The
Week of December 11th, 2005: IN
BLACK HISTORY
Comedy
Legend: RICHARD
PRYOR
From
Peoria, Illinois poverty to Hollywood affluence. From abandonment
by his mother to adoration from millions of fans. From a childhood
in a brothel to eight marriages (twice to the same woman) and
seven children. From tragedy to triumph and back again, Richard
Pryor has earned the status of Legend as a masterful storyteller,
a multi-talented entertainer, a comic of acerbic wit, and a survivor
with no self-pity. Born December 1, 1940, Richard Franklin
Lennox Thomas Pryor III became one of the most influential comedians
in the history of comedy. Few comics today will talk about their
own careers without mentioning the inspiration they received from
Pryor. A talented yet controversial man, most people either love
him unconditionally or hate him passionately but few ignore
him.
One
of four children raised in his grandmother's brothel, Richard
experienced rape at the age of six (by a teenaged neighbor) and
molestation by a Catholic priest during catechism. He watched
his mother perform sexual acts with Peoria's mayor. One way the
young boy escaped from these traumatic experiences was to attend
the movies. Seated in the "black seats" at his local
cinema, Pryor consumed the screen worlds of such heroes as John
Ford and Howard Hawks, stirring within a wild ambition to become
a star like them. He was expelled from school for a petty offense
at age 14, and began working as janitor at a local strip club.
Work as shoe-shine and "careers" as drummer, meat packer,
truck driver, and billiard hall attendant combined to pre-ordain
a perspective of the black underclass in 1950s America that Pryor
translated into honest and hilarious routines. Several brushes
with the country's penal system gave him first-hand knowledge
of the treatment of blacks within it. Ask anyone who has followed
Pryor's comedy and the word authentic comes up. But, as the Grateful
Dead sang, "What a long, strange road it's been" for
the 63 years that Pryor has blessed this earth. And, as Richard
says, "I ain't dead yet, Muther Fucka!"
Pryor's
first introduction to a life of performing came at age 12 when
Juliette Whittaker, a supervisor at a public recreational facility
in Peoria, cast him in a local production of Rumplestiltskin.
Whittaker was so impressed by Richard's comic ability that she
arranged talent shows to showcase him and continued to influence
him throughout his career.
.READ
MORE ABOUT COMEDY LEGEND RICHARD PRYOR
FROM THE OFFICIAL WEBSITE OF RICHARD PRYOR www.RichardPryor.com
Also
read Pioneering comedian Richard Pryor dies from "The
New Pittsburgh Courier" CLICK
HERE
REST
IN PEACE: (R.I.P.)
Andrea
Lee Oliver Woodson aka "Andy" aka "Mother"
Lucy Curry , Dot
Talley, Bertrand "Goocher" Frye, Irma Woodson,
Russell Woodson,
Nora Moorehead-Dixon, James Dixon, Anthony
"Torry" Dorsey,
Ross "Booper"
Thomas, Termain "Butter" Woodson, Dorothy Jean Lee
Ransom,
John Martin Moorehead,
Jr., Donna Ann Davis, Patrice "Trice Ball" Howze
Copyright
2005 Brotha Ash Productions. All Rights Reserved
|
|