NEW YORK _ Columbia University and the Apollo Theater Foundation plan to create an oral history of the famed Harlem theater that launched the careers of Ella Fitzgerald, Sarah Vaughan, Stevie Wonder, Smokey Robinson and other music legends.
The Apollo Theater Oral History Project will feature interviews with performers as well as cultural figures and politicians who helped make Harlem one of the nation’s most vibrant communities.
Planned as part of the landmark theater’s 75th anniversary in 2009, the project is scheduled to be completed in 2010 and will include an online component. The audio and video archive will be housed at Columbia and open to the public a year later.
“We want to document the Apollo’s legacy and its place in American popular culture and African-American history and music,” said foundation president Jonelle Procope. “It allows us to begin talking to a range of people who were connected to the Apollo and its history.”
Among the 30 to 40 people who will be interviewed for the project are Leslie Uggams, Fred Wesley and Robinson.
Uggams, a Broadway and TV actress and singer, won a Tony Award in 1968 for best actress in a musical for “Hallelujah, Baby!” She just finished an off-Broadway run in “First Breeze of Summer.”
Procope said Uggams began performing at the Apollo at age 8 and grew up in the theater. “She can talk about what it was like behind the scenes and who else was there,” Procope said.