AL JOLSON - MY MAMMY

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  • Опубліковано 29 сер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 191

  • @robertfurner1729
    @robertfurner1729 56 хвилин тому

    always remember my mum, listened to this music as a kid thru the 1950s

  • @michaelwestcarr2436
    @michaelwestcarr2436 Місяць тому +4

    Loved hearing his songs at my Grandmother's house, he, Perry Como, Frank Sinatra, and Dean Martin, all bring back happy memories. ❤

  • @NyreeVeronikaUK
    @NyreeVeronikaUK 3 місяці тому +8

    I’ve learned something new today!As a black British woman married to a Lithuanian man ( Al has Lithuanian heritage) in 2024, I respect this history!

  • @LoneStarLawman
    @LoneStarLawman 7 місяців тому +22

    A lot of misconceptions about this man. Early he hung out in black jazz clubs. Fascinated by what Jolson saw and heard, he started using what he had learned, on Broadway, introducing music, to mostly white audiences, in blackface, to be more realistic. He supported black stagehands, in a workers strike, aahebbd he was very public, and outspoken about it. On a radio show, in one broadcast, he stated, that your race, your background, or where you are from, can stop you from achievement. Al Jolson understood prejudice, as he was Jewish. Perhaps his methods were wrong, but out of ignorance, not hate.

  • @johnshephard2076
    @johnshephard2076 2 місяці тому +4

    They know how to belt out a good song.

  • @hmackie6823
    @hmackie6823 18 днів тому +3

    Al played himself in a movie 20 years after his stardom.

  • @belovedone151
    @belovedone151 2 місяці тому +5

    This dude babysat me when I was a kid.

  • @irishmike3514
    @irishmike3514 3 роки тому +40

    How fantastic it must have been to see and hear him on Broadway!!

    • @J.M.Chadwick6
      @J.M.Chadwick6 Рік тому +4

      I totally agree. It would have been one of the greatest accomplishments of my life!

    • @ColtDee
      @ColtDee 5 місяців тому +2

      I bet.

    • @TomSpeaks-vw1zp
      @TomSpeaks-vw1zp 4 місяці тому +1

      @@ColtDee
      Those who did said you could feel the energy. It was unexplainable. If things weren’t going well. Jolie would stop and break into hours long singing & entertaining. His energy was phenomenal. There was , and still is, something special about the man.

    • @ColtDee
      @ColtDee 4 місяці тому

      @@TomSpeaks-vw1zp Jolly was unique a one-of-a-kind entertainer.

    • @EhMichelle
      @EhMichelle 19 днів тому

      ​@@ColtDeeThank fuck for that.

  • @thraciangrapes
    @thraciangrapes 21 день тому +1

    There used to be a gigantic billboard of Al Jolson in full makeup on the Atlantic City boardwalk. Its very famous and was there for a hundred years.

  • @MeadeSkeltonMusic
    @MeadeSkeltonMusic 2 роки тому +20

    Beautiful voice ! 👏 👏 👏 👏

    • @donaldsmith6814
      @donaldsmith6814 3 місяці тому +1

      It was even better in 45 till his unfortunate death in Oct,1950. His bass voice singing is phenomenal! But no matter when, al was the BEST!

  • @LPMAN02
    @LPMAN02 11 місяців тому +27

    RIP Al Jolson (May 26, 1886 - October 23, 1950), aged 64
    You will be remembered as a legend.

  • @ghostrider-ek8gu
    @ghostrider-ek8gu 3 роки тому +17

    The Jazz Singer .. singing a great hit. A true classic

  • @lennon1252
    @lennon1252  2 місяці тому +1

    In 1907, when Al Jolson was just 20, he married Henrietta Keller. At the time he could not find work. So he took a job with Lew Dockstader's Minstrel Show which was white men singing and dancing in blackface. Jolson was not happy singing the same old songs, the same old way night after night.
    One night while the show was in New Orleans, Jolson goes for a walk and winds up in the black section of town where he hears music that he had never heard before coming out of a club. It was JAZZ! He had never heard that kind of music being played by black musicians before. He loses track of time and doesn't get back in time for the Minstrel Show. He is fired. But this experience, hearing JAZZ music, changed his musical career forever.
    Here is that scene from The 1946 motion picture 'The Jolson Story'.. Jolson is being played by actor Larry Parks.
    ua-cam.com/video/4sN2WG2jr0U/v-deo.htmlsi=KIqm5vPeJ4KjxRm5

