Bert Williams

Born
November 12, 1874
in Nassau, Bahamas 
Active Decades
19001020304050607080902000 
 
by Freddy Stidean
Bert Williams was the recording industry's first important and enduring black artist. His dry but insightful humor, coupled with a downtrodden but persevering persona, found popular success at the turn-of-the-century which continued into the Roaring Twenties. Williams was also a noteworthy songwriter, performed on stages ranging from minstrel shows and vaudeville to Broadway, and made great strides in overcoming racial barriers in American entertainment.



Williams was born in Nassau in the West Indies, on November 12, 1874 or 1875. In 1885 he moved with his family to California. By 1893 he had teamed with long time partner George Walker and begun honing his talents in and around San Francisco. Two years later the act relocated to Chicago, but it was the following year they made their Broadway debut in Oriental America, the first "Negro" production featured on the Broadway stage. At about this time the team began turning a serious hand to songwriting.



Read More
   

If you like this artist, you may also enjoy...
Gene Greene, Wendell Hall