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Horne, Lena
(redirected from Lena Horne)

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Horne, Lena (Calhoun) (1917– )

US singer and actor. She performed in the musical Blackbirds of 1939 and by 1938 she was appearing in films, becoming the first African-American to be signed to a long-term contract. The title song of the film Stormy Weather (1943) became her signature. She was blacklisted in the early 1950s for her friendship with Paul Robeson and her outspokenness about discrimination, but she performed in the musical Jamaica in 1957 and later made several films.

Born in New York City, she was raised by her actor mother, and by the age of 16 she was dancing at Harlem's Cotton Club. With her stunning looks and electric voice, she soon became a popular singer with bands such as those of Noble Sissle and Teddy Wilson. She toured Europe and the USA as a nightclub singer, spoke out increasingly against racism, and published her autobiography Lena in 1965.



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He got his first real job at age 16 as a board electrician and spot operator on ``Jamaica,'' starring Lena Horne.
The most memorable full-length film she choreographed is Stormy Weather, the 1943 classic show-business story that starred Lena Horne and Bill "Bojangles" Robinson.
Mills' achievements opened the doors for generations of black female stars from Lena Horne to modern times, and chapters recount how Mills was able to break through the white barriers to become a star in her own right.
 
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