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Lush Life Page 35

by David Hajdu


  Amsterdam News

  Anatomy of a Murder (film)

  Anchors Aweigh (Copasetics)

  Anderson, Cat

  Anderson, Edmund

  Anderson, Ivie

  “Angu”

  Apollo Theater (Harlem)

  Applebaum, Louis

  Arie Crown Theatre (Chicago)

  Arkansas School for the Blind

  Armstrong, Louis

  Army Air Force, U.S.

  Art Institute of Chicago

  Artists Theatre (New York)

  Ashbery, John

  Asmussen, Svend

  Atkins, Cholly

  Avakian, George

  Babs, Alice

  “Babsie”

  Bailey, Dave

  Bailey, Ozzie

  Baker, Harold “Shorty”

  Baldwin, James

  “Ballad for Very Tired and Very Sad Lotus Eaters”

  “Ballet of the Flying Saucers”

  Bal Masque (Miami Beach)

  “Bang-Up Blues”

  Barclay Studios (Paris)

  Barlett, Dean

  Barnet, Charlie

  Bartók, Béla

  Basie, Count

  Basin Street East (New York)

  Bauduc, Ray

  Bearden, Romare

  Beatty, Talley

  “Beauty and Talent”

  Bechet, Sidney

  Beggar’s Holiday (Ellington and Latouche)

  Beggar’s Opera, The (Gay)

  Belafonte, Harry

  Belcher, Harold

  Bellson, Louie

  Benjamin, Bea

  Benjamin, Ben

  Bennett, Tony

  Berdin, Jean

  Berg, Billy

  Bernstein, Walter

  Berry, Bill

  “Beyond Category”

  Bigard, Barney

  Big George’s Barbecue (Queens)

  Big Sound, The (album)

  Billboard

  Billy Strayhorn/Live!!! (album)

  Birdland (New York)

  Black, Brown and Beige (Ellington)

  Blakey, Art

  Blankfort, Henry

  Blanton, Jimmy

  Blessed and the Damned, The (Welles and Ellington)

  “Blood Count”

  “Blossom”

  “Blue Belles of Harlem”

  “Blue Cloud”

  Blue Mural from Two Perspectives, A (Strayhorn and Ellington)

  Blue Note (Chicago)

  Blue Rose (album)

  “Blues for Strayhorn”

  “Blues in the Night”

  Blue Stars

  Boatwright, Ruth Ellington

  “Body and Soul”

  Bogin, Abba

  Bolling, Claude

  “Boll Weevil Ballet”

  Bond, Julian

  “Bon Voyage”

  “Boo-Dah”

  “Boo-Lose”

  Borne, Hal

  Boston Symphony

  “Botch-a-Me”

  Boyd. Charles N.

  Boyd, Jack

  Brand, Dollar

  Branker, Roy

  Bray, Douglas

  Brecht, Bertolt

  Brewington, Frederick

  Bricktop’s (Paris)

  Bridgers, Aaron at memorial; in Paris; recording by; and Strayhorn’s death; during World War II

  “Brighten the Corner Where You Are”

  Britten, Benjamin

  Broadas, Clyde

  Broadcast Music Inc. (BMI)

  Broadway Theater (New York)

  “Brother Big Eyes”

  Brothers nightclub (Los Angeles)

  Brown, Ernest “Brownie”

  Brown, Lawrence

  Brown, Louis

  Brown, Ray

  Brown, William

  “Brown Betty”

  “Brown Penny”

  “Brown-Skinned Girl in the Calico Gown”

  Brubeck, Dave

  Bruce, Gladys

  Bruce, Marian

  Bruskin, Perry

  Bryant, Marie

  “Bugle Breaks”

  Burnett, W. R.

  Burns, Ralph

  Byers, Billy

  Cabin in the Sky (Ellington and Latouche)

  Cafe Society (New York)

  Cage, John

  Cahn, Sammy

  Calloway, Cab

  Camel Caravan (radio show)

  Capri nightclub (Los Angeles)

  “Caravan”

  Carmen Jones (film)

  Carmichael, Hoagy

  Carmichael, Stokely

  Carnegie Hall

  Carnegie Hall Jazz Band

  Carney, Harry

  Carpenter, Thelma

  Carrière, Claude

  Carroll, Diahann

  Carter, Benny

  Casa Mañana (Culver City, Calif.)