  • @mybexchange6330
    @mybexchange6330 2 роки тому +17

    THE STAR REPORT SENT ME HERE MAMMY 🤣

  • @hmackie6823
    @hmackie6823 3 місяці тому +1

    I feel a stronger bond to Al; Jolson than the astronauts

  • @hmackie6823
    @hmackie6823 25 днів тому +2

    if we were morons in the past good thing about the future...it's unwritten

  • @freddieellis8449
    @freddieellis8449 5 місяців тому +11

    Jolson helped many black entertainers to get their start in the industry. And whenever he played the blackface character, it was never as a figure of ridicule, rather of dignity and reverence.

    • @lennon1252
      @lennon1252  5 місяців тому +9

      He called his blackface character 'Gus'. It was a role he was playing.
      Al Jolson was not a racist. Neither were Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire, Judy Garland, or multitudes of others who blacked up for a role. Racism is defined in one's actions and one's motivations, not necessarily by the color of one's make-up, or of one's skin.

    • @lennon1252
      @lennon1252  2 місяці тому

      In 1907, when Al Jolson was just 20, he married Henrietta Keller. At the time he could not find work. So he took a job with Lew Dockstader's Minstrel Show which was white men singing and dancing in blackface. Jolson was not happy singing the same old songs, the same old way night after night.
      One night while the show was in New Orleans, Jolson goes for a walk and winds up in the black section of town where he hears music that he had never heard before coming out of a club. It was JAZZ! He had never heard that kind of music being played by black musicians before. He loses track of time and doesn't get back in time for the Minstrel Show. He is fired. But this experience, hearing JAZZ music, changed his musical career forever.
      Here is that scene from The 1946 motion picture 'The Jolson Story'.. Jolson is being played by actor Larry Parks.
      ua-cam.com/video/4sN2WG2jr0U/v-deo.htmlsi=KIqm5vPeJ4KjxRm5

  • @boblagueux3765
    @boblagueux3765 15 днів тому

    A classic 😂😂😂 the best of times ❤

  • @user-kk8oe5rq1q
    @user-kk8oe5rq1q 8 місяців тому +6

    I love Al and his music forever

  • @tycotoys
    @tycotoys 14 днів тому

    This is funny as hell ! The original Black Face ! Would make a great Half Time show at Super Bowl or Oscars.

  • @davidgottlieb531
    @davidgottlieb531 8 місяців тому +3

    As Jerome once said: Mammy, it's your little boy Sammy, so put on the eggs and hammy, Mammy.

  • @ulrichroesch9114
    @ulrichroesch9114 7 місяців тому +1

    Always loved this song.......

  • @IgotSomuchTroubleonmyMind
    @IgotSomuchTroubleonmyMind 2 роки тому +8

    Thank you, the star report.

  • @strippi8284
    @strippi8284 Рік тому +14

    As a black man myself, I love this! It's hilarious!!

  • @jbstonesfan
    @jbstonesfan Рік тому +7

    One of the greatest entertainers ever.

  • @user-qy8ld8du1u
    @user-qy8ld8du1u 7 місяців тому +2

    Jolson used black face to bring black music and culture to white audiences. Jolson helped Louis Armstrong, Eubie Blake get started. Just to name two black Americans he helped. May he 4ever RIP.❤😊

    • @mturner2584
      @mturner2584 5 місяців тому

      Except he’s Jewish not white.
      ..

    • @yerushalimey
      @yerushalimey 3 місяці тому

      @@mturner2584 Wilton Gregory is the first African American Cardinal in the Catholic Church. Would you say, "Except he's Catholic not black"?

  • @aagreen59
    @aagreen59 8 місяців тому +1

    I read earlier today that Fred Mertz on the I Love Lucy show actually introduced this song to vaudeville audiences before Al Jolson. Apparently he was a good singer.

