Harold Lee Rush

Male

Chicago, IL

United States

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How Did You Hear About Us? What Made You Join?
just surfing
Website:
http://HAROLDLEERUSH.COM

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  • Edie Antoinette

    Whoa! It's a pleasure to have you here! Being from Chicago myself, as you must know by now, it excites me to meet someone that grew up when I did ..Feel free to roam and remember..

    W.E.L.C.O.M.E...*and then some*

    Edie
  • Edie Antoinette

    Oh.....my...goodness!!! I just watched "I Am Black Chicago"..!!!!!! Do you know the chillbumps are still twinkling and dancing on my arms even though the production has stopped?

    Where have you been? How did you find me to make my heart leap for joy like this?? I had forgotten all about the balloons on the bike spokes!!! ha ha ha haaaaaa!!!! What a wonderful memory. And yall rode the ramps of the Dan Ryan?? Lord!! You know the rumour was..that a crazy person designed the Dan...*I believe it too*

    I have a group here 'Cinema Treasures' that I dedicated to the shows on 63rd & Halsted..check it out. In fact I put all the quick links right under the chatbox to the right. I need to put the new group--I ♥ Chicago in the list too now that I think about it.

    I enjoyed that production of your's to the hilt..and look forward to getting to know you and hear all the details of your life..

    You made my year, let alone day. I'm going to visit your site now..

    Again---Welcome to Out Of The Past..!!!

    Edie
  • Edie Antoinette

    Lord, I had no idea .. I just read your bio and listened to the station a bit. I am on the MOON honored that you are here Harold. This is indeed, a special, special day for this site.
    Do you know Mark Christian? He worked at JPC for a time as an air personality. He is my ex-husband. We both graduated from Harlan, he is '68 and me in '69..I lived on 95th St at the time.

    My father was a Chicago Policeman and was assigned to Hirsh at one point..I could write a book I tell you. Anyway, you can see I'm excited..lol Sooooo glad you're here.
  • Shelley "SoleMann" King

    Hey Brother Harold...Welcome to OOTP...I enjoyed your video, that was awesome and well put together...Looking forward to seeing you around..Stop by and checkout my Black Panther Party Memories Blog.
  • Shelley "SoleMann" King

  • Edie Antoinette

    Miss You!
    Click To Enter Edie2k2.com

    Gordon Roger Alexander Buchanan Parks

    Nov. 30, 1912 - March 7, 2006
    Fort Scott, Kansas, United States
    Nationality: American
    Occupation: photographer
    Occupation: movie director
    Occupation: writer
    Occupation: composer

    Awards: Julius Rosenwald Fellowship, 1941; Notable Book Award, American Library Association for A Choice of Weapons, 1966; Emmy Award for documentary, Diary of a Harlem Family, 1968; Spingarn Award, 1972; Christopher Award for Flavio, 1978; National Medal of the Arts, 1988; Library of Congress National Film Registry Classics film honor for The Learning Tree, 1989; honorary Doctor of Letters, University of the District of Columbia, 1996; induction into the International Photography Hall of Fame and Museum, 2002; Jackie Robinson Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award, 2002.

    In 2002, at the age of 90, Gordon Parks received the Jackie Robinson Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award and was inducted into the International Photography Hall of Fame and Museum. These honors were only the two latest tributes bestowed on a man whose achievements in photography, literature, film, and ballet have earned him more than twenty doctorates and numerous awards. When asked why he undertook so many professions, Parks told Black Enterprise "At first I wasn't sure that I had the talent, but I did know I had a fear of failure, and that fear compelled me to fight off anything that might abet it. I suffered evils, but without allowing them to rob me of the freedom to expand."

