Home / Full timeline / Will Marion Cook opens the sensational musical-comedy sketch “Clorindy: the Origin of the Cakewalk” on Broadway.
Will Marion Cook opens the sensational musical-comedy sketch “Clorindy: the Origin of the Cakewalk” on Broadway.
1898 (Jan 15)
Will Marion Cook directed the sensational musical-comedy sketch "Clorindy: the Origin of the Cakewalk" on Broadway. Disregarding warnings that Broadway audiences would not listen to Blacks singing Black opera, Cook composed music to lyrics written by famed Black poet Paul Laurence Dunbar and assembled a company of twenty-six Black performers. The performances of the first Black musical-comedy sketch in New York were held at the Casino Roof Garden. Cook was born in Washington, D.C., in 1869. The son of a Howard University law professor, he was sent at age thirteen to the Oberlin Conservatory to study the violin. Cook later studied with violinist Joseph Joachim in Berlin and with John White and Antonin Dvorak at the National Conservatory of Music. Cook made additional theatrical history when In Dahomey (1902), his satire on the American Colonization Movement's efforts to promote Black emigration to Africa, opened on Times Square on Broadway. Other Cook successes were In Abyssinia (1906) and In Bandana Land (1907). Cook's lively shows left his audiences whistling and tapping their feet and helped popularize the "cakewalk" both in the United States and Europe. Cook died in 1944.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.
Additional Resources:
- Video and explainer of the Cake Walk
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0stVuBlFijc - Wikipedia article about "Clorindy: the Origin of the Cakewalk"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clorindy:_The_Origin_of_the_Cakewalk