Tribute: Ruby Dee

Posted on June 12, 2014 at 1:48 pm

We lost one of the greats today, the actor and activist Ruby Dee.

Kennedy Center honoree with her husband, Ossie Davis, Ruby Dee is as much a legend for her pioneering work as a leader of the Civil Rights movement as for her gifts as a performer on stage and in movies.

Here is a charming early glimpse of Davis and Dee in “Gone Are the Days,” based on Davis’ play, “Purlie Victorious.”

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HRZfdUaVSUU

Here they are in Spike Lee’s “Do the Right Thing.”

You can see Davis and Dee talk about their lives in An Evening with Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee.

Dee’s breakthrough role on screen was Jackie Robinson’s wife in the biopic starring Robinson himself. She would later play his mother in Court Martial of Jackie Robinson. She appeared in cultural milestones from A Raisin in the Sun to Do the Right Thing.  She was Denzel Washington’s mother in American Gangster and a centenarian in Having Our Say: The Delany Sisters’ First One Hundred Years.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Oj7Zn20XZAo

Davis and Dee led lives so intertwined that they even wrote an autobiography together: With Ossie and Ruby: In This Life Together.  I saw her in person just once, at a small press conference on behalf of one of the hundreds of good causes she and Davis led and supported over the years.  I watched her as she watched her husband speak, enjoying her look of pride and pleasure and her commitment to seeing justice done.  At one point, he stepped away from the microphone to whisper to a colleague, not realizing that his theater-trained voice carried so well we could all hear everything he said.  His words were not important, just some minor administrative adjustment.  But her expression was telling.  She clearly enjoyed this display of his vital presence and theatricality, so essential to both of them.  She will be missed, but a part of her continues in the spirit of every actor and every person who has been touched by her work.  May her memory be a blessing.

 

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Actors Tribute

Do the Right Thing

Posted on June 29, 2009 at 8:00 am

A
Lowest Recommended Age: Mature High Schooler
MPAA Rating: R
Profanity: Very strong language including racial epithets
Alcohol/ Drugs: Drinking, drug use, smoking
Violence/ Scariness: Some violence
Diversity Issues: A theme of the movie
Date Released to Theaters: 1989
Date Released to DVD: June 30, 2009
Amazon.com ASIN: 0783227949

Twenty years ago, Spike Lee made a tough, smart, and very provocative film that included an electrifying moment when the character played by Lee himself held up a trash can and aimed it at the glass window of a pizzeria owned by an Italian named Sal (Danny Aiello). People are still arguing about what happened next. The Root has a superb collection of resources and reflections on the film’s 20th anniversary, including thoughts on Lee’s sometimes-troubling portrayal of women by the always-insightful Teresa Wiltz, an update on the Bed-Stuy community’s current challenges, and a consideration of one couple who memorably saw the film on their first movie date and are now living in the White House.

It takes place on the hottest day of the year in in the Bedford-Stuyvesant section of Brooklyn, where there is an uneasy alliance between the old-time residents like Sal and the more recent but majority residents who are African-American. In general, they get along because they need each other but there is a lot of frustration on all sides. Tempers get hot as the weather gets hotter.

Watch for Samuel L. Jackson, John Turturro, Rosie Perez, and Martin Lawrence very early in their careers and legends Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee giving, as always, performances of endless subtlety and grace. And watch to see what has and has not changed since the movie was released two decades ago.

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