  Castle, Nick

  Castro (artist)

  Catizone, Billy

  Catlin, Charlotte

  Century of Negro Progress (exhibition)

  Chakrabarti, Cheryll Conaway

  Chambers. W. Paris

  Charles, Ezzard

  “Chelsea Bridge”

  Chez Honey (Paris)

  Chez Moune de Rivel (Paris)

  Chez Paree (Chicago)

  Chicago Defender

  “China Boy”

  Chocolatiers dance troupe

  “Christmas Surprise”

  “Cindy with the Two Left Feet”

  “Circle of Fourths”

  “‘C’ Jam Blues, The”

  Claerbaut, Adrienne Conaway

  Clarke, Dini

  Clarke, Kenny

  Clef records

  “Clementine”

  Clinton, Larry

  Clooney, Rosemary

  Club Saint-Germain (Paris)

  Coast Guard Band

  Cockleshell Heroes, The (film)

  Cole, Nat “King”

  Coleman, Bill

  Coles, Honi

  Collins, Harry

  Collins, William “Chink”

  Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS)

  Columbia Pictures

  Columbia Records

  Columbia University

  “Come On-a My House”

  “Come Sunday”

  Conaway, Georgia Strayhorn

  Conaway, Gregory

  Conaway, Keith

  Conaway, Kevin

  Conaway, Michael

  Conaway, Robert

  Concerto for Piano and Percussion (Strayhorn)

  Concerto for Violin and Wind Orchestra (Weill)

  “Congo Square”

  Connors, Chuck

  Consumer Reports magazine

  Cook, Charles “Cookie”

  Cook, Willie

  Cooper, Bob

  Cooper, Buster

  Copa City dinner theater (Miami Beach)

  Copasetics

  “Cop-Out”

  Corona Mundi Art Center (New York)

  Coronets

  Coslow, Sam

  Costello, Lou

  “Cottage on the Hill”

  Cotton Club (Harlem)

  Cotton Club Boys

  “Cottontail”

  Crawford Grill (Pittsburgh)

  Creamy (album)

  “Creole Love Call”

  “Creole Rhapsody”

  Cromer, Harold

  Crosby, Bing

  Crosby, Bob

  Cross, James

  Cross, Wally

  Cue for Saxophone (album)

  “Cue’s Blue Now”

  Cullaz, Maurice

  cummings, e. e.

  “Cymbal Sockin’ Sam”

  Damone, Vic

  Dance, Helen Oakley

  Dance, Stanley

  Dandridge, Dorothy

  “Darn That Dream”

  Davis, Almena

  Davis, Bette

  Davis, Elois

  Davis, Jimmy

  Davis, Kay

  Davis, Miles />
  Davis, “Wild Bill”

  Day, Doris

  “Day Dream”

  Dearie, Blossom

  Death of Odysseus (Abel)

  Debussy, Claude

  “Deep Purple”

  Deep South Suite, The (Ellington and Strayhorn)

  de Kooning, Elaine

  De La Beckwith, Byron

  Delacorte Theatre (New York)

  DeLavallade, Carmen

  D’Emilio, Anthony Edward

  Dempsey, Jack

  de Nagy, Tibor

  DeRose, Peter

  Detienne, Tom

  Dicks, Lillian Strayhorn

  “Diga-Diga-Doo”

  Dillard, Bill

  “Diminuendo and Crescendo in Blue”

  Disney, Walt

  Dixon, Ivan

  Dixon, Mildred

  Doll, Bill

  “Don’t Mess Around with the Women”

  Dorsey, Tommy

  Dort, Calvin

  Double Six of Paris

  Douglas, Alan

  Down Beat; Jazz Critics Poll

  Down There (Copasetics)

  Drum Is a Woman, A (Ellington and Strayhorn)

  Duke, Vernon

  Duke Ellington jazz Society

  Duke Ellington Piano Method for Blues

  Duke Ellington’s Jazz Violin Session (album)

  Duke’s in Bed (album)

  Duke with a Difference (album)

  Dunham, Katherine

  Duvivier, George

  Dworkin, Miriam Machiz

  “East St. Louis Toodle-O”

  “Ebony Rhapsody”

  Eckstine, Billy

  Eddie Condon Floor Show, The (television program)

  Edwards, Rex

  Eisner, Jerome

  Eldridge, Jean

  “Elf”

  Ella at Duke’s Place

  Ella Fitzgerald Sings the Duke Ellington Songbook (album)