  • @tomgreaney1
    @tomgreaney1 Рік тому +8

    2023 , still listening and watching and always will 😮 outstanding

  • @jackbuckley7816
    @jackbuckley7816 2 роки тому +13

    Oh, how this man makes one happy to be alive!

  • @sarah87472
    @sarah87472 Рік тому +10

    Freaking awesome man

    • @BaseballPlayer0
      @BaseballPlayer0 11 місяців тому

      I love u, Sara

    • @sarah87472
      @sarah87472 11 місяців тому

      @@BaseballPlayer0 a baseball dude do your research before you make comments. I am a 53 year-old man Sarah is my 16 you're old daughter

  • @Masbelah_ben_Shimon
    @Masbelah_ben_Shimon Рік тому +17

    Brilliant work. Love every second of it ❤ 👏

    • @ramonwilliams83
      @ramonwilliams83 Рік тому +2

      Of course you do

    • @Masbelah_ben_Shimon
      @Masbelah_ben_Shimon Рік тому +6

      Absolutely, Ramon. Jolson was a genius who was ahead of his time. This is brilliant work. Glad you recognize its importance and significance to your own history!

    • @ramonwilliams83
      @ramonwilliams83 Рік тому

      Amazing!👌🏾

    • @dave2940
      @dave2940 Рік тому +3

      ​@@ramonwilliams83 Us guys could start an Al Jolson fan club. He's the best

    • @ramonwilliams83
      @ramonwilliams83 Рік тому +2

      @@dave2940 I would love it we can listen to the greatest hits from the grave 🪦 how does that sound?

  • @quincyrodgers48
    @quincyrodgers48 Рік тому +61

    I understand there's a lot of controversy with blackface, but there is something oddly wholesome and charming about this. Maybe it's the music, the background, his voice. Idk for sure

    • @danielktdoranie
      @danielktdoranie Рік тому +8

      Well Eminem does it in present day

    • @J.M.Chadwick6
      @J.M.Chadwick6 Рік тому +6

      I totally agree. Jolson greatly admired the style and the excellence of the entertainment provided by black people. He recognized how tremendously talented they were. And for a performer with the popularity of Jolson to imitate them is in my opinion, truly a great honor.

    • @fartsneed9464
      @fartsneed9464 Рік тому +12

      There's literally nothing malicious about it

    • @PhoenixDawnX77
      @PhoenixDawnX77 9 місяців тому

      Racists have completely taken over UA-cam. No way you can make this right, but a racisrmt will try, but trip the fock out if a tranny advertises for a beer 😂😂😂.

    • @irishman5562
      @irishman5562 9 місяців тому +8

      I grew up in the south many many years ago. I had a Mammy or Nanny that took care of my brother and I. Our care taker was named Eunice. We all loved her as a part of our family. She gave me knowledge of life's basics and to love the Lord. I'd walk a million miles to see her smile just once more and to say I loved you.

  • @lennon1252
    @lennon1252  5 місяців тому +1

    Al called his blackface character 'Gus'. It was just a role he was playing.
    Al Jolson was not a racist. Neither were Bing Crosby, Fred Astaire, Judy Garland, or multitudes of others who blacked up for a role. Racism is defined in one's actions and one's motivations, not necessarily by the color of one's make-up, or of one's skin.

    • @LordZedd123
      @LordZedd123 17 днів тому

      That’s very interesting, thanks for sharing. It’s pretty eye opening because I just assumed these people were racists. I guess I learned a valuable lesson you could say. Thanks!

  • @hmackie6823
    @hmackie6823 Місяць тому +1

    his father was a Rabbi and wanted him to al;so be one...AL Said..."I Gotta Singa"

  • @hmackie6823
    @hmackie6823 Місяць тому +2

    I assume u all know the Jazz Singer was based on Al Jolson's life

  • @lennon1252
    @lennon1252  5 місяців тому

    He sang this in the key of C because he was younger. But for The Jolson Story he sang it in Bb a whole step lower.

    • @TomSpeaks-vw1zp
      @TomSpeaks-vw1zp 4 місяці тому

      I believe that his manager(?) suggested he try singing in a lower key. It resulted in a reinvented Jolie. Much more relaxed and mellow voice.

