Harlem Renaissance
Harlem Renaissance was a secret service project of cultural marxism in Harlem NY during the 20s and 30s, with clubs like Cotton Club, Savoy Ballroom and Apollo Theatre, after the Great Migration of African Americans from the South to cities in the north (NY, Chicago, Philadelphia), as the new style of slavery, propaganda aimed specifically at blacks, manipulating their sense of identity, sold as black liberation (start of the Black Church). It was part of program Modernism and program jazz of the music industry. In propaganda (Henry Louis Gates Jr) the Harlem Renaissance is sold as a flourishing of repressed creativity (doctrine of 'progress' of the Left Wing Church), similar to the Renaissance in Italy. |
Harlem was named after Dutch city Haarlem.
It was promoted by Julius Rosenwald, Guggenheims, Charlotte Osgood Mason, Albert Barnes (friend of Bertrand Russell), Elizabeth Marburg (agent of Fabian GB Shaw, Colony Club with daughter of JP Morgan), Carl Van Vechten (Mabel Dodge as mentor) and marxist Max Eastman.
It was a preparation for the fake Civil Rights Movement with Delta Sigma Theta members Amelia Boynton, Betty Shabazz, Ida Wells,..
Philip Payton built real estate in Harlem to house black people. Literary magazine Fire! was used to push the gay-lesbian agenda.
The Savoy Ballroom (Chic Webb, Ella Fitzgerald) was opened by Moe Gale (jewish) and Joe Fadden (Roseland Ballroom).
The Cotton Club (cc=33) was opened in 1923 on Lennox Avenue to promote masons Duke Ellington, Count Basie (Omega Psi Phi), Cab Calloway, Louis Armstrong (Knights of Pythias, jewish manager Joe Glaser), Ethel Waters, Dorothy Dandridge (daughter of Ruby Dandridge who played a dancer in King Kong), Sammy Davis Jr, Harold Arlen (Over the Rainbow), Lena Horne,..
The Apollo Theater, previously leased by the Minsky family, was bought by Sidney Cohen, with John Hammond (Vanderbilt, later producer of Bob Dylan) as talent scout. Phil Spector's The Ronettes first performed at the Apollo.
Aaron Douglas painter, trained by Winold Reiss (Art Students League), art editor of The Crisis of NAACP, Fisk University at Nashville. He was supported by Julius Rosenwald and Albert Barnes who worked with Gertrude Stein.
Adelaide Hall (Pratt Institute like Joseph Barbera, Jack Kirby of Marvel Comics, Ellsworth Kelly, Harvey Fierstein, Martin Landau, David Sarnoff, Fred Trump, Robert Mapplethorpe) performed at Broadway and tranvestite club El Dorado in Berlin (Christopher Isherwood's Goodbye to Berlin).
Alain LeRoy Locke was a Phi Beta Kappa and Phi Beta Sigma at Howard University, part of the gay agenda and friend of Zionist Horace Kallen (ACLU). He was a student of Theosophist William James (start of cultural relativism) at Harvard like Gertrude Stein (patron
of modernist art
scene with Pablo Picasso),
George Santayana, WEB Dubois (NAACP), Horace Kallen, Walter
Lippmann (advisor of Woodrow
Wilson). He received a Rhodes Scholarship and published The New Negro. He was supported by Margaret Butcher (Julius Rosenwald Foundation, Howard University, NAACP). Jeffrey Stewart won a Pullitzer Prize for Locke's biography.
Alice Dunbar Nelson (Delta Sigma Theta, lesbian agenda, Phillis Wheatley Club with Delta Sigma Theta president Vivian Osborne March)
Archibald Motley (Art Institute Chicago)
Arna Bontemps (Federal Writers Project)
Augusta Savage, sculptor funded by Julius Rosenwald Foundation
Benny Andrews (Korean War, Art Institute Chicago)
Bessie Smith (lesbian agenda with cross dresser Gertrude Rainey, Columbia Records, played in St Louis Blues, died in car crash)
Cab Calloway (Lincoln University) worked with Dizzy Gillespie and played in Stormy Weather (The Tempest with Caliban) of 20th Century Fox with Harold Arlen, The Singing Kid with Al Johnson and Porgy and Bess (Gershwin brothers). His music was used in Betty Boop cartoons (father of Richard Fleischer).
Charles Alston trained at Columbia, worked for MoMa.
Claude McKay (gay agenda, Tuskegee Institute), supported by Max Eastman, met with Emmeline Plankhurst's daughter Sylvia Plankhurst.
Duke Ellington was a Prince Hall freemason (like Richard Pryor, Sugar Ray Robinson, Jesse Jackson) and member of the Legion of Honour and Alpha Phi Alpha, founded at Cornell University, like MLK, Henry McKee (founder of Sigma Pi Phi), WEB Du Bois (NAACP), Jesse Owens (Berlin Olympics with Adolf Hitler), Andrew Young (United Nations), Lionel Richie, Dick Gregory, Wesley Moore,..
He worked with jewish publisher Irving Mills (Cab Calloway, Harold Arlen of Over the Rainbow, movie Stormy Weather of 20th Century Fox).
Bluebird Records (RCA Victor) reissued his early recordings. In 1950 he worked with jewish producer Al Schmitt.