  Ellington, Daisy

  Ellington, Duke; booklet on instrumental approach of; Bridgers and; Broadway show by; and civil rights movement; Clooney and; Copasetics and; European tour of; film scores by; Fitzgerald and; at Hickory House; image projected by; introduced to Billy; at jazz festivals; Logans and; Middle East tour of; and Mine Boy project; musical revue by; piano duets with; professional background of; publicity for; and publishing of compositions; religious music of; Shakespearean suite of; Sinatra and; singers with; songs composed by (see also specific titles); Strayhorn hired by; and Strayhorn memorial; Strayhorn’s business arrangement with; and Strayhorn’s death; Strayhorn’s disengagement from; and Strayhorn’s homosexuality; and Strayhorn’s illness; and Strayhorn’s proposed partnership with Henderson; Tchaikovsky and; television special of; theme songs of; tone poems by (see also specific works); during World War II

  Ellington, Edna

  Ellington, Evelyn

  Ellington, J. E.

  Ellington, Maria

  Ellington, Mercer

  Ellington, Ruth, see Boatwright, Ruth Ellington

  Ellington at Newport (album)

  Ellingtonia (album)

  Ericson, Rolf

  Esch, Bill

  Esch, Veronica Heffernan

  Evans, Gil

  Evers, Medgar

  Evers, Merlie

  Fantastic Rhythm (Strayhorn)

  Far East Suite (Ellington and Strayhorn)

  Farrell, Jack

  Faust, musical version of, see Blessed and the Damned, The

  Fay, Frank

  Feather, Leonard

  “Feather Roll Blues”

  Federal Communications Commission (FCC)

  Felton, Paul

  Ferrer, José

  Fields, Frank

  Fifth Avenue Presbyterian Church (New York)

  Finegan, Bill

  Fitzgerald, Ella

  “Flamingo”

  Flash and Dash

  Flash Inn (New York)

  Flender, Harold

  “Flippant Flurry”

  “Flower Is a Lovesome Thing, A”

  Fol, Raymond

  Ford, Dorothy

  Fowler, Oliver “Boggy”

  Franck, César

  “Frankie and Johnny”

  “Frustration”

  “Fun to Be Fooled”

  Gaby and Haynes (Paris)

  Gaines, Lee

  “Gal from Joe’s”

  Gallop, Sammy

  Gardin, Dorothy Ford

  Garfield, John

  Garner, Erroll

  Gamer, Linton

  Gaudry, Michel

  Gay, John

  Gazzara, Ben

  Gensel, John

  Gentry, Herb

  George, Don

  Gershwin, George

  Gershwin, Ira

  Gibran, Kahlil

  Gillespie, Dizzy

  “Girls Want a Hero”

  Glaser, Joe

  Godkin, Paul

  Goldberg, Francis

  Goldberg, Frank

  Goldberg, Monticello

  Goldmark, Karl

  Gomez, Dolores

  Gonsalves, Paul

  Goodman, Benny

  “Good Queen Bess”

  Gooson, Steve

  Gordon, Claire

  “Got No Time”

  Grace Cathedral (San Francisco)

  Graham, Bill

  Gramercy Five

  Granada TV

  Granz, Norman

  Grappelli, Stephane

  Greenlee, Bluford

  Greenlee, George

  Greenlee, William Augustus “Gus”

  Greenwood, Lil

  Greer, Sonny

  Gregory, Dick

  Grieg, Edvard

  “Grievin’”

  Griffin, Johnny

  Grissom, Jimmy

  Grouya, Ted

  Grove, Bill

  Guinness, Alec

  Gunga Din (film)

  Guthrie, Tyrone

  “Half the Fun”

  Hall, Al

  Hall, Juanita

  Hamilton, Chico

  Hamilton, Jimmy

  Hamilton, Vivian

  Hampton, Lionel

  Hampton, Slide

  Hardwicke, Otto “Toby”

  “Harlem Rumba”

  Harrah’s Casino Cabaret (Reno)

  Harris, Tom

  Harris, Woogie

  Harrison, Lou

  Hartigan, Grace

  Hawkins, Erskine

  Hayes, Cleo

  Haymes, Joe

  Hayton, Lennie

  Hayton-Horne Music, Inc.

