the hurt, you took the shame / They built the walls to block your way / You beat them down, you won the day / It wasn't right, it wasn't fair / You taught them all, you made them care / Yes, you were there, and thanks to you / There's now a door we all walk through / And we are here, for all to see / To be the best that we can be / Yes, I am here / Because you were there." - Words and music by Michael Jackson
- Metal band GWAR has made at least two references to Sammy Davis: a song on the 1997 album Carnival of Chaos called "Sammy", and the 1999 song "Child" on We Kill Everything.
- "She didn't understand / That I'm a happy dappy Sammy Davis Jr. man."
- Sammy Davis was portrayed by Don Cheadle in an HBO movie about Sinatra and Dean Martin entitled The Rat Pack.
- Bill Cosby, a good friend of Davis' (who in fact once appeared on The Cosby Show), wore a black pin that read "SDJR" in commemoration of his friend's death, from 1990 until the show's end in 1992.
See also
External links
- Sammy Davis, Jr. at IMDb
- Sammy Davis, Jr. at the Internet Broadway Database
- Find A Death - Sammy Davis Jr.
- Sammy Davis Jr. at the Copacabana
- 1925 births
- 1990 deaths
- African-American actors
- African American musicians
- American World War II veterans
- Converts to Judaism
- American film actors
- Puerto Rican actors
- Hollywood Walk of Fame
- Jewish American actors
- Jewish-American singers
- Jewish American musicians
- Manhattanites
- American soap opera actors
- Academy Awards hosts
- Spingarn Medal winners
- Tap dancers
- Vaudeville performers
- Batman actors
- American male singers
- American jazz singers
- Worst Supporting Actor Razzie Nominee
- Entertainers who died in their 60s
- Eyepatch wearers
- Deaths by throat cancer
- Black Jews