Dubai Telegraph - Nina Simone comes to a New York stage, as song rights controversy brews

EUR -
AED 4.240175
AFN 72.738255
ALL 96.17702
AMD 434.215423
ANG 2.066785
AOA 1058.745466
ARS 1612.053897
AUD 1.622129
AWG 2.078234
AZN 1.976838
BAM 1.957673
BBD 2.319658
BDT 141.335218
BGN 1.973525
BHD 0.436011
BIF 3420.057227
BMD 1.154575
BND 1.471902
BOB 7.959615
BRL 5.997436
BSD 1.151722
BTN 106.372769
BWP 15.651534
BYN 3.45502
BYR 22629.662253
BZD 2.316646
CAD 1.581865
CDF 2615.111973
CHF 0.906515
CLF 0.026533
CLP 1047.672158
CNY 7.951382
CNH 7.939542
COP 4272.630328
CRC 539.92123
CUC 1.154575
CUP 30.596227
CVE 110.370594
CZK 24.433126
DJF 205.084235
DKK 7.47264
DOP 70.307874
DZD 152.49491
EGP 60.475578
ERN 17.318619
ETB 179.826801
FJD 2.547684
FKP 0.865294
GBP 0.863541
GEL 3.129059
GGP 0.865294
GHS 12.550007
GIP 0.865294
GMD 84.860843
GNF 10094.614005
GTQ 8.823442
GYD 240.990561
HKD 9.049538
HNL 30.487432
HRK 7.536374
HTG 151.0939
HUF 388.231453
IDR 19540.020611
ILS 3.569195
IMP 0.865294
INR 106.739556
IQD 1508.937096
IRR 1517111.030971
ISK 143.606336
JEP 0.865294
JMD 181.204932
JOD 0.818573
JPY 183.209056
KES 149.344238
KGS 100.96799
KHR 4622.402328
KMF 493.002867
KPW 1039.092206
KRW 1715.258568
KWD 0.353889
KYD 0.959914
KZT 555.018594
LAK 24718.54168
LBP 103149.932317
LKR 358.701624
LRD 210.791669
LSL 19.269953
LTL 3.409158
LVL 0.698391
LYD 7.372904
MAD 10.801534
MDL 20.094137
MGA 4794.839797
MKD 61.646581
MMK 2424.726099
MNT 4123.103378
MOP 9.297555
MRU 45.821235
MUR 53.699572
MVR 17.837555
MWK 1997.328183
MXN 20.355422
MYR 4.512649
MZN 73.789014
NAD 19.269953
NGN 1567.02341
NIO 42.390372
NOK 11.054203
NPR 170.198306
NZD 1.967424
OMR 0.443931
PAB 1.151902
PEN 3.937067
PGK 4.969755
PHP 68.712779
PKR 321.550404
PLN 4.258822
PYG 7465.978894
QAR 4.199718
RON 5.093402
RSD 117.432957
RUB 95.105991
RWF 1684.626307
SAR 4.334863
SBD 9.288763
SCR 16.489423
SDG 693.899631
SEK 10.700517
SGD 1.473168
SHP 0.86623
SLE 28.400322
SLL 24210.864673
SOS 657.134385
SRD 43.440844
STD 23897.363242
STN 24.523462
SVC 10.078599
SYP 127.67951
SZL 19.270432
THB 37.282949
TJS 11.040663
TMT 4.052557
TND 3.395549
TOP 2.779938
TRY 51.051155
TTD 7.815443
TWD 36.74895
TZS 3006.200215
UAH 50.602123
UGX 4348.159972
USD 1.154575
UYU 46.824798
UZS 13978.312799
VES 517.02793
VND 30365.312105
VUV 138.078881
WST 3.156265
XAF 656.590861
XAG 0.014531
XAU 0.000231
XCD 3.120296
XCG 2.075977
XDR 0.816454
XOF 656.482724
XPF 119.331742
YER 275.423263
ZAR 19.209368
ZMK 10392.557279
ZMW 22.467787
ZWL 371.772552
  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.0400