  “Hear Say”

  Hefti, Neal

  Hemming, Roy

  Henderson, Fletcher

  Henderson, Luther

  Henderson. Steffi

  Hendricks, Jon

  Hentoff, Nat

  Herforth, Harry

  Herman, Woody

  “Hey, Cherie”

  Hibbler, Al

  Hickenbottom family

  Hickory House (New York)

  High Hat Club (Boston)

  Hill, Kenneth

  Hill, Lois

  Himes, Chester

  Hindemith, Paul

  Hines, Earl

  Hines, Felrath

  “Hip Hoe Down”

  Hodges, Cue

  Hodges, Johnny

  Holiday, Billie

  Holloway, Nancy

  Hollywood Bar (Harlem)

  Hollywood Canteen

  Hollywood Club (New York)

  “Honeysuckle Rose”

  “Hoppin’ John”

  Horne, Lena; and civil rights movement; at Copasetics events; Logans and; marriage of; recordings by; in sacred concert; songs written for; and Strayhorn’s death; and Strayhorn’s illness; and during World War II

  Hot Club de France

  Hudson, Will

  Hungarian Rhapsody (Liszt)

  Hurley, Ruby

  Hyde, George, Studio

  Ibrahim, Abdullah

 
Ice, Orva Lee

  “I Could Write a Book”

  “I Don’t Mind”

  “If I Can’t Have You”

  “If We Were Any More British, We Couldn’t Talk at All”

  “If You Were There”

  “I Got It Bad and That Ain’t Good”

  “I Got Rhythm”

  “I’ll Never Have to Dream Again”

  “I’m Afraid”

  “Imagine My Frustration”

  “I’m Checkin’ Out, Goom Bye”

  “I’m Just a Lucky So and So”

  “I’m Still Begging You”

  In a Mellow Tone (album)

  “In a Sentimental Mood”

  Indigos, The

  “In My Solitude”

  “In the Dungeons of Guilt”

  “Isfahan”

  “I Surrender, Dear”

  “It All Depends on Your Point of View”

  “It Don’t Mean a Thing”

  “It Happens to Be Me”

  “It Must Be a Dream”

  “It’s All Right with Me”

  “I’ve Got a Passport from Georgia”

  “I Want to Hold Your Hand”

  Jackson, Andrew

  Jackson, Mahalia

  Jackson, Milt

  Jackson, Oliver

  Jackson, Quentin

  “Jack the Bear”

  Jacobs, Phoebe

  Jamal, Ahmad

  James, Harry

  Jamison, Marshall

  Jazz Music

  Jazz Scene, The (anthology album)

  “Jeep Is Jumpin’, The”

  “Jeep’s Blues”

  Jeffries, Herb

  Jet magazine

  “Johnny Come Lately”

  Johnny Hodges, Soloist, Billy Strayhorn and the Orchestra

  Johnson, James P.

  Johnston, Arthur

  Joliffe, Mary

  Jones, Fritz

  Jones, Hank

  Jones, Herbie

  Jones, Jimmy

  Jones, Jo

  Jones, Richard B.

  Josephson, Barney

  “Juice A-Plenty”

  Juilliard School

  Jump for Joy (musical revue)

  “Jumpin’ Jive”

  “Jumpin’ Punkins”

  “Jumpin’ with Symphony Sid”

  “Junior Hop”

  “Just A-Sittin’ and A-Rockin’”

  “Just Squeeze Me”

  Katz, Dick

  Keepnews, Orrin

  Kemp, Chubby

  Kemp, Irene

  Kennedy, John F.

  Kent, Arthur

  Kenton, Stan

  Kentucky Club (New York)

  Kern, Jerome

  King, Martin Luther, Jr.

  Kirk, Andy

  Kitt, Eartha

  Koger, Ralph

  “Ko-Ko”

  Kresch, Albert

  Kuller, Sid

  Kyle’s nightclub (Paris)

  “Lady Mac”

  Laffont, Robert

  Lamb, John

  Lambert, Constant

  “Lament for an Orchid”

  Landau, Irwin

  Langner, Armina Marshall

  Langner, Lawrence

  langouste qui ne pense a rien, La (Welles)

  Lardner, Ring, Jr.

  Larkin, Milton

  Latouche, John

  Leave It to Me (musical)

  Leavy, Ray

  Lee, Henry

  Lehner, Gerhart

  Leslie, Alfred

  Leslie, Frank S.

  “Let Nature Take Its Course”

 

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