  • @franrisso3524
    @franrisso3524 Рік тому +4

    Wonderful, Thank you!

  • @hmackie6823
    @hmackie6823 Місяць тому +1

    THe Movie Jazz Singer was based on Al Jolson's life

    • @lennon1252
      @lennon1252  Місяць тому

      @@hmackie6823 not really. It was more Hollywood

  • @BG-su6gx
    @BG-su6gx 7 місяців тому +1

    Fantastic

  • @JoeKnows44
    @JoeKnows44 6 місяців тому +5

    Not only is it bad, it’s cringeworthy from the first moment.
    I’d like to believe this wasn’t racist, but it’s just so wildly ignorant.

    • @lennon1252
      @lennon1252  6 місяців тому +1

      Then why did you bother to watch it, if it were cringeworthy?

    • @JoeKnows44
      @JoeKnows44 6 місяців тому +1

      @@lennon1252, because I've been reading about Al Jolson and I wanted to see it.

    • @lennon1252
      @lennon1252  6 місяців тому +3

      @@JoeKnows44
      OK that's cool.
      If you're reading about him you know he was not a racist. And he was promoting black music, used real black actors in his movies instead of white people wearing blackface and that he himself wore blackface because he was insecure. He was hiding himself as crazy as that sounds because at the time he was considered the world's greatest entertainer. Check out another one of my Jolson videos called Liza Lee and see what I'm talking about. No white performer in 1930 would ever pick up a black girl and dance with her. Peace out
      ua-cam.com/video/A9V8hwWzccA/v-deo.htmlsi=UnI-kJGWa7LfdDFK

    • @JoeKnows44
      @JoeKnows44 6 місяців тому +3

      @@lennon1252, thanks. It seems he was a very complicated individual with a complicated legacy, but I can say that I haven't yet heard one credible account of him being hateful, malicious or intentionally racist.
      What is most vexing to me is that for the most part, he was playing to audience of racists. People who wanted the music and sentimentality that Jolson delivered, but wouldn't accept it from a black performer.
      Thanks for your work sharing history with so many of us.

    • @lennon1252
      @lennon1252  6 місяців тому +2

      @@JoeKnows44
      You are 100% correct
      White people even today do not give black people the credit they deserved.
      Blacks fought in WWII and in the Vietnam War and they came home unable to eat in a white restaurant or go to a white bathroom.
      And Elvis Presley had the same thing. He sang black music but folks excepted it because he was white. The Beatles sang black music and put it on the American racist radio stations. When they were touring down South they were horrified to see a rope in the audience. They asked why was there a rope? The owner of the venue said to separate the white and black kids. The Beatles especially John Lennon told the promoter that if he didn't take the rope down they wouldn't play. A lot of arguing with the manager but the Beatles held their ground. P.S. the rope was taken down.
      True story ♥.

  • @BaseballPlayer0
    @BaseballPlayer0 11 місяців тому +4

    Love it. Every one should watch this

  • @N-8
    @N-8 Рік тому +19

    Woah, thought this was trudeau before I heard the awesome voice.

  • @hmackie6823
    @hmackie6823 5 місяців тому +1

    MLKjr,"Judge Not by the color of skin but the content of Character"

  • @isaacdyer6556
    @isaacdyer6556 2 місяці тому

    The Brave Little Toaster brought me here.

  • @hmackie6823
    @hmackie6823 Місяць тому +1

    Like a Moona and a Juna and a Springa

  • @donnawilliams9769
    @donnawilliams9769 7 місяців тому +1

    The best you can lilith to ❤❤❤

  • @user-kk8oe5rq1q
    @user-kk8oe5rq1q 9 місяців тому +2

    It’s a compliment to sing blackface they have very good rythym wonderful

  • @drakeybryter5997
    @drakeybryter5997 5 місяців тому +1

    Larry Parks actually did this even better - he mimed but his phrasing of the song is better

  • @steverapley3104
    @steverapley3104 5 місяців тому +1

    Great entertainment remember lenny Henry used to take the shilling with the black and white minstrels and he ended up up getting a knighthood and doing a premier inn add repect !!!

