Miriam Makeba (4 March 1932 – 9 November 2008), nicknamed Mama
Africa, was a Grammy Award-winning South African singer and civil rights activist.
In the 1960s she was the first artist from Africa to
popularize African music in the U.S. and around the world. She is best known
for the song "Pata Pata", first recorded in 1957 and
released in the U.S. in 1967. She recorded and toured with many popular
artists, such as Harry Belafonte, Paul Simon,
and her former husband Hugh Masekela.
Makeba campaigned against the South African system of apartheid.
The South African government responded by revoking her passport in 1960 and her
citizenship and right of return in 1963. As the apartheid system crumbled she
returned home for the first time in 1990.
Makeba died of a heart attack
on 9 November 2008 after performing in a concert in Italy organized to support
writer Roberto Saviano in his stand against the Camorra,
a mafia-like organisation local to the region of Campania.
On 4 March 2013 - what would have been her 81st birthday
Google commemorated her life with a "doodle".
Zenzile Miriam Makeba was born in Johannesburg
on 4 March 1932. Her mother was a Swazi
sangoma
(traditional healer-herbalist). Her father, who died when she was six years
old, was a Xhosa. When she was eighteen days old, her
mother was arrested for selling umqombothi,
an African homemade beer brewed from malt and cornmeal. Her mother was
sentenced to a six-month prison term, so Miriam spent her first six months of
life in jail. As a child, she sang in the choir of the Kilmerton Training
Institute in Pretoria,
a primary school that she attended for eight years.
In 1950 at the age of eighteen, Makeba gave birth to her
only child, Bongi Makeba, whose father was Makeba's first
husband James Kubay. Makeba was then diagnosed with breast cancer,
and her husband left her shortly afterwards.
Her professional career began in the 1950s when she was
featured in the South African jazz group the Manhattan Brothers, and appeared for the first
time on a poster. She left the Manhattan Brothers to record with her all-woman
group, The Skylarks, singing a blend of jazz and traditional melodies of South
Africa. As early as 1956, she released the single "Pata Pata",
which was played on all the radio stations and made her name known throughout
South Africa.
She had a short-lived marriage in 1959 to Sonny Pillay, a
South African singer of Indian descent. Her break came in that year when she
had a short guest appearance in Come Back,
Africa, an anti-apartheid documentary produced and directed by American
independent filmmaker Lionel Rogosin. The short cameo
made an enormous impression on the viewers and Rogosin managed to organise a
visa for her to attend the première of the film at the twenty-fourth Venice Film Festival in Italy, where the
film won the prestigious Critics' Award. That year, Makeba sang the lead female
role in the Broadway-inspired South African musical King Kong; among those in the cast was musician
Hugh Masekela.
She made her U.S. debut on 1 November 1959 on The Steve Allen Show.
Very interesting.-grandma linda
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