Richard Durham
Richard Durham (September 6, 1917 – April 27, 1984) was a writer and radio producer in the United States.[1][2][3] He was African-American.[2]
Richard Durham | |
---|---|
Born | |
Died | April 27, 1984 66) New York City, New York | (aged
Occupation(s) | Writer (radio and books) |
Known for | Promotion of American civil rights |
Notable work | Destination Freedom |
Spouse | Clarice Davis |
Children | Mark Durham |
Early life
He was born in Raymond, Hinds County, Mississippi[2] and moved with his family to Chicago in 1921.[4] He attended Hyde Park High School and Northwestern University.
Career
In 1940, with support from the Illinois Writer's Project (part of the Federal Writers' Project),[5] Durham wrote two short radio dramas entitled The Story of Winslow Homer[6] and The Story of Auguste Rodin.[7] An essay, "The philosophical basis of Sterling McMurrin", was also published.[8]
Durham wrote for New Masses, the Chicago Defender, the Chicago Star and the Illinois Standard newspapers.[9][10] At the same time he joined the Communist Party, USA.[11]
His first radio series was Democracy – USA, which aired in 1946 on Chicago's WBBM.[12] The next year he started dramatic Black soap opera radio series, Here Comes Tomorrow.[12]
Destination Freedom
Following his early radio writings, Durham wrote and produced the radio drama Destination Freedom.[13] In cooperation with The Chicago Defender, he began this series over NBC Chicago outlet WMAQ in July 1948, with scripts emphasizing the progress of African-Americans from the days of slavery to the ongoing struggle for racial justice.[14]
Post-Destination Freedom
After Destination Freedom Durham was the national program director of the United Packinghouse Workers of America. He resigned in 1958.[15]
Muhammed Speaks editing
In the 1960's Durham was the editor of Muhammad Speaks, a Nation of Islam newspaper in Chicago.[16]
Bird of the Iron Feather soap opera
While an editor of Muhammed Speaks Durham started up a soap opera on Chicago's NPR radio/WBEZ-FM television station.[17] Bird of an Iron Feather had an all Black cast and ran for 21 episodes three times a week starting in January 1970. Newton Minow was the chairman of the Channel 11 WTTW TV station that put on the show via a grant from the Ford Foundation.[18] The show's title came from a speech by Frederick Douglass given in 1847.[19][20][21]
Other media
He had a supporting role in the 1972 film Sounder.[22][23] He also co-wrote The Greatest: My Own Story, the 1975 autobiography of Muhammad Ali. The book was adapted into a 1977 movie of the same name.[24] In 1980 Ali and Durham wrote the article "Why I Must Fight" for Umoja Sasa.[25]
Durham also wrote for the Illinois Writers Project, Here Comes Tomorrow (WJJD/Chicago) and Ebony Magazine.[26] His own short book of poetry, Night Windowpanes, was published in 1975.[27]
Political activity
During Harold Washington's 1982 mayoral election Durham worked to improve Washington's political speaches.[4]
See also
- Carlton Moss – a 1930–40's Black radio dramatist
- Roi Ottley – journalist and writer who wrote the radio series New World A'Coming, broadcast by WMCA in New York City in 1944
References
- Richard Durham – Radio Hall of Fame
- "Richard Durham (1917–1984)". BlackPast.org. March 28, 2014.
- "Richard Durham Biography" (audio). Old Time Radio Researchers – via YouTube.
- Word Warrior: Richard Durham, Radio & Freedom – video presentation from the Library of Congress featuring author Sonja D. Williams
- Dolinar, Brian (June 28, 2016). Federal Writers' Project. African American Studies. doi:10.1093/obo/9780190280024-0021. ISBN 978-0190280024. OCLC 6785186412.
- OCLC 77309330
- OCLC 77309329
- OCLC 367540475
- Library of Congress: Chronicling America – The Chicago Star (Chicago, Ill.) 1946–1948
- Library of Congress: Chronicling America – The Illinois Standard (Chicago, Ill.) 1948–1949
- Pecinovsky, Tony (December 9, 2015). "'Word Warrior' a good book on democratic media". People's World.
Reviewing the book Word Warrior by Sonja D. Williams
- Ellett, Ryan. "'Destination Freedom': 'A Garage in Gainesville' and 'Execution Awaited' (September 25; October 2, 1949)" (PDF). Library of Congress National Recording Preservation Board.
- Dunning, John (1998). On the Air: The Encyclopedia of Old-Time Radio (Revised ed.). New York: Oxford University Press. pp. 196–198. ISBN 978-0195076783. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
- Williams, Sonja D. (October 27, 2016). "Destination Freedom: A Historic Radio Series About Black Life". Journal of Radio & Audio Media. 23 (2): 263–277. doi:10.1080/19376529.2016.1223973. ISSN 1937-6529. OCLC 7065588339. S2CID 157918778.
- Chicago Public Library – Mapping The Stacks – Guide to the Richard Durham Papers, 1939–1999
- Askia, Muhammad (March 14, 2001). "Muhammad Speaks a Trailblazer in the Newspaper Industry". A&E publishers. Retrieved 17 November 2022.
- Sergio Mims, February 24, 2017, "Bird of an Iron Feather – Television's First Black Soap Opera That Was Too Hot for Television, Shadow & Act.
- Television Academy Foundation interview
- 'Bird Of The Iron Feather' – A TV Show Way Too Hot For Its Time, 13 February 2013, IMDb
- "Remembering a public TV drama that delved into lives of black Chicagoans" Sonja D. Williams, June 14, 2016, Current.org
- Sounder credits – Turner Classic Movies database
- Richard Durham – IMDb.com
- The Greatest – IMDb
- Ali, Muhammed; Durham, Richard (October–November 1980). "Why I MustFight". Umoja Sasa. Career Communications Group. 20: 20–22. ISSN 2472-0674. JSTOR 43690621. OCLC 6178372480.
