biography
| name: |
Lincoln, Abbey
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originally Anna Marie Wooldridge
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| sex:
| female
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| lived:
| (1930– )
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| biography:
| Jazz singer, composer, arranger, and film actress, born in Chicago, Illinois, USA. While a teenager, she sang at school and church functions and then toured locally with a dance band. At age 19 she won an amateur singing contest in Michigan and went to California, where she sang in nightclubs (under her name, Anna Marie). She went to Hawaii as a resident club singer, but in 1954 returned to sing in clubs around Hollywood, now using the name Gaby Lee. In 1956 she changed her name to Abbey Lincoln, and made her first album under that name. In the early 1960s she began to work with drummer Max Roach and his band (they were briefly married, 1962–70), and she not only turned to jazz singing but also became more involved in African-Americans' struggle for civil rights, and recorded Roach's Insist! Freedom Now Suit (1960). As her career took off, she toured worldwide as a soloist and appeared on radio and television. She co-starred in the film Nothing But a Man (1963) but it was ahead of its time, and she later starred in For Love of Ivy (1968). Travelling and performing in Africa in the early 1970s, she decided to adopt a new name, Aminata Moseka, in tribute to her African roots, but then she seemed to drop out of sight professionally. In the early 1990s, however, as Abbey Lincoln again, she revived her career, with both recordings and live performances, and was the subject of a Public Broadcasting System documentary, You Gotta Pay the Band (1992). She is recognized as one of the truly fine jazz singers of her generation. |
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