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Frankie Manning has passed away

dhermann1

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,154
Location
Da Bronx, NY, USA
Frankie has been in the hospital for several days now. He's gravely ill. He's fighting and we have hope. Please send out your prayers. He's just a month short of his 95th birthday.
 

Marc Chevalier

Gone Home
Messages
18,192
Location
Los Feliz, Los Angeles, California
The swing world mourns. Someone should make a movie about this man: his story is every bit as compelling as that of the Buena Vista Social Club musicians. A good, good person. :(


I first met Mr. Manning at the '97 Avalon Ball on Catalina Island. He liked my suit and tie. :)


.
 

Hammelby

One of the Regulars
Messages
227
Location
Copenhagen, Denmark
I am filled with such sorrow.. its hard to grasp that my great hero is gone.

But i pray that he had his last wish fullfilled, that heaven would be a eternal savoy ballroom. God bless you frankie! You inspired me with your enthusiasm for the lindy hop and made my dark days shine with your contagious smile. Like you did, I will keep listening to that swing music to celebrate the gladest of times and to lift the badest.

Thank you for taking time to chat with to a little cat like me, you were so gentle and funny, a true gentleman. Im sorry we never met again at Herräng as promised. Rest in peace my man, and now dance your behind of on that last stairway to heaven!

Thank you for everything Frankie!

Much Love and tears,
Hammelby
 

resortes805

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,019
Location
SoCal
Truly a sad occurrence. The Frankie 95 event will still go on, and will be a great memorial to the ambassador of Lindy Hop.
 

Trickeration

Practically Family
Messages
548
Location
Back in Long Beach, Ca. At last!
My husband and I met Frankie at the Century masters show in 2007. We got to hang out with him all day during rehearsals. He was such a wonderful man, and an inspiration to countless dancers. I'll miss him. He's dancing with angels now.
 

Feraud

Bartender
Messages
17,190
Location
Hardlucksville, NY
Here is just one of many articles about Frankie's passing.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/04/28/arts/dance/28manning.html?_r=3&hpw

April 28, 2009
Frankie Manning, the Ambassador and Master of Lindy Hop, Dies at 94
By TERRY MONAGHAN
Frankie Manning, a master of swing-era dance who went from the Savoy Ballroom in Harlem to Broadway and Hollywood, and then after a long break enjoyed a globe-trotting second career as an inspirational teacher and choreographer of the Lindy hop, died on Monday in Manhattan. He was 94 and lived in Corona, Queens.

His death was announced by his companion, Judy Pritchett.

Excelling in what quickly became first America’s and then the world’s most popular participatory form of jazz dancing in the 1930s and ’40s, Mr. Manning led the way in giving the Lindy hop professional expression. The dance, which enables both partners to improvise rhythmically at the same time, has had enduring appeal as both a social and a performance dance, sweeping aside hierarchical, class, ethnic and gender conventions. When questioned about the apparently irresistible allure of the Lindy, Mr. Manning invariably described it as “a series of three-minute romances.”

Dapper and charming to the end, he always conveyed the muscular and pile-driving yet rhythmically rich style of his heyday, when he propelled partners through the air at lightning speeds to the swinging sounds of Chick Webb, Duke Ellington and Count Basie at the Savoy, Harlem’s premier ballroom. From there he ascended the entertainment ladder, appearing in Cotton Club productions, Mike Todd’s 1939 musical “The Hot Mikado” and movies like “Radio City Revels” (1938) and “Hellzapoppin’ ” (1941).

Born on May 26, 1914, Mr. Manning left Jacksonville, Fla., with his mother three years later as part of the great northward migration of Southern blacks. They settled in Harlem. One day in 1929, on his way to Sunday school, he experienced a cultural epiphany on Seventh Avenue, outside the Alhambra Ballroom, when he discovered that he could take part in a youth dance there instead. Dancing soon became his passion, and though his mother initially dismissed his dancing as “too stiff,” he practiced incessantly and kept getting better.

In the early 1930s the entrepreneur Herbert White invited Mr. Manning to join his elite troupe, Whitey’s Lindy Hoppers, at the Savoy Ballroom. Granted free admission to the Savoy, where he moved to the incessant rhythms of the major 1930s big bands, white as well as black, he rapidly progressed as a dancer. But Mr. Manning, who was working as a furrier, did not consider himself a professional; as he explained in his autobiography, “Frankie Manning: Ambassador of Lindy Hop” (Temple University Press, 2007), written with Cynthia R. Millman, “We didn’t get paid, but the people watching might throw some money on the floor near the dancers, and we would divide it up.”

Mr. White paired Mr. Manning with Naomi Waller, and his distinctive style took shape. By the time the two of them signed a contract to dance at the Cotton Club, in 1936, shortly after that fabled room had moved from Harlem to Midtown, Mr. Manning was indisputably a professional.

Their success there led to a 1937 tour of France, Ireland and Britain, which included a royal command performance at the London Palladium. Mr. Manning was soon dancing in the Hollywood movie “Radio City Revels” and on tour across New Zealand and Australia.