    22.95

    -0.17%

  • GSK

    -0.3600

    53.41

    -0.67%

  • BCE

    0.1100

    26.01

    +0.42%

  • BTI

    -0.3900

    60.55

    -0.64%

  • RIO

    -0.0600

    89.8

    -0.07%

  • BP

    0.9500

    43.85

    +2.17%

  • NGG

    -0.4700

    90.42

    -0.52%

  • RELX

    -0.1800

    34.29

    -0.52%

  • AZN

    -0.7200

    191.29

    -0.38%

  • RYCEF

    0.6900

    16.81

    +4.1%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    22.88

    -0.31%

  • BCC

    1.2000

    72.92

    +1.65%

  • JRI

    -0.0800

    12.46

    -0.64%

  • VOD

    0.1500

    14.75

    +1.02%

Nina Simone comes to a New York stage, as song rights controversy brews
Nina Simone comes to a New York stage, as song rights controversy brews

Nina Simone comes to a New York stage, as song rights controversy brews

In New York, an off-Broadway show is bringing queen of the blues Nina Simone back to life -- but backstage, a battle has been brewing over rights to the anti-racist icon's songs.

Text size:

"Nina Simone was constantly told to sit down and shut up: you're being too loud, you're the angry Black woman," said Laiona Michelle, who is performing the role of the late superstar in "Little Girl Blue" at a 200-seat hall in Manhattan's theatre district.

"It was my mission to bring all that noise to the front and answer those questions. Why was she so unsettled? Why was she angry? Why was she so deeply sad?"

Throughout the two-hour performance, the actor -- who also wrote the show -- brings her warm vocals to songs like "Feeling Good," "Love Me Or Leave Me" and "Don't Let Me Be Misunderstood," classics that contributed to the legend of Simone, who died in 2003.

The "Little Girl Blue" team had to rely on many of the covers that Simone rendered iconic because they were unable to obtain the rights to perform her originals, a quandary they blamed on her former lawyer Steven Ames Brown.

The California attorney says since 1988 he has administered the artist's catalogue -- she granted many of her rights to a charitable trust -- and has called the musical "fictitious" and "superficial," saying it "does not do her justice."

- Radicalism -

"Little Girl Blue" explores the life of the artist born Eunice Waymon in 1933 in North Carolina.

A gifted singer who aspired to become a classical pianist, she was denied admission to a prestigious conservatory in Philadelphia, a rejection Simone attributed to racism.

The show lays bare the suffering she endured throughout her life, including beatings from her husband and manager Andrew Stroud, and mental health struggles.

It also approaches the singer's radicalism: "Nina Simone was saying 'Black Lives Matter' before it was even an expression," Michelle said.

"I ain't 'bout to be non-violent, honey," she famously told an audience in 1968 while performing "Mississippi Goddam" -- three days after the murder of Martin Luther King Jr.

Simone had written "Mississippi Goddam" in response to a 1963 fire set by Ku Klux Klan members at an Alabama church, in which four young Black girls died.

But in the musical, which brings to life that performance at the Westbury Music Fair on Long Island, New York, writers had to leave out the song that became emblematic of the Civil Rights Movement.

- 'Homage to an icon' -

Attorney Brown accuses the team behind "Little Girl Blue" of having "appropriated Nina for their own gain," saying they "have no understanding of her life."

He vowed a different show to be staged in New York and London, which "will be faithful to her life as she expressed it."

But following a successful 2019 run in New Jersey, the producer of "Little Girl Blue" holds that their show stands up to the critics.

"Nina was a Black woman and this piece was written by and stars a Black woman who wanted to pay homage to an icon that belongs to Black cultural history," producer Rashad V. Chambers said.

He suspects that Brown granted rights to Simone's songs to someone who offered a more attractive sum.

In terms of the musical, the handicap is relative: Simone was famous for her covers, and many of those songs are now in the public domain.

During a recent performance that included the title song "Little Girl Blue," along with "Black Is the Color of My True Love's Hair," the audience rose to its feet in applause.

Michelle aims to take the show to one of Broadway's prestigious theaters, where biopics honoring Bob Dylan, Tina Turner and Michael Jackson have already come out.

"That's where Nina Simone deserves to be," Michelle said. "She deserves to be on the big stage."

W.Darwish--DT