He performed at The Village Gate (Edgard Varèse, Miles Davis, Bill Evans, John Coltrane, Dizzy Gillespie, Jimi Hendrix, Woody Allen, Nina Simone, Lenny Bruce, Velvet Underground) in Greenwich Village. Lighting engineer Chip Monk was used during the Woodstock festival.
He later signed to William Morris Agency. He worked with Billy Strayhorn (gay agenda, Walk of Legacy), Quincy Jones, Orson Welles and Eartha Kitt.
Ethel Waters played in Cabin in the Sky of Vincente Minnelli (gay agenda), husband of Judy Garland.
Fatz Waller (jazz, St Albans Queens like Count Basie) was trained at DeWitt Clinton High School, Julliard by Carl Bohm.
Fenton Johnson (Columbia University Pullitzer School of Journalism)
Gladys Bentley (lesbian agenda, Okeh Records of Otto Heineman))
Gwendolyn Bennett (Delta Sigma Theta) funded by Albert Barnes, Fire! magazine.
Hubert Harrison (Socialist Party of America, atheist agenda, Negro World of Marcus Garvey's Universal Negro Improvement Association, American Friends Service Committee of Quakers, supported by Eugene O'Neill)
James Lesesne Wells worked at Howard University.
John P Davis (The Crisis, Fire!)
Josephine Baker (Legion of Honour) played the role of Whore of Babylon of Metropolis.
Langston Hughes (Columbia University, Lincoln University of Quakers, The Crisis of NAACP) was funded by the Guggenheims and Julius Rosenwald. He pushed the gay agenda as member of sodomy cult Omega Psi Phi and worked with CIA agent Arthur Koestler. He was part of the Yaddo artist community (Spencer Trask, Peabody's) like CIA agents Robert Lowell, Dorothy Parker Rotschild, Delmore Schwartz, Lionel Trilling, Philip Roth, Sylvia Plath, Jonathan Franzen, Aaron Copland, Truman Capote, Raymond Carver, Mario Puzo, David Foster Wallace, Saul Bellow, Hannah Arendt,.. Jussie Smollett (jewish, gay agenda) played Hughes in Marshall.
Lena Horne worked for RCA and Café Society in Greenwich Village and with Paul Robeson during the Civil Rights Movement. She had a relationship with Orson Welles and Vincente Minnelli.
Lois Mailou Jones lived in Paris and Haiti.
Max Eastman jewish marxist CIA agent, published New Masses with Ralph Ellison.
Meta Warrick Fuller sculptor trained by Auguste Rodin, married to Solomon Fuller (research on Alzheimer's Disease with Emil Kraepelin).
Oscar Micheaux director of Body and Soul with Paul Robeson.
Richard Bruce Nugent (gay agenda) appeared in Before Stonewall.
Richmond Barthé (gay agenda, trained at Art Institute Chicago, Guggenheim and Julius Rosenwald Fund fellowship, supported by Lincoln Kirstein and Edgar Kaufman Jr, Whitney Museum of American Art, the Met, Smithsonian) made a bust of mason Toussaint L'Ouverture. He trained Ralph Ellison.
Ridgely Torrence (Walter Lippmann's The New Republic, Rockefeller Foundation). His wife worked for New York World of Joseph Pullitzer.
Wallace Turman (gay agenda with Richard Nugent, novel The Blacker the Berry, promoted in program Hip Hop, married to Louise Thompson Patterson of Communist Party USA and The New School).
Zora Neale Hurston (Zeta Phi Beta like Sara Vaughan, Chaka Kahn, Minnie Riperton, Vivica Fox and Rhona Bennett, Barnard College, Columbia University) worked with Alain Lomax (folk research with Woody Guthrie). The Guggenheims funded her research on vodoun rituals in Haiti. She worked for the Federal Writers Project with Stetson Kenedy. She was promoted by Alice Walker in Ms magazine of Gloria Steinem.
Oprah Winfrey, Disney and ABC produced Their Eyes Were Watching God with Halle Berry, Ruby Dee, Lorraine Toussaint, Terrence Howard, based on her novel. Rozonda Thomas (TLC) played Hurston in Marshall.
Vincente Minnelli directed MGM movie Cabin in the Sky (1943) with Lena Horne, Ethel Waters, Louis Armstrong, Rex Ingram, Ruby Dandridge, Duke Ellington,.
James Van der Zee's photographs were used in the Harlem On My Mind exhibition at MoMa.
Clarence Edward Smith founded the Islamic movement 5
Percenters (Nation of Islam) in Harlem, influenced by Elijah Muhammed,
supported by Bayard Rustin.
In 1984 Francis Ford Coppola (The Godfather) directed The Cotton Club with Richard Gere, Bob Hoskins as Owney Madden, Diane Lane, Nicolas Cage, Laurence Fishburne, Jennifer Grey, Diane Venora, produced by Robert Evans (Rosemary's Baby), based on book of James Haskins (trained at Georgetown).
Fishburne played gangster Bumpy Johnson in Hoodlum with Tim Roth as Dutch Schultz, Cicely Tyson (Delta Sigma Theta).
During the 90s Harlem was used in program Hip Hop (Mase, Camron).
Anthony Mackie played in Brother to Brother with Roger Robinson as Richard Bruce Nugent.