  • @stanandollie7041
    @stanandollie7041 4 місяці тому

    Brilliant!😂😂😂😂

  • @hmackie6823
    @hmackie6823 11 місяців тому +4

    this guy had character

  • @donnawilliams9769
    @donnawilliams9769 11 місяців тому +2

    Amazing ❤

  • @TheConorsmithusa
    @TheConorsmithusa 9 місяців тому +2

    My little mammy 😂
    Im coming, i hope i didn't make you wait 😂
    It's your baby 🤣

  • @gizabitadat1499
    @gizabitadat1499 5 місяців тому +1

    NEW IRISH HIT

  • @ftrecordingstudio4034
    @ftrecordingstudio4034 6 місяців тому

    In Seconday school my desk partner was once or twice Richard Petter but the ultimate choice in commenting upon this make up video is mine.

  • @pauljones4536
    @pauljones4536 10 місяців тому +4

    The black national anthem.

  • @sketcharmstrong8491
    @sketcharmstrong8491 Рік тому +4

    Seinfeld brought me here...

  • @lerenzoroberts3663
    @lerenzoroberts3663 Рік тому +1

    Star show brought me here hollysmokes 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @jakestilson1947
    @jakestilson1947 Рік тому +5

    Was Bing`s hero.

    • @TomSpeaks-vw1zp
      @TomSpeaks-vw1zp 4 місяці тому +2

      Jolson inspired many up an coming singers and entertainers back in the 50’s. Elvis among them.

  • @AlbertoGonzalez-yb3ic
    @AlbertoGonzalez-yb3ic Рік тому +3

    Who gives you your green eggs and hammy? MAMMY!

  • @somethinglikethat212
    @somethinglikethat212 10 місяців тому +3

    Justin Trudeau at his best...

  • @AllRequired
    @AllRequired 2 роки тому +25

    Justin Trudeau in the flesh.

    • @chadwickwhite6107
      @chadwickwhite6107 2 роки тому +15

      Al Jolson HAD more TALENT in his LITTLE FINGER than Justine Trudeau does INTEGRITY.

    • @imperialbricks1977
      @imperialbricks1977 Рік тому

      Justin Trudea is a terrible person. Jolson was a saint compared to the Commie scum in 30s Hollywood.

    • @imperialbricks1977
      @imperialbricks1977 Рік тому

      @Caroline Woodward
      Al Jolson was a wonderful person.
      And yes, Hollywood has always been run by Communists.

    • @margaretthomas8899
      @margaretthomas8899 Рік тому

      @Caroline Woodward How old are you please?