    Driven by this determination to "drive failure from my dreams and to push on," Parks became the first black photographer to work at magazines like Life and Vogue, and the first black to work for the Office of War Information and the Farm Security Administration. Parks achieved these milestones in the 1940s. Later, in the 1960s, he helped break racial barriers in Hollywood as the first black director for a major studio. He co-produced, directed, wrote the screenplay, and composed the musical score for the film based on his 1963 novel, The Learning Tree. The film was later placed on the National Film Register by the Library of Congress.
    The youngest of fifteen children, Gordon Parks was born into the devout Methodist family of Sarah Ross Parks and Andrew Jackson Parks in 1912 in Fort Scott, Kansas. It was a town "electrified with racial tension," Parks remembered. The family was dirt-poor, but the children were taught to value honor, education, and equality, as well as the importance of telling the truth. The security that Parks derived from the quiet strength of his father and his mother's love was shattered when she died during his fifteenth year. As he recalled in Voices in the Mirror, he spent the night alone with her coffin, an experience he found both "terror-filled and strangely reassuring."

    After his mother's death, Parks was sent to live with a sister and her husband in St. Paul, Minnesota. His high school education was cut short when, after an argument, his sister's husband threw him out of the house just before Christmas one year. Suddenly and unexpectedly on his own, Parks was forced to take a variety of temporary jobs that included playing piano in a brothel and mopping floors. As a busboy at the Hotel Lowry in St. Paul, he played his own songs on the piano there and joined a band that was on tour after the leader heard him play.

    Unfortunately, the band broke up when they returned to New York. Stuck in Harlem, living in a rat-infested tenement and unable to find work, Parks joined the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) in 1933. He married Sally Alvis in 1933 and returned to St. Paul in 1934, taking a job there as a dining car waiter and porter on the North Coast Limited. The couple had three children, Gordon, Jr., Toni, and David.

    His Early Interest in Photography
    Parks became interested in photography while working on the railroad. He took his first pictures in Seattle, Washington, in 1937, at the end of his "run" from St. Paul. As Parks recalled for The Black Photographers Annual, "I bought my first camera in a pawn shop there. It was a Voigtlander Brilliant and cost $12.50. With such a brand name, I could not resist." He took his first pictures on Seattle's waterfront, even falling off the pier as he photographed sea gulls in flight. Upon his return to the Midwest, he dropped his film off at Eastman Kodak in Minneapolis. "The man at Kodak told me the shots were very good and if I kept it up, they would give me an exhibition. Later, Kodak gave me my first exhibition," Parks recalled.

    Against all odds, Parks made a name for himself in St. Paul as a fashion photographer. When Marva Louis, the wife of heavy-weight champion, Joe Louis, saw his photographs on display in a fashionable store, she encouraged him to move to Chicago where she could steer more fashion work his way. Using the darkroom of Chicago's South Side Arts Center, a black community arts center, he supported his family through fashion photography while documenting life in the city's slums. His documentary photographs won him a Julius Rosenwald Fellowship in 1941, paying him $200 a month and offering him his choice of employer. In January 1942, he went to work in Washington, D.C., for Roy Emerson Stryker in the photography section of the Farm Security Administration, where he joined some of the finest documentary photographers in the country.

    Parks took one of his most significant photographs on his first day in the nation's capital. He called it "American Gothic, Washington, D.C.," a portrait of Mrs. Ella Watson, a black woman who had mopped floors for the government all her life, posed with a mop and broom in front of an American flag. After a day of facing racial prejudice in restaurants and stores, Parks was angry when he took the photo. As the first black in the FSA, Parks did all he could to break down racial barriers, and he had the full support of his boss, Roy Stryker. While at the FSA, Parks took documentary photographs of everyday life. He spoke of his camera as if it were a weapon, "I had known poverty firsthand, but there I learned how to fight its evil—along with the evil of racism—with a camera."

