"Live with it': Betty White defied racist demands in 1954
Last edited Sun Jan 2, 2022, 09:16 AM - Edit history (2)
Live with it: Betty White defied racist demands in 1954
Retropolis
Live with it: Betty White defied racist demands in 1954
By Gillian Brockell
December 31, 2021 at 6:47 p.m. EST
Arthur, did you have a nice weekend? Betty White asked Arthur Duncan. The entertainer, in her early 30s at the time, was center stage, speaking to the young Black tap dancer seated on her right.
I did something a little different, Duncan told her. I rehearsed with a choral group thats going to do Christmas carols this Christmas. ... Oh, wonderful, White said. Are you going to go house to house?
His reply to her that they would be performing at local hospitals and orphanages was as wholesome as the beloved actress and entertainer, who
died this week at 99.
[Goodbye to Betty White, popular cultures beloved (and saucy) great-grandma]
Duncan appeared on the show at least three times. On
another episode, White interviewed a Black child during the kids segment.
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By Gillian Brockell
Gillian Brockell is a staff writer for The Washington Post's history blog, Retropolis. She has been at The Post since 2013 and previously worked as a video editor. Twitter
https://twitter.com/gbrockell