Billie
Holiday's grandfather
was one of 17 children
of a black Virginia
slave and a white
Irish plantation
owner. Her mother
was only 13 when
she was born.
The
future "Lady
Day" first heard
the music of Louis
Armstrong and Bessie
Smith on a Victrola
at Alice Dean's,
the Baltimore "house
of ill repute" where
she ran errands and
scrubbed floors as
a young girl. She
made her singing
debut in obscure
Harlem nightclubs
(borrowing her professional
name from screen
star Billie Dove),
then toured with
Count Basie and Artie
Shaw before going
solo. Benny Goodman
dragged the frightened
singer to her first
studio session. Between
1933 and 1944, she
recorded over 200 "sides," but
she never received
royalties for any
of them.
Despite
a lack of technical
training, Holiday's
unique diction, inimitable
phrasing and acute
dramatic intensity
made her the outstanding
jazz singer of her
day. White gardenias,
worn in her hair,
became her trademark.
"Singing
songs like the 'The
Man I Love'
or 'Porgy'
is no more work than
sitting down and
eating Chinese roast
duck, and I love
roast duck," she
wrote in her autobiography. "I've
lived songs like
that." Her own
compositions included "God
Bless the Child," espousing
the virtues of financial
independence and "Don't
Explain," lament
on infidelity.
Billie
Holiday, a musical
legend still popular
today, died an untimely
death at the age
of 44.