Home / Full timeline / Veteran Black American actor Lincoln Theodore Andrew Perry, better known as Stepin Fetchit, dies of pneumonia and congestive heart failure in Woodland Hills, California.
Veteran Black American actor Lincoln Theodore Andrew Perry, better known as Stepin Fetchit, dies of pneumonia and congestive heart failure in Woodland Hills, California.
1985 (Nov 19)
Veteran Black American actor Lincoln Theodore Andrew Perry, better known as Stepin Fetchit, died of pneumonia and congestive heart failure in Woodland Hills, California. He was eighty-three years old. Perry, a native of Key West, Florida, began his acting career in the 1930s, appearing in such films as Steamboat Round the Bend, and was best known for his roles as “a shuffling, head-scratching” servant. He took his stage name from a race horse on which he had won some money in Oklahoma before leaving for Hollywood in the 1920s. Perry was the first Black performer to appear on film with such movie stars as Will Rogers and Shirley Temple. Perry's film characters were viewed by many Blacks as negative stereotypes of their race, but Perry himself often bristled at such criticism and defended his “contributions." He once said that “when I came into motion picture, it was as an individual. ... I had no manager, and no one had the idea of making a Negro a star. ... I became the first Negro entertainer to become a millionaire. ... All the things that Bill Cosby and Sidney Poitier have done wouldn't be possible if I hadn't broken that law (the race barrier). I set up thrones for them to come and sit on.” After the CBS television documentary entitled “Of Black America" characterized him as a “stupid, lazy, eye-rolling stereotype” in the 1960s, Perry sued the network for $3 million, alleging that he had been held “up to hatred, contempt, and ridicule.” A federal judge dismissed the suit in 1974.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.