    After the FSA disbanded in 1943, Parks worked as a correspondent for the Office of War Information, where he taught himself about "writing to the point." One of his assignments was photographing the training of the first unit of black fighter pilots, the 332nd Fighter Group. Prohibited from accompanying them to Europe and documenting their participation in the war effort, Parks left in disgust and moved back to Harlem. In New York, he attempted to land a position with a major fashion magazine. The Hearst Organization, publisher of Harper's Bazaar, would not hire a black man. Impressed by Parks's experience, famed photographer Edward Steichen sent him to Alexander Liberman, director of Vogue magazine. Liberman put Parks in touch with the senior editor of Glamour magazine, and by the end of 1944 Parks's photographs appeared in both magazines. Parks's former boss, Roy Stryker, offered him a position with Standard Oil of New Jersey in 1944. Parks would stay there until he joined Life magazine as a photojournalist in 1948, shooting pictures of the company's executives and doing a notable documentary series for Standard Oil on life in America.

    Began Career at Life Magazine
    Parks's first assignment for Life was one of his most significant, a profile of Harlem gang leader Red Jackson. It was an idea Parks himself suggested, and he stayed with the gangs for three months. His most famous photograph of Red Jackson is one in which the gang leader has a .45 pistol in his hand, waiting for a showdown with a rival gang. Parks would work at Life for nearly a quarter of a century, until 1972, completing more than 300 assignments. When asked by The Black Photographers Annual to name his most important stories for Life, Parks listed the Harlem gang story, his first Paris fashion shoot in 1949, the Ingrid Bergman-Roberto Rosellini love affair on Stromboli, a cross-country U.S. crime series, an American poetry series that interpreted in photographs the works of leading U.S. poets, the Black Muslims and Malcolm X, the Black Panthers, and Martin Luther King's death. By the early 1960s, Parks was writing his own essays to accompany his photographs in Life.

    Parks provided the readers of Life magazine with a unique view of the Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s. As Phil Kunhardt, Jr., assistant managing editor of Life, recalled for Deedee Moore, "At first he made his name with fashion, but when he covered racial strife for us, there was no question that he was a black photographer with enormous connections and access to the black community and its leaders." It was Malcolm X's trust of Parks that allowed him to do a feature on the Black Muslim leader. Malcolm X wrote of Parks in his autobiography, "Success among whites never made Parks lose touch with black reality."

    Real life and photography were often closely intertwined in Parks's work. In 1961 he was on assignment in Brazil to document poverty there. He met a young, asthmatic boy named Flavio Da Silva who was dying in the hills above Rio de Janeiro. Parks's now-famous photo-essay on Flavio resulted in donations of thousands of dollars, enabling Parks to bring the boy to a clinic in the United States for treatment. Flavio was cured and lives today outside of Rio; Parks and Flavio have remained friends.

    Embarked On Cinematic Sojourn
    Parks began his cinematic career by writing and directing a documentary about Flavio in 1962. In 1968 he became the first black to produce and direct a film for a major studio, Warner Bros. Seven Arts. The film, The Learning Tree, was based on Parks's 1963 autobiographical novel and featured lush romanticism. Surprisingly, Parks also directed some highly commercial dramas, including Shaft (1971), Shaft's Big Score (1972), and The Super Cops (1974). As described by Donald Bogle in Blacks in American Films and Television, "Almost all his films [except The Super Cops] reveal his determination to deal with assertive, sexual black heroes, who struggle to maintain their manhood amid mounting social/political tensions.... In some respects, his films ... can generally be read as heady manhood initiation rituals."

    The commercial success of the Shaft films put MGM studios back on its feet financially after some difficult times, but Parks was not assured of a lasting place in Hollywood. Something of a maverick, Parks found himself in a dispute with Paramount Pictures over the distribution and promotion of his 1976 film, Leadbelly, which tells the story of the legendary folk and blues singer. Paramount's new management denied the film a New York opening, thus lessening its impact, and Parks felt the advertising campaign made the movie appear to be another "blaxploitation" film. Declining to do another Hollywood movie, Parks went on to film several documentaries for television and the Public Broadcasting System, including Solomon Northrup's Odyssey, The World of Piri Thomas, Diary of a Harlem Family, and Mean Streets.

