Eddie Shu(neEdward Shulman; 18 August 1918[1] New York City – 4 July 1986) was an American jazz musician who played saxophone, clarinet, trumpet, harmonica, and accordion. He was also a comedic ventriloquist.[2][3][4][5][6]
Career
Shu learned violin and guitar as a child before picking up saxophone as a teenager. His professional career began in 1935 in Brooklyn. For the seven years leading up to his service in the United States Army, he performed in vaudeville and as a ventriloquist in night clubs and a harmonica player with the Cappy Barra Harmonica Band.[7]
In the 1960s Shu moved to Florida, playing locally as well as with Louis Armstrong's All-Stars, Hampton, and Krupa again. He was a member of the vocal jazz group Rare Silk in 1980. During this period, he performed with this group in Boulder, Colorado, and in a Department of Defense tour. His final recording was "Shu-Swings" with the Joe Delaney Trio.
Carol Shulman, the widow of Eddie Shu, filed suit against Andy García, et al. in Los Angeles Superior Court, claiming he stole the identity of her late husband for the film The Lost City. The film centers on a Cuban nightclub owner fleeing the country's oppressive regime for New York. Shulman claimed Eddie Shu was exiled from Cuba in 1958 for exercising freedom of expression after Fidel Castro came into power.[13]
In 1957 a group of musicians, disc jockeys, and jazz fans joined in Havana City to exchange experiences with North American musicians. The main venues were Havana 1900 and the Tropicana. Funds collected were used by the Jazz Cuban Club to bring jazz musicians to the island. These musicians included Eddie Shu, Kenny Drew, and Philly Joe Jones.[14]
^Some biographies provide 18 August 1918 as a date of birth; but the Florida death index states 18 August 1918
^Kinkle, Roger D. (1974). The Complete Encyclopedia of Popular Music and Jazz, 1900–1950. New Rochelle, New York: Arlington House. ISBN9780870002298.
^Kuhn, Laura Diane, ed. (2001). Baker's Dictionary of Musicians (9 ed.). New York: Schirmer.
^Biography Index. A cumulative index to biographical material in books and magazines. Volume 15, September 1986 — August 1988. New York: H.W. Wilson. 1988.
^Kernfeld, Barry Dean, ed. (1988). The New Grove Dictionary of Jazz. London: Macmillan Press. ISBN9780333398463.
^Who's Who in Hollywood, two volumes, by David Ragan, Facts on File, New York (1992)
^"Lionel Hampton at Wrigley Field on Sunday July 10th". Los Angeles Sentinel. July 23, 1949.
^Chilton, John (1970). Who's Who of Jazz. Macmillan.
^Feather, Leonard (1955). The Encyclopedia of Jazz.
^Andy García Facing Lawsuit Over His 2005 Film The Lost City, AceShowbiz.com (Anita Yang, Saint Paul, co-founder; Denny Lee, Irvine, co-founder), September 17, 2007