Showing posts with label Harlem. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Harlem. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

The Soul of Essence: Susan L. Taylor


In an industry where corporate loyalty has gone the way of the dodo bird, Susan L. Taylor has been synonymous with the Essence brand since the magazine's launch in 1970. After working nearly four decades at Essence magazine, editor and author Susan L. Taylor has ventured out to devote more time to her mentoring campaign. Ms. Taylor is now focusing much of her time to building the National Cares Mentoring Movement, which she founded as Essence Cares. Her goal for the mentoring movement is to have “every able Black adult” mentor an at-risk youth.

Her success is all the more remarkable considering that she was once a single mother of daughter, Shana-Nequai and they were barely scraping by. When she was 24, she found herself separated, with rent due, car broken, and three dollars to her name. One Sunday morning in November of 1970, Taylor was snowed under by pain in her chest and experiencing trouble breathing. The New York City emergency room doctor who admitted her diagnosed her with acute anxiety and prescribed a heavy dose of relaxation. Leaving the hospital feeling fearful and hopeless, Taylor stumbled on inspiration on her way home.

Walking up Broadway, she came to a church and went in. She had not attended church in years, but sitting in a back pew in her jeans and leather jacket, she heard a sermon that changed her life. "The preacher said that our minds could change our world. That no matter what our troubles, if we could put them aside for a moment, focus on possible solutions and imagine a joyous future, we would find a peace within, and positive experiences would begin to unfold," she recalled in “In the Spirit.” She decided to try it and gathered up some of the small pamphlets in the church vestibule. Little did she know she was taking the first step toward replacing her fears with faith. “It was the beginning of my realization that our thoughts create our reality,” said Taylor. She held on, and eventually her part-time job at the new magazine “Essence” became full-time, providing direction for her career.

Born in the Harlem section of New York City to West Indian parents on January 23, 1946, Taylor was raised in a strict yet loving environment. She was taught about the determination of her forebears to make a better life. She heard stories of her maternal grandmother's bravery--leaving a broken marriage and six children in Trinidad in 1916, settling in Harlem, working and saving and bringing her children and mother to the United States by 1925, and doing battle with anyone and anything that stood in the way of her family's forward movement, including racist police, school principals, and even the federal government. "Like the women of her time, my grandmother didn't wait for change; she initiated it," Taylor noted in her column in Essence.

Taylor's father, Lawrence, arrived in Harlem from St. Kitts, West Indies, in the early 1920s and opened a clothing store with Taylor's mother, Violet. But by the early 1960s, the street on which the store was situated had become a "war zone" of drug-related crime and after 30 years, the business closed. Noting the "disturbing sadness" of many Black male youths in the 1990s, Taylor remembered seeing similar “deep, quiet kind of sadness” in her father’s eyes when his clothing store, the family's main means of support, closed.

In her Essence columns, Taylor also recognized a central trait she had inherited from her mother. "My mother always said that one of her greatest frustrations with me was my mouth," Taylor wrote. "But I come by my strong opinions naturally: In that respect I am my mother's child." In fact, Taylor celebrates her power to speak out. "It is not for nothing that Black women have acquired a reputation for speaking out. Historically, our words have been our only weapons, and our voices often our only defense.... But let us not forget the power of our collective voice when it is united--in prayer or in protest or in demand."

In her early 20s Susan Taylor trained in acting with the Negro Ensemble Company. She also founded her own company, Nequai Cosmetics, obtaining a license as a cosmetologist and developing beauty products for Black women. Taylor's experience with Nequai attracted the editors of Essence, which led to her first free-lance articles there.

After divorcing her first husband, William Bowles, Taylor struggled as a single parent in personal and financial crisis. She credits her daughter with helping her remain focused through these hard times. "After the breakup of my first marriage, I realized it was my sole responsibility to feed, clothe and educate my daughter," she was quoted as saying in Memphis, Tennessee's Tri-State Defender. "This empowered me and compelled me to live my life with purpose. My daughter has been my anchor," said Taylor. Her daughter accompanied her everywhere while she pursued her career. In an interview with Cosmopolitan, Taylor recollected her early days at Essence, explaining, "I just decided that rather than limit myself because I was a mother, I'd take her everywhere and expose her to everything. She was hanging around these offices when she was two."

Taylor's rise to the top at Essence took ten years. While friends moved from one magazine to another, Taylor stayed on at Essence. "There were some moments of self-doubt, but the bottom line was that I was still challenging myself. And the waiting paid off." Taylor moved from the part-time position of free-lance beauty editor, to the full-time staff position of fashion and beauty editor, and eventually became editor-in-chief, in 1981.

