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Chuck Green (6 November
1919-7 March 1997)
2003 Inductee
Chuck Green, jazz tap dancer, was born
Charles Green in Fitzgerald, Georgia. As a young boy,
he stuck bottle caps to the bottom of his bare feet
and danced on the sidewalk for coins. At the age of
six, he won third place in an amateur dance contest
in which Noble Sissle was the bandleader, and soon thereafter
toured the South as a child tap dancer. At the age of
nine, he was spotted by a talent agent and taken to
New York to study tap dance.
Nat Nazzaro, known as the “monster
agent” by those who knew of his practice of signing
vulnerable young performers to ironclad contracts, signed
Green to his own contract when he was twelve years old.
A few years later, Green formed the team of Shorty and
Slim with childhood friend James Walker, a talented
comic dancer. They studied the great comedians of the
day, picking up lines of patter from such shows on the
black vaudeville circuit as Pigmeat Crack Shot and Hunter
Pete and Repeate. “Their act was hilarious. Chuck
was a natural-- so cute,” tap dancer Leonard Reed
remembered, adding that Walker at the time was tall
and skinny and Green was small as a chair. They did
what was called “dumb talk comedy,” a rapid
rhythmic banter that was interspersed between the songs
and dances. As Walker played a broken-down vibraphone
that looked as if it were falling apart, Green sang,
“Some people was born to be doctors . . . some
people were born to be kings . . . I fortunately was
born to swing.” Then they tap danced, with Green
making graceful turns and Walker excelling in leg-o-mania.
Nazarro at the time also managed Buck
and Bubbles (Ford Lee “Buck” Washington
and John Sublett Bubbles). He suggested that Green and
Walker study the singing-dancing-comedy team that had
bypassed the black vaudeville Theatre Owners Booking
Association (TOB.A) circuit to become headliners on
the white vaudeville circuit; by 1922 they had played
New York’s prestigious Palace Theatre. Changing
the name of their act to Chuck and Chuckles, Green and
Walker were groomed as a “juvenile act”
to Buck and Bubbles. Bubbles soon took Green under his
wing, calling him “the son I never had,”
and offered to teach him what he knew, though it came
in the form of a challenge. “Bubbles would do
a step just once,” Green explained, “and
then say, ‘you got one chance.’ He was a
creator. They called him the ‘father of rhythm.’”
Bubbles’ style of rhythm tapping--in which he
loaded the bar (put many extra beats into a bar of music)
and dropped his heels, hitting unusual accents and syncopations--
was revolutionary. He prepared for the new sound of
bebop in the 1940s, and anticipated the prolonged melodic
lines of Cool jazz in the 1950s. “If you dropped
your heels, you could get a more floating quality, like
a leaf coming off top of a tree,” said Green,
who became a protege of Bubbles. “It changed the
quality of the sound, gave it tonation.”
Through the 1930s and early 1940s, Chuck
and Chuckles toured Europe, Australia, and the United
States, performing in such venues as Radio City Music
Hall, the Paramount, Apollo, and Capital theatres. Jobs
were plentiful and their manager had the team doubling
up on performances. They averaged five stage shows a
day, played nightclubs until early morning, and toured
nonstop with big bands across the country and abroad.
By 1944, the strain and wear of performing had taken
its toll. The team of Chuck and Chuckles broke up, and
Green was committed to a mental institution. When he
was released some fifteen years later, he was changed--
extremely introverted and seemingly in a world of his
own. His friends thought it a miracle he could still
dance. By experimenting with the new harmonies, rhythmic
patterns, and melodic approaches of the bop musicians,
Green created his own bop-influenced style of rhythm
tapping that was ad-libbed, up-tempo, and ultra cool.
In the sixties, Green began again to
perform on stage and television. He appeared with the
Copasetics (a tap fraternity dedicated to the memory
of Bill “Bojangles” Robinson) on the popular
educational channel W.N.E. T. in a show hosted by Dick
Cavett. On 6 July 1963 he performed at the Newport Jazz
Festival as a member of the “Old Time Hoofers”
with Honi Coles, Charles “Cookie” Cook,
Ernest Brown, Pete Nugent, Cholly Atkins, and Baby Laurence.
The show was introduced by jazz historian Marshall Stearns
and marked the resurgence of tap dance in popular culture.
At the New York’s Village Vanguard
in 1964, the legendary tap dancer Groundhog faced Green
in a tap challenge. “I’ve been waiting to
battle Chuck Green for twenty years,” Groundhog
told Stearns. “Dancing is like gang war and tonight
I’m up against one of the best.” Groundhog’s
rapid and syncopated staccato tapping was foiled by
Green’s relaxed and fluid style of jazz tapping
and almost dreamlike grace. In 1969 Green appeared with
members of Harlem’s Hoofer’s Club for a
series of “Tap Happenings” that were produced
in New York City by Letitia Jay.
Through seventies and eighties, Green
continued to perform with the Copasetics. Host Honi
Coles introduced him as, “Chuck Green, the greatest
tap dancer in the world.” When asked why Green
was bestowed that special title, Coles answered, “His
slow dance is genius. Most dancers would fall on their
face. His timing is like a musician’s.”
In the late eighties, Green toured Europe
with The Original Hoofers, appeared as a guest soloist
at the Kennedy Center Honors, and was awarded an honorary
professorship at Washington University. In New York
in 1987, he began teaching a weekly two-hour tap class
to a dedicated cross-section of New York’s top
professional jazz dancers. With great clarity and precision,
he led his students into the complexity of his material
with warmth and ease, allowing the dancer to hear and
feel the weight of the rhythm and movement.
In the late eighties and early nineties,
Green was twice honored with a New York Dance and Performance
Award (the Bessies) for his innovative achievements
and technical skill in dance, and for his work in Black
and Blue (1989) on Broadway.
Tall and big-footed, Green was a surprisingly
light, graceful, and melodious rhythm dancer who was
known for his specialty “strut” when he
came on stage and for his tick-tock tap sounds. Whether
dancing to such favorite tunes as “A Train”
or “Caravan,” Green’s smooth and graceful
rhythm tapping was uncluttered, even, and beautifully
phrased. He has been called the “Poet of Tap.”
In the “Green, Chaney, Buster,
Slyde” number from the 1996 Broadway musical,
Bring in ‘Da Noise, Bring in ‘Da Funk, Savion
Glover celebrates Green as a master teacher who “was
educatin’ people, not entertainin.’”
“Chuck’s dancin’,” rapped Glover
as he danced before a multi-paneled mirror, “was
like, kind of slow. Every tap was clean, you know what
I’m sayin’. You hear every tap. He was,
just like, on the slow type, smooth type.”
Chuck Green died in Oakland, California.
The fluency of Green’s tap dancing is captured
in George Niremberg’s documentary film, No Maps
On My Taps (1980) with “Sandman” Sims and
Bunny Briggs. His free-association poetry of speech
is beautifully rendered in the film, About Tap (1987).
His gentleness of spirit is immortalized in Masters
of Tap (1983), a documentary film that also includes
Honi Coles and Will Gaines. The sheer musicality of
Green’s solo dancing is seen in the film Dance
Black America (1984).
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