Juanita Hall (née Long, November 6, 1901 – February 29, 1968)[1] was an American musical theatre and film actress. She is remembered for her roles in the original stage and screen versions of the Rodgers and HammersteinmusicalsSouth Pacific as Bloody Mary – a role that garnered her the Tony Award – and Flower Drum Song as Madame Liang.
Early years
Born in Keyport, New Jersey,[2] to an African-American father and Irish-American mother,[3] Hall (along with three siblings) was raised by her maternal grandparents after her mother's death. She attended Bordentown Industrial School and graduated from Keyport High School.[4] She also received classical training at the Juilliard School.[5]
Career
Soon after she finished high school, Hall worked in the Lincoln settlement house in East Orange, New Jersey, teaching music to children during the day and to an adult chorus at night.[4]
In the early 1930s, she was a special soloist and assistant director for the Hall Johnson Choir. A leading black Broadway performer in her day, she was personally chosen by Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II to perform the roles she played in the musicals South Pacific and Flower Drum Song, as a Tonkinese woman and a Chinese-American, respectively. [citation needed]
Before her acting roles, she assembled her own chorus group, The Juanita Hall Choir, and kept busy with performances in concert, on records, in films, and on the air. She auditioned for Talent 48, a private review created by the Stage Manager's Club. Later, she performed on radio in the soap opera The Story of Ruby Valentine on the National Negro Network. The serial was broadcast on 35 stations, and sponsors of the broadcast included Philip Morris and Pet Milk.[10]
In 1958, she recorded Juanita Hall Sings the Blues (at Beltone Studios in New York City), backed by a group of jazz musicians that included Claude Hopkins, Coleman Hawkins, Buster Bailey, Doc Cheatham, and George Duvivier.[citation needed] In 1958, she reprised Bloody Mary in the film version of South Pacific, for which her singing part was dubbed. "Rodgers decreed her vibrato was now frayed, so her songs would be dubbed by Muriel Smith, Broadway's original Carmen Jones."[11] Smith had played the role in the London production. (Music director Alfred Newman and director Joshua Logan thought that it was unnecessary to dub her.) The same year, Hall starred in Flower Drum Song, another Broadway show by Rodgers and Hammerstein.[12] She also toured in the road show version of Flower Drum Song, but she had to leave it in early 1962 because of illness.[13]
Personal life
Hall married actor Clement Hall while in her teens, when they both were performing in the Broadway production Lew Leslie's Blackbirds. They had no children and eventually were divorced.[1]
In her later years, diabetes led to blindness. As she had little money, the Actors Fund of America supported her in its Lillian Booth Actors Home in Englewood, New Jersey, and in hospitals when she needed treatment.[14]
^ abcd"Actress Juanita Hall, 66". The Central New Jersey Home News. New Jersey, New Brunswick. Associated Press. March 1, 1968. p. 12. Archived from the original on 7 July 2019. Retrieved 7 July 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
^William Barlow (1999). Voice Over: The Making of Black Radio. Temple University Press. pp. 130–131. ISBN1-56639-667-0.
^Purdum, Todd S. (2018). Somethihng Wonderful: Rodgers and Hammerstein's Broadway revolution. New York: Henry Holt and Co. p. 258. ISBN978-1-62779-834-1.
^Lewis, David H. (2006). Flower Drum Songs: The Story of Two Musicals. Jefferson, NC: McFarland and Co. Inc. p. 46. ISBN0-7864-2246-7.