    The Learning Tree, Parks's autobiographical novel and subsequent film, was his first published work of fiction. The story is about a black family in a small Kansas town; it focuses on Newt Winger, the youngest son. As described in the Dictionary of Literary Biography, "On one level, it is the story of a particular Negro family who manages to maintain its dignity and self-respect as citizens and decent human beings in a border Southern town. On another, it is a symbolic tale of the black man's struggle against social, economic, and natural forces, sometimes winning, sometimes losing.... Because the family is portrayed as a normal American family whose blackness is a natural circumstance and therefore not a source of continual pain and degradation, the book contributes greatly to a positive view of black people."

    Parks followed The Learning Tree with A Choice of Weapons. Published in 1966, it was the first of three autobiographical works he would write. The book detailed in a fairly straightforward manner the time of his life that was fictionalized in The Learning Tree, covering Parks's life from the time of his mother's death to 1944. It was a time that Parks has described as "a sentence in hell."

    Awarded Springarn Medal
    Parks's second volume of memoirs was published in 1979. To Smile in Autumn begins in 1944, when his first fashion photographs were appearing in Vogue and Glamour, and ends in 1978, when Parks had done just about everything he had set out to do. His creative output during that period was phenomenal. In addition to his work in film and television, Parks published several volumes of his own poetry with accompanying photographs. In 1972 the NAACP awarded him the prestigious Spingarn Medal following the publication in 1971 of Born Black, a collection of articles on notable African-Americans. By 1975 Parks was married to his third wife, editor Genevieve Young, and had a major retrospective showing twenty-five years of his photographs in New York. He lived in New York in a large apartment overlooking the East River near the United Nations building.

    As Voices in the Mirror attests, though, Parks was not about to retire. In 1988 he received the National Medal of Arts from President Reagan, and his autobiographical film, Moments without Proper Names, aired on PBS. He completed the musical score and libretto for Martin, a ballet about Martin Luther King, Jr., in 1989 and began filming it for PBS, where it was shown on King's birthday in 1990. Grace Blake, the producer of Martin, had worked with Parks on some of his Hollywood films. She told the Smithsonian, "Gordon's vision of this whole project is so important to all of us.... There are not that many good projects being done about black people.... [Martin] is totally conceived by a black man who is an artist—who wrote the libretto, the music, directed the film, worked on the choreography, narrated, did his own fund raising. Absolutely, we know we are working with a genius."

    In 1995 Parks donated his archives of films, photographs, writings, and other memorabilia to the Library of Congress. Parks said the donation was made because, as he told Jet, "I wanted it all stored under one roof and a roof that I could respect." In 1998 he published Half Past Autumn: A Retrospective. The book accompanied a traveling exhibit of his work organized by the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington, DC. Parks donated 227 pieces of artwork from the show to the Corcoran Gallery later in 1998.

    In 2002 the 90-year-old Parks was inducted into the International Photography Hall of Fame and Museum in Oklahoma City and received the Jackie Robinson Foundation Lifetime Achievement Award. Although he was no longer as active as he once was, his body of work is still being recognized as an amazing contribution to American culture.

    October 11, 2004: The first Gordon Parks Celebration of Culture and Diversity, a four-day event, took place in Parks's hometown of Fort Scott, Kansas, in October. Source: Associated Press, http://customwire.ap.org, October 11, 2004.



    ::Gordon Parks Dead at 93::



    The Kansas City Star..

    Gordon Parks, the Kansas native who made his mark on the world by photographing poverty and racism in America for Life magazine, died this afternoon in his New York City apartment. He was 93.
    Relatives said that Parks, who had been in ill health in recent years, had been receiving radiation treatment for cancer. His son and daughter were with him when he died.
    Funeral arrangements are pending, but Parks had decided in recent years to be buried in his hometown of Fort Scott, Kan.



    ::..HALF PAST AUTUMN..::
    THE LIFE OF GORDON PARKS

    by Edie A Iverson
    (written in 1999)

    This special, tracing the life of Gordon Parks, Life Magazine photographer who is now in his 90's, was 'superb'!

