Christiern Posted March 9, 2004 Report Posted March 9, 2004 Duke's sister, Ruth Ellington Boatwright has passed away. She was 89, I believe, and quite a character. I had the pleasure of knowing Ruth and--although we had not been in touch for some time--I shall miss the knowledge that she's around, doing bizarre things. Quote
Chrome Posted March 9, 2004 Report Posted March 9, 2004 I shall miss the knowledge that she's around, doing bizarre things. Surely, you're not going to just leave us hanging with this ... Quote
maren Posted March 9, 2004 Report Posted March 9, 2004 circa 1935 (maybe Chris has more to share?): Quote
JSngry Posted March 9, 2004 Report Posted March 9, 2004 I shall miss the knowledge that she's around, doing bizarre things. Surely, you're not going to just leave us hanging with this ... Yeah, SURELY not! Who does this leave of either Ellington siblings or offspring? Nobody? Mercedes is Duke's granddaughter, right? Quote
maren Posted March 9, 2004 Report Posted March 9, 2004 I shall miss the knowledge that she's around, doing bizarre things. Surely, you're not going to just leave us hanging with this ... Yeah, SURELY not! Who does this leave of either Ellington siblings or offspring? Nobody? Mercedes is Duke's granddaughter, right? Right, Mercedes is Mercer's daughter (Mercer died in 1996?), and her son Paul is currently leading the Ellington Orchestra, I think. Quote
jazzbo Posted March 10, 2004 Report Posted March 10, 2004 That's a very nice picture of a lovely lady. You can see the family resemblance. Also the look and the way she is lovely reminds me very much of a coworker, who is also quite a character. Quote
maren Posted March 11, 2004 Report Posted March 11, 2004 (edited) Up for this NY Times Obit (pasted from clandy44's "Misc Music" thread here): Ruth Ellington Boatwright, 88, the Sister of Duke Ellington, Dies By DOUGLAS MARTIN Published: March 11, 2004 Ruth Ellington Boatwright, Duke Ellington's only sibling, who for many years took care of his business affairs, died on Saturday in Manhattan. She was 88. Her son Michael James said her death came after she had been sick for some time. Ruth Dorothea Ellington was born on July 2, 1915, in Washington, and her first memory of her brother, who was 16 years older, was hearing him perform on the radio. In 1930 Ellington, by then highly successful, summoned his sister and parents from Washington to live with him in an apartment on Edgecombe Avenue in Harlem. "He was the only brother I had, and I was his only sister," Mrs. Boatwright said in an interview with Ebony in 1999. "He took care of me from the time I was 12, and he's still taking care of me." Ellington died in 1974; Mrs. Boatwright oversaw his copyrights, contracts and other business matters for many years afterward. In 1991 she sold a large number of his musical scores and manuscripts to the Smithsonian Institution, and in 1995 she sold 51 percent of Tempo Music, the company that owns most of Ellington's compositions, to a New York publisher. After high school in Manhattan, she graduated from Columbia University in 1939 with a degree in biology, planning to teach it. She then went to Europe to learn languages and write a thesis comparing the teaching of biology in Paris and New York. She stayed with Josephine Baker, the singer and her brother's friend. In 1941 Ellington formed Tempo Music to oversee his interests and named his sister president. He also bought her a four-story house on Riverside Drive, where she maintained his trophy room of medals and honors. In the 1950's she was host of a radio program on WLIB in New York on which she interviewed guests including the writer Ralph Ellison. She was also active in the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and was a founder of the jazz ministry of St. Peter's Lutheran Church in Manhattan, where Ellington was a friend of the first designated jazz pastor, the Rev. John Garcia Gensel. Her first marriage, to Daniel James, a journalist and political scientist, ended in divorce. Her second husband, McHenry Boatwright, an operatic baritone, died in 1994. Mrs. Boatwright is survived by her sons Michael and Stephen James, both of Manhattan. At some special occasions Ellington brought her as his official escort. Michael James said this was because Ellington thought it honored his sister; she once offered another explanation. "He took me to the White House because he didn't want his women to be upset," she said to Ebony. "If he picked one, all the rest of them would have screamed. Imagine a song like `Sophisticated Lady.' I imagine he told every woman that he knew that she was the inspiration for that song." Bill Cunningham/The New York Times, 1997 BTW, Christiern -- did you know McHenry Boatwright? I'd thought of asking you this earlier in the week. When I was a freshman in college I sang in the chorus in a performance of Beethoven's 9th, conducted by Gunther Schuller (oops, I'm name-dropping), for which McHenry Boatwright was the baritone soloist -- beautiful voice. Edited March 11, 2004 by maren Quote
Christiern Posted March 11, 2004 Author Report Posted March 11, 2004 BTW, Christiern -- did you know McHenry Boatwright? I'd thought of asking you this earlier in the week. When I was a freshman in college I sang in the chorus in a performance of Beethoven's 9th, conducted by Gunther Schuller (oops, I'm name-dropping), for which McHenry Boatwright was the baritone soloist -- beautiful voice. I can't say that I knew Boatwright, but I met him a few times. I also have clear images of him dancing with Ruth at the Copa, she with her Charo wig, he with movements that defied his figure. Quote
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