    • @margaretthomas8899
      @margaretthomas8899 Рік тому

      @Caroline Woodward Thank You! I am 72, born a few weeks after Al Jolson passed. I cannot think of anybody else, who got me interested in singers, and musical movies, stage entertainment in general than Al Jolson. Hearing his voice on old 78 rpms, seeing the movies about him on TV, people taking him of, relatives etc, talking about him, or the movies about him, or the early talkies he was in. it, not instantly but eventually at a very young age, got me out of mud pies, cowboys and indians, and all those things pre teen boys are into. To me, because he gave it more than, others I heard very young, it I think influenced me to get into the rock and roll, when it happened. The likes of Frankie Laine,, Johnny Raye, Guy Mitchel were a sort of bridge from Jolson to rock and roll, because Jolson lived at a time popular music, and everything in general changed so much, due to new inventions coming along, and new and different ways of doing things, there is a lot of entertainment history there, and I have found it has helped me get into other artists, and different eras, ragtime, Jazz, Vaudeville, swing etc, prior to my own life time. When you carry the label of The World's Greatest Entertainer, more than anybody ever, although others have also had the title, it puts a burden on you, to be tops in everything, and comparisons on statistics, overall talents etc will be thrown up objectively, and of course there is always somebody/s that does some things better, than Jolson, or anybody,? or were more popular, for a longer period etc, but then there is other times it is vice versa. All indications are that in front of an audience, most always, Al Jolson just had a way of communication that totally broke down all barriers between artist and audience, particularly in legitimate theater, where he just really dominated shows, did as he liked, and really turned them into personal concerts of his own. No body has ever repeated that. There is brief examples of that. on some of his radio shows, and briefly hinted at in movies from time to time, However, the restrictions of time, working to plots etc. The free wheeling, come on everybody and lets just have a great time Al Jolson, was not possible unless live, and in real time, Still there is plenty to enjoy that has been preserved, and to me above all, it is the Singing. A Voice that has a sound all it's own, with variation over some 40 years, involving so much contrast and styles. I think also because Al Jolson was born in, and developed in a time that was completely non technically assisted, it gave him a way of selling a lyric, get the true full meaning from it, than those later more technically assisted. He of course did adjust and use technology to his advantage, and many of the songs he sang on radio in the late 1940's. that came out long before radio, are superb. Still with the pathos. melancholy of earlier times, but in a more updated style. Unfortunately somebody that passed now over 72 years ago, and who was the number one star in America beginning approx some 38/9 years prior, is going to carry a lot of baggage, just on the reality of the passage of time. Lots of people have passed on in all that time, People have found different idols in their own life times, and to most, it is a feeling of, a burden of not being accepted in the now, if they show any interest, or give any credence to anybody that just out dates them if they do. As I say Al Jolson, was not part of my own lifetime by a few weeks, but to me, that has never bothered me. I prefer to be true to myself, than just feel I am accepted, and go along with what appears to be what the majority do ,and although even when I was very young I learnt Al Jolson, even then, went back a long time, but all the years since that have have made no difference, when I hear him, or see him in a clip like a 80 something year old clip like this, his presence, impact, and sheer enjoyment it gives me, It to me, IS JUST LIKE HE IS ALIVE AGAIN! www.jolsdon.org aljolson.weebly.com. for links to much more.

  • @TDHurley
    @TDHurley 4 місяці тому +2

    Shieeet.

  • @assistanttothetravelingsec8301
    @assistanttothetravelingsec8301 5 місяців тому +2

    My first time seeing anything by Al Jolson...yikes this is what they called entertainment back then!? Anything better by him, he's supposed to be a legend?

  • @HelenPrior-wh3ml
    @HelenPrior-wh3ml 8 місяців тому +3

    No such talent today How great were the old days 😅

  • @user-qy8ld8du1u
    @user-qy8ld8du1u 5 місяців тому +1

    To M Turner. What does Al Jolson religious preference hv 2 do with anything? U hv 2 explain tt one 2 me.
    Al Jolson was white. So again, what does his religious preference hv 2 do with his race? Look up his birth certificate if it still exists. Or look up his race FM Ellis Island's immigration records when his parents arrived FM Latvia, or Lithuania, which were still part of the Russian Empire at that time, in the late 1880s.
    So I do not get ur point. Anyway, tks 4 ur reply, hv a great day, and God bless U and ur family.😊

  • @chadwickwhite6107
    @chadwickwhite6107 2 роки тому +5

    MAMMY!!!!!! MAMMY!!!!! PAPPY!!!!! PAPPY!!!!! MAMMY!!!

  • @dave2940
    @dave2940 Рік тому +5

    Epic

  • @hmackie6823
    @hmackie6823 25 днів тому

    it was basedd on him not following in his fathers footsteps

  • @JasonBourne-ei7vs
    @JasonBourne-ei7vs Рік тому +4

    Mammy lives in my building on the fifth floor 5S 😂😂😂😂 👵🏿

  • @user-ty8ts9vk4c
    @user-ty8ts9vk4c Місяць тому

    Mísè ès Ribidium fàdà

  • @v.b.4622
    @v.b.4622 Рік тому +11

    Videos like this just go to show how there is nothing and never was anything wrong with so-called "blackface"... the petulent adult children who take offense to it are just whining to whine.

    • @BaseballPlayer0
      @BaseballPlayer0 11 місяців тому

      The Left r trash

    • @h.w.barlow6693
      @h.w.barlow6693 9 місяців тому +1

      Make fun of a jew and everyone loses their minds.