Back home again he danced in “The Hot Mikado” at the New York World’s Fair and appeared in Hollywood’s version of the comedy team Olsen and Johnson’s Broadway show “Hellzapoppin’,” in a sequence widely regarded as the best example of the Lindy hop on film. Mr. Manning’s ebullient, athletic style was captured at its peak in a sensational acrobatic duet with his new partner, Ann Johnson. Mr. Manning had choreographed a series of routines for four couples to Count Basie’s “Jumpin’ at the Woodside,” but different music was used in the film because the studio did not want to pay for the use of Basie’s song.

After serving with the Army in New Guinea, the Philippines and Japan during World War II, Mr. Manning led a four-person dance troupe called the Congaroos, which toured England and South America and appeared in the movie “Killer Diller” in 1948. But work began drying up in the 1950s, and Mr. Manning finally abandoned professional dancing for a Post Office job in 1955.

After 32 years of service, Mr. Manning embarked on a hyperactive retirement, returning his full attention to the Lindy, which had begun experiencing a revival. He taught at the Sandra Cameron Dance Center in Manhattan. Many bookings in the United States and abroad followed, and he began teaching, and eventually performing, with his son, Charles Young, known as Chazz, who had followed in his professional footsteps.

In 1989 Mr. Manning and another veteran of Whitey’s Lindy Hoppers, Norma Miller, choreographed a Lindy routine for Alvin Ailey’s “Opus McShann.” That same year Mr. Manning shared the Tony Award for choreography with Cholly Atkins, Henry LeTang and Fayard Nicholas for their contributions to the Broadway revue “Black and Blue.”

In 1992 he trained Denzel Washington for a Lindy scene in Spike Lee’s film “Malcolm X,” in which Mr. Manning also appeared. “We were just trying to keep up with him,” Mr. Washington recalled.

Other awards followed, including a National Heritage Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts in 2000. Mr. Manning and Ms. Miller were the only dancers to be included in Ken Burns’s PBS documentary series “Jazz.”

Mr. Manning’s marriage to Gloria Holloway ended in divorce. In addition to Ms. Pritchett, his companion, and Mr. Young, his son, who lives in Las Vegas, he is survived by another son, Frank Manning Jr. of Leonia, N.J.; a daughter, Marion Price of Atlanta; a half-brother, Vincent Manning of Tobyhanna, Pa.; seven grandchildren; and nine great-grandchildren.

In 1994, Mr. Manning celebrated his 80th birthday in New York at a four-day event billed as Can’t Top the Lindy Hop, attended by Lindy enthusiasts from around the world, at which he established a new tradition by dancing with 80 successive partners. In honor of his 85th birthday in 1999, he danced with 85 partners at the Roseland Ballroom, where his name was emblazoned on the marquee — and where back in the 1930s he had once been turned away.

In recent years two hip replacements had slowed Mr. Manning down, but he was still planning to celebrate his 95th birthday in grand style at a five-day Birthday Festival in New York reaffirming his leading role in ensuring the recognition of the Lindy hop, including the premiere of a documentary, “Frankie Manning: Never Stop Swinging,” on Channel 13 in New York. Organizers say that event — set for May 21-25, with some 2,000 expected to attend — will go on as scheduled, as a memorial.
28manning190.jpg
 

dhermann1

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,154
Location
Da Bronx, NY, USA
This was taken the last time I saw him, last fall. He was a dear wonderful man. I'm proud to say that I was on his Chrismas card list for many years. I guess I'll hold on to the last one as a keep sake.
MeandFrankie12708cropped.jpg
 

dhermann1

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,154
Location
Da Bronx, NY, USA
Frankie Manning's Funeral

I spent most of today at Frankie Manning's funeral. I don't have pictures, but I have impressions which I won't soon forget.
The emotional impact of the great man's passing has affected all sorts of people form all around the world. There were people from as far away as Sweden and Tokyo who flew here just for the event and of course from all over the country.
It was held at the magnificent Mount Morris Ascension Presbyterian Church, in the heart of Harlem, presided over by the Rev Calvin Butts. A steady stream of people, family and friends got up and made moving tributes to him, interspersed with music from the Harlem Renaissance Orchestra, and a LOT of dancing.
The interment was up at beautiful Woodlawn Cemetery, in the Bronx. Frankie is near Illinois Jacquet, Miles Davis, and many other jazz great of the Golden Era.
Later there was a repast at a wonderful building, The Gatehouse, which is an old pumping station for the New York City reservoir system. It is now a wonderful theater called Harlem Stage. The George Gee Jump Jivin' Wailers band played, and everybody danced.
A beautiful send off to a beautiful soul.
 

Chas

One Too Many
Messages
1,715
Location
Melbourne, Australia
Well, he lived long, well and was loved by many. Not a bad run!

I found this quote about dancing.

"I would only believe in a God that knows how to dance." ~ Friedrich Nietzsche

But I think that this one from Byron sums up Frankie's life pretty well.

"On with the dance! let joy be unconfined;
No sleep till morn, when Youth and Pleasure meet
To chase the glowing hours with flying feet."


That man's feet certainly flew.
 

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