By the late 1980s Essence had a paid circulation of 800,000 and an estimated "pass-along" circulation of some 4 million, of whom about one-fourth were male. When asked what she hoped to communicate with the magazine, Taylor told Cosmopolitan, "We're saying, 'You're beautiful and you're intelligent and you can do [it].' We try to deliver the strategic information and the inspiration to help Black women make a triumph of their lives." Taylor asserted to the Los Angeles Times that Essence was one of the first magazines to consider in print the difficult subjects of incest, drug use, and rape. The publication's coverage has ranged widely, from interviews with figures like Winnie Mandela, a leader in South Africa's anti-apartheid movement, to features on romantic meals for two, male-female relationships, hair-styling tips, and spa and vacations.

In addition to her success editing Essence, Taylor has also excelled as a business executive and in television. During the 1980s, she became vice-president of the magazine's publisher, Essence Communications, and the host/executive producer of the television show Essence, the Television Program, a 30-minute interview series produced in New York and syndicated to 55 network affiliates and independent stations. The show ran for four seasons in more than 60 countries. During this period Taylor also returned to school to finish her degree at Fordham University. She later received an honorary doctorate from Lincoln University.

During much of her tenure at Essence, Taylor has maintained a column titled "In the Spirit." In addition to autobiographical reflections, she has addressed such diverse topics as sexuality, domestic violence, male-female relations in the Black community, the Gulf War, the beating of Rodney King, the meaning of Africa for Black Americans, and Black history. Offering her insights in the form of general advice, Taylor frequently stresses the need for positive and empowering thought--for spirit and faith--among Black women and throughout Black America in the ongoing personal and collective struggle against racism.

In 1993 Taylor collected a number of these essays and new ones for her book, In the Spirit: The Inspirational Writings of Susan L. Taylor. "In the Spirit is a deeply personal book," Taylor wrote in the preface. "It's about my healing and yours. It contains the seeds I want to plant in our hearts and within our universal garden so that we can uplift our people and ease the suffering in our world." Publishers Weekly commended the book, particularly the author's style, warmth, and generosity in revealing herself. Library Journal highly recommended it, noting that it was written "first of all for Black women," yet still "appeals to common humanity while encouraging transcendence." In the Spirit became a national best-seller. She has also written and co-authored several books including Confirmation: The Spiritual Wisdom That Has Shaped Our Lives.

Taylor travels widely to address conferences for Black women and to speak on the state of Black America. The African Women on Tour conference, which was held in various cities in the U.S., featured workshops, motivational speakers, and entertainment. In her address as keynote speaker, Taylor urged "quiet time" for focus and critical thought. "We need to know what our needs are and not let others tell us what are needs are," she proclaimed, as reported by Malaika Brown of the Los Angeles Sentinel. "It's just time for us to do the work and we know what the work is. What we have to become are critical thinkers."

Friday, August 15, 2008

James Blake Stuns Roger Federer in Beijing


In an amazing upset at the Beijing Olympics, U.S. tennis player James Blake defeated the Olympics top-seeded and the world’s No. 1 men’s player Roger Federer. Blake, the eighth seed, beat Federer, 6-4, 7-6 (7-2), after losing all seven of their previous meetings. James Blake represented the United States as one of its three men's singles tennis players in the Beijing Olympics. In the quarterfinals, he gained perhaps the biggest win of his career with his first ever win over Roger Federer. However in the semifinals Blake lost to Fernando Gonzalez 4-6, 7-5, 11-9.

James Riley Blake was born December 28, 1979 in Yonkers, New York to Thomas, Sr. and British mother Betty Blake. Blake started playing tennis, along with his younger brother, Thomas, Jr., at the age of 5 years old. Thomas, Jr. is also a professional tennis player. He has three older half-brothers, Jason, Christopher, and Howard, and a half-sister, Michelle.

At the age of thirteen, he was diagnosed with scoliosis and was forced to wear a back brace for eighteen hours daily although not during tennis. Blake was inspired to pursue tennis after hearing his role model, Arthur Ashe, speak to the Harlem Junior Tennis Program. James, eager to turn pro, left Harvard University after his sophomore year, as the top collegiate player in the country. He is the only player in the top 50 who even went to college. He intends to return to Harvard, once his time on tour is up—and to change his major from economics to sociology or African-American studies.

James Blake was named rookie of the year for 2000 for the World team tennis season. He gained the eyes of the tennis world by taking eventual champion Lleyton Hewitt to five sets in the U.S. Open in 2001. In 2004 Blake experienced dreadful events starting with him breaking his neck by running into a net post during practice, his father past in July due to stomach cancer, and Blake developed shingles that temporarily paralyzed part of his face and weakened his vision.