- Richard Durham – Radio Hall of Fame
- Durham, Richard (1975). Night Windowpanes. New York: Vantage Press. OCLC 28545023.
- "Clarice Durham". Woods, Wyatt, and Durham Foundation. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
- "Clarice Durham (Obituary)". Chicago Sun-Times. 6 May 2018. Retrieved 20 December 2022.
- Williams, Sonja D. (2015). Word Warrior: Richard Durham, Radio, and Freedom University of Illinois Press, ISBN 978-0252081392, OCLC 915152208
Books cited, with reviews
- Williams, Sonja D. (2015). Word Warrior: Richard Durham, Radio, and Freedom University of Illinois Press, ISBN 978-0252081392, OCLC 915152208
- Pecinovsky, Tony (December 9, 2015). "'Word Warrior' a good book on democratic media". People's World.
Reviewing the book Word Warrior by Sonja D. Williams
- Burroughs, Todd Steven (March 3, 2016). "Word Warrior: Richard Durham, Radio and Freedom". American Journalism. 33 (1): 104-105. doi:10.1080/08821127.2015.1134983. ISSN 0882-1127. OCLC 6026209311. S2CID 183764477.
- Sheppard, Josh (2016). "Williams, Word Warrior: Richard Durham, Radio, and Freedom". Journal of Radio & Audio Media. 23: 188. doi:10.1080/19376529.2016.1156400. ISSN 1937-6529. OCLC 6034487340. S2CID 147771885.
- Pecinovsky, Tony (December 9, 2015). "'Word Warrior' a good book on democratic media". People's World.
Further reading
- Bogle, Donald (2001) [1973 (Viking)]. Toms, Coons, Mulattoes, Mammies & Bucks (4th ed.). Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-0826412676. OCLC 53220186.
- Dolinar, Brian (2013). Dolinar, Brian (ed.). The Negro in Illinois : the WPA papers. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. doi:10.5406/illinois/9780252037696.001.0001. ISBN 9780252037696. OCLC 885228982.
- Guzman, Richard D., ed. (2006). "Richard Durham (1917–1984)". Black Writing From Chicago: In the World, Not of It?. Carolyn M. Rodgers (forward). Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press. pp. 119–126. ISBN 978-0809327034. OCLC 62324506 – via Google Books.
- Kavanaugh, Brian (March–April 2022). "Destination Freedom (1948) & Fred Pinkard & Richard Durham" (PDF). Old Time Radio Times. Lawrence, Kansas: Old Time Radio Researchers Group (119): 13–16.
- Lawrence-Sanders, Ashleigh (March 16, 2018). "History, Memory, and the Power of Black Radio". Black Perspectives. African American Intellectual History Society (AAIHS). Retrieved February 2, 2023.
- MacDonald, J. Fred, ed. (1989). Richard Durham's Destination Freedom. New York: Praeger. ISBN 978-0275931384. OCLC 18986323.
- MacDonald, J. Fred (March 1978). "Radio's Black Heritage. Destination Freedom, 1948–1950". Phylon. 39 (1): 66–73. doi:10.2307/274433. ISSN 0031-8906. JSTOR 274433.
- MacDonald, J. Fred (1991) [1979]. "Stride Toward Freedom – Blacks in Radio Programing". Don't Touch That Dial. Radio Programing in American Life (1920–1960). Chicago: Nelson-Hall. pp. 327–370. ISBN 978-0882295282. OCLC 29810460.
- Savage, Barbara Dianne (1999). "Chapter 6: New World A'Coming and Destination Freedom". Broadcasting Freedom: Radio, War, and the Politics of Race 1938–1948. Chapel Hill & London: University of North Carolina Press. pp. 246–270. ISBN 978-0807848043. OCLC 40135343.
- Richard Durham Papers 1939–1999, OCLC 651014993
- Richard Durham's Destination Freedom : scripts from radio's Black legacy, 1948–50 (with J. Fred MacDonald), ISBN 978-0275931384 OCLC 18986323, 715382247
- Tracy, Steven C. (2011). "Richard Durham". Writers of the Black Chicago Renaissance. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. p. 185. ISBN 978-0252093425. JSTOR 10.5406/j.ctt1xcfxx. OCLC 783468908.
- Chicago Renaissance, 1932–1950 : a flowering of Afro-American culture images and documents from the Vivian G. Harsh Research Collection (eBook ed.). Chicago: Chicago Public Library. 2000. OCLC 44761204.
External links
Media related to Richard Durham at Wikimedia Commons
- Destination Freedom programs
- Destination Freedom Black Radio Days, from KGNU News – Boulder Community Broadcast Association
- Contreras, Felix (October 10, 2015). "With Dramas on the Dial 'Freedom' Made History by Teaching It". All Things Considered. NPR.org. OCLC 8239961269.
Link includes audio
- "History, Memory, and the Power of Black Radio", by Ashleigh Lawrence-Sanders, March 16, 2018 – African American Intellectual History Society (AAIHS)
- Mapping the Stacks – Guide to the Richard Durham Papers, 1939–1999 – Chicago Public Library
- Richard Durham – Radio Hall of Fame
- Richard Durham Papers OCLC 1356506317 – Chicago Public Library archives
- Richard Durham – KeyWiki
- Richard Durham Destination Freedom – Goodreads
- Word Warrior: Richard Durham, Radio & Freedom – video presentation from the Library of Congress featuring author Sonja D. Williams
- ‘Word Warrior’ Traces Uncommon Life of Chicago Writer Richard Durham, Nick Blumberg, October 12, 2017, WTTW