Zip A Dee Doo Dah sung by James Baskett in Song of the South.
No
song exudes the exuberance of Spring like
Zip
A Dee Doo Dah. In Disney’s 1946 break though combination of live
action and animation it had
everything—a pleasant rustic lane,
chirping blue birds of happiness,
clouds of pink cherry blossoms, and
a carefree singin’ Darkie. Uh oh—that’s where the storm clouds
rolled in that pretty much kept the film
and James Baskett’s performance as Uncle Remus from public viewing for 50 years.
The
film was based on Georgia author Joel
Chandler Harris’s collections of re-told Gullah folktales narrated by Uncle Remus, a kindly, happy-go-luck
plantation worker in the Reconstruction
era South. Written in what passed for Black dialect the stories related the adventures of Br’er
Rabbit, Br’er Fox, and Br’er Bear with roots going back to African tribal yarns to entertain a young white boy with fables with hidden life lessons.
Harris,
an Atlanta journalist, considered
his wildly popular books to be tributes to the stories he heard as a
boy regionalist writers who used dialect in their work.
The original Disney theatrical poster for Song of the South featured only the white actors and cartoon characters so the film could be advertised and shown in the segregated South.
|
Walt Disney had wanted to
bring the stories to the screen since the success of Dumbo in 1941 but
shifting to war-time shorts and training films put the project on a back burner for years. When it was revived Baskett, a busy radio actor with a little film
experience, who had voiced Preacher Crow
in Dumbo was his first choice to
play Uncle Remus.
The
movie was a big success and Zip A Dee Doo Dah, written by Allie Wrubel and Ray Gilbert, won the 1947 Academy
Award for Best Original Song. But Baskett was not nominated for either Best
Actor or Best Supporting Actor. There was considerable controversy over
the snub and protests organized by
the pesky NAACP. In 1948 the Motion Picture Academy tried to atone by presenting Baskett with a special Oscar—the same designation once used for an award to Shirley Temple. It was the first time any type of Academy
award was presented to a Black man—Hattie McDaniel had previously won Best Supporting Actress in Gone
With the Wind.
Ingrid Bergman presented James Baskett with his Special Oscar.
|
With
the Academy Award under his belt and a regular
part on the half-hour radio version
of Amos ‘n’ Andy Baskett was looking
forward to a booming career when he
suddenly died of a heart attack on July 9, 1948. He was only 44 years old.
Disney
re-released Song of the South just
once and showed clips from the film
on the Disneyland and Disney’s Wonderful World of Color TV shows. But by the late ‘60’s the film was under
attack as pandering to racist stereotypes by organizations that included the
NAACP which had once championed it.
Disney withdrew the film from
circulation and from the regular rotation of the studio’s video re-issues.
Zip
A Dee Doo Dah
was included in various CD collections
of Disney songs, and, as we see, is seen on YouTube. You can be the
judge of how appropriate it is.
No comments:
Post a Comment