Blake is currently the 7th ranked player in the world as of August 13, 2008. He is the top-ranked American player. James Blake is known for his speed and powerful forehands. On July 3, 2007, Blake's book, Breaking Back: How I Lost Everything and Won Back My Life, discussing his comeback after his unlucky 2004 season, was released and debuted at #22 on the New York Times Best Seller list.

In 2005 Blake recovered from his injuries and received a wildcard to the U.S. Open, where he beat Rafael Nadal, Tommy Robredo, but lost in a five set match to Andre Agassi. He has remained a top tennis player since.

At the age 21, Blake saw his first Davis Cup action in 2001 against India and became the third person Black American to play for the Davis Cup for the United States (after Arthur Ashe and MaliVai Washington).

Career Highlights
• August 5, 2002: Wins his first ATP title - the doubles title at AMS Cincinnati with Todd Martin
• March 19, 2006: Reaches his first ATP Masters Series singles final, losing to Roger Federer in the final of AMS Indian Wells
• 2005 2005 U.S. Open: beat Rafael Nadal on September 3, 2005, which was his first win over a Top 10 player in a Grand Slam event.
• March 20, 2006: Breaks into the world top ten for the first time—ranked No. 9, moving up from No. 14
• August 21, 2006: Achieves a ranking of No. 5
• November 4, 2006: Secures a spot in the Tennis Masters Cup for the first time in his career
• November 19, 2006: Achieves a career-high No. 4 ranking, becoming the top-ranked American.

Away from tennis, Blake also enjoys golf and basketball. He is a big fan of the New York Mets. Blake appeared in People magazine's Sexiest Man Alive issue. He is also good friends with singer/songwriter John Mayer, who also attended the same High School.

James Blake now lives in Tampa, Florida with his brother Thomas, in a gated community populated almost exclusively by professional athletes. Mardy Fish, his closest friend on tour, lives down the street, as do several Yankees, including Derek Jeter and, soon, Mariano Rivera. Blake owes his tennis existence to his father, a salesman at 3M who learned the game in the Air Force, met his mother on the public courts in Yonkers. Thomas Sr., volunteered at a tennis clinic in an old armory in Harlem when the boys were young, and that is where he took them every weekend, and where, in the years to come, the media would tend to imagine them being from. When he was six, the Blakes moved from Yonkers to Fairfield, Connecticut, a well-to-do commuter town, where the family lived modestly, by Fairfield standards, in a house with one bathroom. At the public high school, the boys were tennis stars and straight-A students. Blake gets annoyed when people say he's from Harlem. “I can still be Black and be from Fairfield," said Blake.

Sunday, May 11, 2008

Eugene Bullard: “The Black Swallow of Death”


Eugene Jacques Bullard was born in Columbus, Georgia in 1894 and went on to become the first Black American fighter pilot. He was loosely protrayed by Abdul Salis in the 2006 movie Flyboys. In an interview Mr. Salis discussing the notion of doing an entire movie on Eugene Bullard revealed that director Dean Devlin had said on the shoot, “of the characters, Eugene’s story alone is the only one worth a film in its entirety.”

And it really is a story -- his dad, “Big Chief Ox” was a slave; his mother was a Creek Indian. Bullard stowed away on a ship headed for Scotland to escape racial discrimination (he said that he witnessed his father’s narrow escape from a lynching as a child). While in the United Kingdom he became a boxing champion and also worked in a music hall. On a trip to Paris, he decided to stay and joined the French Foreign Legion upon the outbreak of World War I in 1914. He was wounded in the 1916 and awarded the Croix de Guerre (Cross of War") which is given to individuals who distinguish themselves by acts of heroism involving combat with enemy forces.

Bullard transferred to the Lafayette Flying Corps – better known as Lafayette Escadrille -- (composed largely of American volunteer pilots flying fighters. He flew some 20 missions and shot down two enemy aircraft. But, with the entry of the United States into the war the US Army Air Service convened a medical board in August 1917 for the purpose of recruiting Americans serving in the Lafayette Flying Corps. Although he passed the medical examination, Eugene Bullard was not accepted into American service because Blacks were barred from flying in U.S. service at that time. Bullard was discharged from the French Air Force after fighting with another officer while off-duty and was transferred to the 170th (French) Infantry Regiment on January 11, 1918, where he served until the end of the war.

Following the end of the war, Bullard remained in Paris. He began working in nightclubs and eventually owned his own establishment. He married the daughter of a French countess, but the marriage soon ended in divorce, with Bullard taking custody of their two daughters. His work in nightclubs brought him many famous friends, among them Josephine Baker, Louis Armstrong and Langston Hughes. At the outbreak of World War II in 1939, Bullard, who spoke German, readily agreed to a request from the French to spy on German agents frequenting his club in Paris. After the German invasion of the France, Bullard took his daughters and fled south from Paris. In Orléans he joined a group of soldiers defending the city and suffered a spinal wound in the fighting. He was helped to flee to Spain by a French spy, and in July 1940 he returned to the United States.