    Produced by Denzel Washington, it follows the life of a man who is a marvel of simplistic magnificence...The program is a quiet, pensive reflection of a life filled with creativity and excitement. Mr. Parks is an artist, equestrian, poet...and...what black person coming up in the 60's didn't 'talk about Shaft'...which he directed...and 'we could dig it!

    His many photographic gems are renderings of pure genius, like the maid standing in front of the american flag with a broom and mop in her hand.

    When recalling the tragic death of his oldest son, Gordon Jr, who perished in a plane crash, one could feel the deep and abiding sorrow that has been a constant companion to Mr. Parks since it happened.

    The closing music, as he recites one of his poems, is ethereal. I was thoroughly enthralled by this man, and It's nice to know that programs like this are out there for us to partake of. Gordon Parks is one of God's gift's...and a 'universal' treasure ...to us all.




    Click To Enter Edie2k2.com




  • Edie Antoinette

    Thinking about you..
  • Edie Antoinette

    Noooo you didn't..that made my heart jump! I need to go get my yearbook out..what was your Mom's name? My sister went to Burnside..by the time we moved into the area I started at Harlan. I graduated from Juliette G. Lowe as the Salutatorian..I also sang in the chorus with The Hutchinson Sunbeams, better known as The Emotions, too..Wanda was in my room...

    Wow! Fantastic! And thanks for the good words on the site here. It means alot to me!
  • Harold Lee Rush

    Join me Tuesday, Aug 5, 2008 at www.WKKC.FM from 10AM CT - 2PM CT for "Live with Harold Lee Rush". At Noon CT is the "Dusty Diner Hour", high-lighting the year 1965.
  • Edie Antoinette

    I'll be there!
  • CynthiaღMarie

    Giving you a warm welcome and a hearty hello!!! I'll be listening in to your show.
  • LuvinDat

    ~~~just stopping by to give you a shout-out...I am Joy...pure Joy...and I would like to give you a warm welcome and to let you know that I will be tuning in~~~
  • Edie Antoinette

    I got to listen until 12:15 today and it ...was...SLAMMIN!!! When I heard my whole name, Edie Antoinette...*sigh* that was just soooo deliciously wonderful..and the plug you gave the site!!!!

    You are the man!!!! Just thee total MAN!!!! Thank you so much, and I'm now a loyal KKCedie-ite! Whew-wee!!!

    I still want Dustie Diner too, please.
  • saraphen

    Hi Harold. Welcome aboard.
  • Edie Antoinette

    My Baby has begun his 2 year around-the-world tour
    starting in Madrid. He says he made it safe
    but US Airways lost his bags!
    I wish you success precious Evan!
    ~Momma loves You~
  • Shelley "SoleMann" King

    Rest In Peace Mr. Bernie Mac

  • Edie Antoinette

    *clapping* Thank You!!!!! I'll be there today for the whole program..
    Thanks so much again.
  • No1Alky

  • No1Alky

  • Edie Antoinette

    It's so wonderful to see you Harold. I had been thinking about you and hoping all is well. Thanks for stopping in and joining the two groups too.

    ~e
  • Edie Antoinette

    Hi Harold! Thinking about you..hoping all is well!
  • Edie Antoinette

    You take me on the BEST journey with that video...oh my goodness! "got fiftyleven cousins all over chi-town.." LOL!!!
  • TJ

    Hi Harold. I enjoyed the video.
  • Shelley "SoleMann" King

    Good morning to you Brother Harold. Have a blessed Sunday.
  • Shelley "SoleMann" King

    TODAY IS ALL ABOUT CHANGE, MAY YOU ENJOY THIS MOST HISTORIC DAY THAT WE ARE TRULY BLESSED TO WITNESS...

  • Edie Antoinette

    Man, I've been remiss in visiting my favorite place! How are you Harold? Hope all is well.
  • Gary

    Thanks for the add! I'm glad to have you on board. :-)
  • Edie Antoinette

    You okay??? We miss you!