August 18, 2018

"When she was performing, she didn’t slither out of her mink or her chinchilla as though she was doing a flirtatious little striptease for her audience’s pleasure."

"Instead, she discarded her fur coats as though she was shedding bothersome earthly shackles in order to commune directly with the Holy Spirit. The coat drop was a signal that Franklin... was ready to loose her full vocal power in a transformative sermon of gospel, soul and rhythm and blues. That voice was more lush and valuable than the coat. Still, she did not want to sweat out her coat. She threw it off. The coat was dismissed."

From "Aretha Franklin, secret style icon: With the drop of a fur coat, she proclaimed her worth" by Robin Givhan.

What about the usual criticism of wearing fur? Givhan refers to it but only in passing:
Franklin had earned [the furs], and they were worn with pride and pleasure and in spite of all PETA’s begging and bullying. So, so many furs. Worn against the cold and worn in the face of adversity. Worn with hauteur. Worn because she was a star, and furs are what stars wear.
In the comments at WaPo, I see:
Having a good singing voice is no justification for deplorable behavior. Flaunting big, gaudy fur coats is insensitive to the animal torture that it is.
And:
Does your "religion" or "church" have anything to say about torturing and killing other sentient beings?
And:
Aretha was able to wear fur because she was grandfathered (grandmothered?) in. Mad about a legendary black woman being allowed to do something no one else is allowed to do today, black or white? Tough. Watching that move was like watching living black and feminist history. Until the 1980s or so few people thought much about wearing fur. By the 2000s virtually no one in polite company wore fur any longer. Aretha was at heart an old fashioned church lady through and through. As Robin alludes to, those in the church community with enough means definitely wore furs and wore them proudly. Aretha pulling off her fur coat mid-performance was similar and perhaps even more powerful than James Brown shedding his coat (which in his performance was more a cartoon statement of need and desperation). Hers was a statement of shedding oppression and gaining freedom.
Another thing that happens in the comments — because it has to happen everywhere — is Trump. Someone drags in that Trump wrote that Franklin "worked for him" and others add things like "Trump is a cockroach" and Trump (unlike Franklin) "has made nothing and has shared nothing, his entire life," and — this is good, dark humor:
I think that what the Trumps did to those animals should be done to them. Satisfied?

24 comments:

The Crack Emcee said...

I don't know how to evaluate dropping a coat, unless someone's about to fight ("Uh-Oh!") but I can remember when Aretha's generation flourished, and what a mink coat meant to the 52 Girls blacks were compared with, and then it makes a kind of inverse logic. As I said on another thread, a value system worth valuing.

tim in vermont said...

I went with a friend to see Patty LaBelle a couple of years ago, and she did the same thing.

The Crack Emcee said...

"Aretha was able to wear fur because she was grandfathered (grandmothered?) in. Mad about a legendary black woman being allowed to do something no one else is allowed to do today, black or white? Tough. Watching that move was like watching living black and feminist history. Until the 1980s or so few people thought much about wearing fur. By the 2000s virtually no one in polite company wore fur any longer. Aretha was at heart an old fashioned church lady through and through. As Robin alludes to, those in the church community with enough means definitely wore furs and wore them proudly. Aretha pulling off her fur coat mid-performance was similar and perhaps even more powerful than James Brown shedding his coat (which in his performance was more a cartoon statement of need and desperation). Hers was a statement of shedding oppression and gaining freedom."

Analysis: True.

tim in vermont said...

A mink is a weasel, and if you have ever seen the aftermath of a weasel in a chicken coop, the walls looked like the shower scene from Psycho, for example, your sympathy for them sort of drops. Nobody much wears the fur of vegetarian animals. I doubt Aretha did.

David Begley said...

Many on the Left would love to torture and skin the President alive. And he’s the divisive one?

Chris N said...

It’d be nice to know what the rules are before a howling mob of life's losers shows up at your door.

Everyone will eventually get turned on by the mob. You can only win by not playing.

Chris N said...

‘Turned-upon?’

Eleanor said...

Using a cherished icon to try to diminish Trump doesn't work. Nobody who supports Trump has his mind changed about Trump, and now instead of talking about a beautiful lady with a great voice and individual style, we're talking about Trump and fur. She used her music to touch people's hearts and minds. That's what we should be talking about if we absolutely have to inject politics into it. The left eats its own in so many ways.

