The Beatles' Historic Stance Against Segregation, with Dr. Kitty Oliver
BC the Beatles19 Juni 2024

The Beatles' Historic Stance Against Segregation, with Dr. Kitty Oliver

Today is Juneteenth, a day that has held significance for the Black community for many years and one that, for the past four, has become a national holiday in the United States. It’s a day for education, listening, learning, and increasing awareness of the Black experience. Though we are two white women who are still doing a lot of learning and listening ourselves, we wanted to celebrate Juneteenth by exploring the Beatles’ connection to civil rights, especially during their 1964 tour.

1964 was time of continuing segregation and heightened racial tensions in America's southern states. But racial segregation, as it was in America, didn’t exist in England. The Beatles were famously appalled at the idea that any of their concerts would take place in front of audiences separated by race, and they refused to play to segregated crowds. John Lennon famously remarked, “We never play to segregated audiences and we aren’t going to start now. I’d sooner lose our appearance money.” The city was resistant but eventually relented, resulting in Jacksonville's first integrated concert.

Our guest today is Dr. Kitty Oliver, who has firsthand experience of this moment. As a Black Beatles fan growing up in Jacksonville, Florida, Dr. Oliver jumped at the opportunity to attend the integrated concert; she was one of few Black teens in the audience.

Beatles fans will recognize Dr. Oliver from her appearance in the Ron Howard-directed documentary Eight Days A Week: The Touring Years. She joins us today to recount her story of attending the first integrated concert in Jacksonville history, against the backdrop of growing up in a segregated city.

Dr. Oliver is a veteran journalist, an academic, an author, an oral historian, producer, and professional singer. She holds a PhD in Comparative Studies focusing on race and ethnic communication. She calls herself “a product of the civil rights era who came of age with integration in the US,” and is the founder of the cross-cultural Race and Change Oral History Archive, which is housed in Special Collections at the African American Research Library and Cultural Center. She has written and/or compiled three books focusing on race, change, and her own memories of growing up Black in the South.

---------------------

Avsnitt(100)

March 1966 — The Image and the Cage

March 1966 — The Image and the Cage

This episode is Part Three of our 12-part series, Beneath the Surface: The Beatles in 1966, a year-long, month-by-month look at the band’s most transformational year. March 1966 marks the moment the B...

25 Mars 53min

Capitol Gains: The Beatles' Records in America, with Author Andrew Cook (Part 2)

Capitol Gains: The Beatles' Records in America, with Author Andrew Cook (Part 2)

Today we’re bringing you part two of our interview with Andrew Cook, author of the new book Capitol Gains: Exposing the Conflict between the Beatles and the Record Label that Made Them. In part one, w...

4 Mars 42min

Capitol Gains: The Beatles' Records in America, with Author Andrew Cook (Part 1)

Capitol Gains: The Beatles' Records in America, with Author Andrew Cook (Part 1)

Today we’re joined by Andrew Cook, author of the new book Capitol Gains: Exposing the Conflict Between The Beatles and the Record Label That Made Them — part one of a two-part conversation. If you thi...

24 Feb 53min

February 1966 — Words That Will Echo

February 1966 — Words That Will Echo

This episode is Part Two of our 12-part series, Beneath the Surface: The Beatles in 1966, a year-long, month-by-month look at the band’s most transformational year. February 1966 continues the strange...

17 Feb 52min

January 1966 — The Calm Before the Weird

January 1966 — The Calm Before the Weird

This episode is Part One of our 12-part series, Beneath the Surface: The Beatles in 1966, a year-long, month-by-month look at the band’s most transformational year. In January 1966, everything about t...

27 Jan 41min

(Just Like) Starting Over: Celebrating 1966 in 2026

(Just Like) Starting Over: Celebrating 1966 in 2026

It's been a minute, and we're back with a new season! This year, we're focusing the transformational year of 1966 — tracking the Beatles' lives, month-by-month.  In this preview episode, we catch up o...

13 Jan 44min

Digging Into The Beatles ’64 Doc & New Mono Set!

Digging Into The Beatles ’64 Doc & New Mono Set!

Another crazy month for us Beatles fans! This episode, we’re going through the Beatles’ new vinyl releases, including the brand-new Mono box set and its breakouts. (Which you can win in our special ho...

25 Nov 20241h 4min

Yoko Ono in Your Mind, with Author Madeline Bocaro

Yoko Ono in Your Mind, with Author Madeline Bocaro

We’re back from our summer break and are so excited to welcome author Madeline Bocaro. Madeline is a music journalist with a lifelong admiration for Yoko Ono. Her new book, In Your Mind - The Infinite...

21 Aug 202447min

Populärt inom Nöje

mellan-himmel-och-jord-med-jlc
filip-fredrik-svarar
mardromsgasten
badfluence
dialogiskt
chilla-med-de-vet-du
rss-p3-musikdokumentar
schulman-show
fem-i-topp
mannen-utan-spar
gott-snack-med-fredrik-soderholm
skandal
hemma-hos-strage
sexet
rss-rockpodden
karatefylla
alex-room-service-en-podcast-om-kiss
podme-bio-4
hundaren-motgangspodden-av-tomas-andersson-wij
let-me-know-kiss-army-sweden-podcast