Bullard spent some time in a hospital in New York for his spinal injury, but he never fully recovered. During and after World War II, when seeking work in the United States, he found, like many Blacks that became famous in Europe that the fame he enjoyed in France had not followed him to New York. He worked in a variety of occupations, as a perfume salesman, a security guard, and as an interpreter for Louis Armstrong, but his back injury severely restricted his activities. For a time he attempted to regain his nightclub in Paris, but his property had been destroyed during the Nazi occupation, and he received a financial settlement from the French government which allowed him to purchase an apartment in Harlem.

In the 1950s, Bullard was a relative stranger in his own homeland. His daughters had married, and he lived alone in his apartment, which was decorated with pictures of the famous people he had known, and with a framed case containing his 15 French war medals. His final job was as an elevator operator at Rockefeller Center, where his fame as the “Black Swallow of Death” was unknown.

In 1954, the French government invited Bullard to Paris to rekindle (together with two Frenchmen) the everlasting flame at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier under the Arc de Triomphe, and in 1959 he was made a chevalier (knight) of the Légion d'honneur. Even so, he spent the last years of his life in relative obscurity and poverty in New York City where he died of stomach cancer on October 12, 1961. He was buried with military honors by French officers in the French War Veterans' section of Flushing Cemetery in the Queens, New York.

In 1972, his exploits as a pilot were published in the book The Black Swallow of Death: The Incredible Story of Eugene Jacques Bullard, The World's First Black Combat Aviator. This book is part of the Bullard display at the National Museum of the United States Air Force near Dayton, Ohio. On 23 August 1994, 33 years after his death, and 77 years to the day after his rejection for U.S. military service in 1917, Eugene Bullard was posthumously commissioned as a Second Lieutenant in the United States Air Force.

His Medals include:
• Knight of the Légion d'honneur
• Médaille militaire
• Croix de guerre
• Volunteer's Cross (Croix du combattant volontaire)
• Wounded Insignia
• WWI commemorative medal
• WWI Victory medal
• Free French Medal
• WWII commemorative medal

Monday, March 17, 2008

Paterson Sworn in As New York’s First Black Governor


David Paterson was sworn in as New York's governor on today, becoming the state's first black chief executive and vowing to move past the scandal that has rocked the state Capitol. Paterson, who is legally blind, was interrupted at several times during his address with thunderous applause. Before he spoke, lawmakers gave him a two-minute standing ovation and chanted: "David! David! David!" "This transition today is an historic message to the world: That we live by the same values that we profess, and we are a government of laws, not individuals," Paterson said.

Governor Paterson rose from the lieutenant governor's office after ex-governor Eliot Spitzer resigned last week amid allegations that he hired a call girl from a high-priced escort service. It was a dramatic fall for Spitzer, who was elected with an overwhelming share of the vote and who had vowed to root out corruption at the Capitol. Paterson spoke without notes for 26 minutes with much of his speech being self-deprecating humor that helped define him as a lawmaker and lieutenant governor. It seemed aimed at smoothing the damage Spitzer did with his adversaries in the Legislature. "We move forward. Today is Monday. There is work to be done," Paterson said. "There was an oath to be taken. There's trust that needs to be restored. There are issues that need to be addressed." Paterson drew howls from the audience when he poked fun at his disability and deadpanned that he would accept an invitation to dinner with the state's top Republican, Senator Joseph Bruno, only if his "taster" could come along. He playfully teased Assembly Minority Leader James Tedisco, a former small-college basketball star, that he is ready to school him on the court. And he told the story of how Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver stopped him from accidentally bringing his gavel down on a glass, saying he didn't want him to turn the Legislature into a Jewish wedding. The mood at the Capitol was cheerful and most politicians said they were hopeful that Paterson can help the state recover from the shock of the past week. Lawmakers including New York Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton, New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and governors from three neighboring states attended Paterson's inauguration.

Governor Paterson was the lieutenant governor for just 14 months. Before that, he was a Democratic state senator since 1985, representing parts of Harlem and Manhattan's Upper West Side. He is the first legally blind governor in the nation to serve more than a few days in office. His father, Basil, a former state senator representing Harlem and later New York's first Black secretary of state, was part of a political fraternity that included fellow Democrats U.S. Representative Charles Rangel, former New York City Mayor David Dinkins and former Manhattan Borough President Percy Sutton.