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Lady Sings the Blues

Lady Sings the Blues

  • Status: Released
  • 12-10-1972
  • Runtime: 144 min
  • Score: 6.899
  • Vote count: 74

Chronicles the rise and fall of legendary blues singer Billie Holiday, beginning with her traumatic youth. The story depicts her early attempts at a singing career and her eventual rise to stardom, as well as her difficult relationship with Louis McKay, her boyfriend and manager. Casting a shadow over even Holiday's brightest moments is the vocalist's severe drug addiction, which threatens to end both her career and her life.

Diana Ross

Billie Holiday

Billy Dee Williams

Louis McKay

Richard Pryor

Piano Man

James T. Callahan

Reg Hanley

Paul Hampton

Harry

Sid Melton

Jerry

Virginia Capers

Mama Holiday

Yvonne Fair

Yvonne

Isabel Sanford

The Madame

Tracee Lyles

The Prostitute

Ned Glass

The Agent

Milton Selzer

The Doctor

Norman Bartold

The Detective #1

Clay Tanner

The Detective #2

Jester Hairston

The Butler

Bert Kramer

The Policeman

Paul Micale

The Maitre d'

Michele Aller

The Singer

Byron Kane

The Announcer

Barbara Minkus

Radio Actress

Kay Lewis

Angela DeMarco

Helen Lewis

Debbie McGee

George Wyner

The M.C.

Shirley Melline

The Policewoman

Toby Russ

The Jail Guard

Larry Duran

Hood #1

Ernest Robinson

Hood #2

Don McGovern

Reporter #1

Dick Poston

Reporter #2

Charles Woolf

Reporter #3

Denise Denise

Denise

Lynn Hamilton

Aunt Ida

Victor Morosco

Vic

Robert L. Gordy

The Hawk

Harry Caesar

The Rapist

Paulene Myers

Mrs. Edson

Scatman Crothers

Big Ben

CinemaSerf

I’ve never really be an huge fan of Diana Ross’s voice, but there’s no getting away from her personable and visceral performance here as the flawed jazz musician Billie Holliday. With Motown’s Berry Gordy at the helm it was always going to lead on the music and it does that effectively too for the most part whilst giving us the basic bones of her turbulent battle with narcotics. We start in that position so often inhabited by aspirational young black Americans, a poverty stricken environment where sex was all too often the way young women made a living, before she gets that lucky break in a Harlem nightclub. That introduces her to Louis McKay (Billy Dee Williams) who takes up the management of her career. Unlike with many of her contemporaries, though, he is genuinely interested in his protégée and tries to keep her on the rails as her success exposes her to bigotry and heroin. Gradually the headlines begin to turn against her, the pressures increase and her talent alone can no longer save her from this very sad, but predicable, path of self-destruction. Ross, helped often by some quite powerful make-up effects, is entirely convincing right through the stages of Holliday’s rise and fall, and Williams as well as an authentic looking production design also manages to evoke some of the trials and tribulations faced by an African American woman in a very much white man’s world. As you’d expect, the soundtrack reminds us of some of the gorgeous songs like “God Bless the Child” and the title song that made her famous. It’s a bit speculative when it comes to the private life of this woman, and can be a bit heavy weather towards the disappointingly rushed conclusion, but it’s still a classy production that largely steers clear of being adulatory.