Tank said...

If they can trace one of those fur coats back to Trump, then they would have something.

THIS is IT !!!!!

Amadeus 48 said...

Let's go get those Manafort jurors! They are taking too long!

The hatred and stupidity run deep in our nation's capital. WaPoo is there to add its thundering voice to the mob.

Rigelsen said...

Nobody much wears the fur of vegetarian animals

No, but we do wear their tanned hides. Never worn fur myself, but leather versus vinyl? No contest.

tim in vermont said...

Liberals are control freaks. Shame on this woman for defying them!

Oso Negro said...

I'm gonna be honest, here. I know that Respect became an anthem, and I have Freeway of Love on my playlist, but I like The Supremes a lot better. And I am probably more likely to listen to Gladys Knight. Wilson Pickett, Percy Sledge, Same and Dave, Otis Redding, Sly and the Family Stone, and the one and only Stevie Wonder. Just saying.

BUMBLE BEE said...

Just copying James Brown, who symbolically cast off the "chains of the proletariat" as well as his cape.

Birkel said...

Love Otis Redding.
His legend was cut WAY too short but still he remains.

Fernandinande said...

"CBS affiliate WTKR reports a witness said he heard the two people in the argument were fighting over whether or not Halle Berry played Aretha Franklin in a movie.
...

Both men got emergency medical assessment and treatment by Suffolk Fire & Rescue personnel before being transported to local hospitals for further treatment."

Clyde said...

He's a billionaire, yet he's living in all of their heads rent-free.

William said...

I wonder if, when the Indians collected scalps, they placed a higher value on some scalps rather than others. Were blondes favored over brunettes? Did they pay a premium for red hair scalps hoping thereby to gain the mystical powers thatred haired people possess?

William said...

I have more songs by Doris Day than Aretha Franklin on my playlist. Doris Day is much nicer to animals than Aretha Franklin. I don't think that they will make anywhere near the fuss about Doris Day when she passes on as they're doing about Aretha Franklin......Ella Fitzgerald is my favorite female vocalist. I don't know if she ever wore fur. It would not change my opinion of her if she did. You have to judge people by the ethos of the era in which they lived. It's too bad that Aretha didn't share the moral grandeur that makes Doris Day such a saint, but she's not a bad person for that.

Lloyd W. Robertson said...

I keep thinking there might be an affinity between a certain generation of African-Americans--maybe especially church ladies--and Trump. Ostentation, flaunting wealth in order to do things with style, may be part of it.

I'm thinking of teasing my son: Aretha Franklin wasn't a fine person?

Char Char Binks, Esq. said...

It's cool when black folks do it. They do everything cool.

Hammond X. Gritzkofe said...

Pancreatic cancer - so it is reported. No one deserves that. The woman departed this orb with grace. Moreso than given by venal "Fashion Critic" Givhan.

Molly said...

The WaPo had a lot of articles about AF's life and death. This was one. Another mentioned that AF had a child at age 12 (not a secret I guess, but not something I knew). https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/arts-and-entertainment/wp/2018/08/16/from-giving-birth-at-12-years-old-to-physical-fights-the-difficult-life-and-times-of-aretha-franklin/?utm_term=.f87b280c48e8

The comments section was uniformly negative -- along the lines of "this is not the time to slander the memory of a great artist" -- and (in response to the negative comments??) the WaPo rewrote the article. So now many of the comments appear to be non-sensical. One comment says, "Don't rewrite the article without making a link to the earlier version."

This is why people agree with Trump that the media is the enemy: they try to hide their mistakes (or their embarrassments -- my argument here is not dependent on your agreeing that publishing these facts was a mistake). Look for the article on the WaPo website: I bet you can't find it from there. Then google for Aretha had a baby and you will come to the link I provided here.

truth speaker said...

Screw all this revisionist history about her and what her songs supposedly meant.

Sick of people making things into something they aren't, after the fact.

She had a great voice and some really good songs, even into the 80s, that's it. She didn't cure cancer or prove that Einstein was right; she just sang like she meant it and brought a lot of enjoyment to many, many people. That is enough for any life.