  • @lennon1252
    @lennon1252  5 місяців тому +1

    My cover of My Mammy
    ua-cam.com/video/zDEwZaA_y7M/v-deo.htmlsi=e6K0ROFjlDTEKNoZ

  • @hmackie6823
    @hmackie6823 25 днів тому +1

    not a new story

  • @alfiewillis4893
    @alfiewillis4893 2 роки тому +6

    /ourguy/

  • @barryjacobs8524
    @barryjacobs8524 5 місяців тому +1

    F……controversy. I’m sick of hearing all this. He was an entertainer. The end. I love golliwogs too. How’s that for racist. The do gooders started all this rubbish. Yes take everything away from history with these great entertainers. 😮

  • @castle23clash
    @castle23clash 3 місяці тому

    🚬🚬🚬

  • @johnsonjan
    @johnsonjan 4 місяці тому

    😢😢😢

    • @lennon1252
      @lennon1252  4 місяці тому +1

      😊 😊 😊

    • @johnsonjan
      @johnsonjan 4 місяці тому

      @@lennon1252 Thank you. I lost my mum last year. She was 93 but I’m still grieving. Thanks for making me smile

  • @Raven-ep6pq
    @Raven-ep6pq Місяць тому

    Was this Justin Trudeau in a past life.

  • @tomc4304
    @tomc4304 11 місяців тому +2

    Fred Sandford must have replaced mammy with Elizabeth and made it his own?

  • @lennon1252
    @lennon1252  2 місяці тому

    ua-cam.com/video/PK_TbgYjDtk/v-deo.htmlsi=UP2JHqu2UoUcBWEW

  • @StevenHughes-hr5hp
    @StevenHughes-hr5hp 27 днів тому

    Must have been an Ethiopian Jew.

  • @donaldjacques7962
    @donaldjacques7962 Місяць тому

    Nope! Still don't understand the purpose of black face.

    • @lennon1252
      @lennon1252  Місяць тому

      @@donaldjacques7962 You are 100% correct. The History of white people wearing blackface goes back hundreds of years. It was used to demean black people. There was absolutely nothing positive about it. It was disgusting. The only thing I can tell you is, Al Jolson, a Lithuanian Jew, who knew all about hate, prejudice and antisemitism, NEVER wore blackface to demean or make fun of black people. He lived in an Era where it was the norm. Especially in Minstrel shows down south. This was the Era he lived in. Judy Garland, Bing Crosby and even Shirley Temple wore blackface. I never saw Jolson make fun of black people. It was he who used real black performers in his movies not white people wearing blackface. He was not a racist by any means. One day he was eating in a restaurant and 2 black men were eating with him and the owner came over and asked the black men to leave. Jolson told the owner if they have to leave, then I'm leaving too and not coming back. The owner let them stay.
      True story. ☺

  • @MargaretBrowne-q4x
    @MargaretBrowne-q4x 22 дні тому

    Johnson to late ala bamy i like al hes telling a story to late john

  • @user-mj1wg8mc4l
    @user-mj1wg8mc4l 10 місяців тому

    Thank god for 1924

  • @Leonardo-ef9qo
    @Leonardo-ef9qo 6 місяців тому

    horror total

  • @waynesWyrdWorld
    @waynesWyrdWorld 3 роки тому +4

    I’ve shat things with more talent.

    • @user-xz2fn9xr4f
      @user-xz2fn9xr4f 3 роки тому +18

      Lol settle down

    • @lmate063
      @lmate063 2 роки тому

      Seriously?

    • @cjc4765
      @cjc4765 2 роки тому +13

      In that case you should eat it. Maybe some will rub off on you.

    • @TheMostSlyFox
      @TheMostSlyFox 2 роки тому +14

      Considering he doesn't need voice modulation like 99% of 'performers' nowadays, I'd say that statement is quite false. lol

    • @margaretthomas8899
      @margaretthomas8899 2 роки тому

      Be careful! It might get around your seen as OLD HAT! If people know you are on here!

  • @robertmiles1603
    @robertmiles1603 Рік тому +2

    if i were still a kid id go as this for halloween

  • @timfool
    @timfool Рік тому +10

    Joe Biden in his younger days