Terri Francis,
"What Does Beyoncé See in Josephine Baker?: A Brief Film History of Sampling La Diva, La Bakaire"
(page 4 of 5)
Touki Bouki, known as sub-Saharan Africa's first avant-garde
film, cites Baker through her singing voice. This citation is associated
with the film's two main characters, Mory (Magaye Niang) and Anta
(Mareme Niang), who scheme and plot to leave their town for Paris.
Whenever they discuss their plans, the clip from Baker's recording is
heard. In one particular scene, the couple is riding on Mory's
motorcycle through a field of fallow trees. Gradually, the sound of the
bike gives way to Baker's voice. She sings: "Paris, Paris, a bit of
paradise on earth." The action—Mory and Anta traveling on modern
motorized transport—and the desolate setting, combined with Baker's
beckoning lyrics, is ironic and cutting. For as Baker's excerpt recurs,
both her high-pitched singing voice and the lyrics seem to constitute a
siren's song enticing the young travelers to their destruction. The
recurrence can also express Mory and Anta's tenacity, true to their
commitment to migrate. In the Baker sequences, the success she
represents, along with the fantasy Paris of which she sings, reinforces
the illusory, seductive nature of their closely held dreams.
Next, the story of Alma's Rainbow includes a character that is
a former Baker impersonator who has returned, broke and a little lost,
from paradise to New York. In this girl's coming-of-age comedy-drama,
Rainbow Gold (Victoria Gabrielle Platt) seeks aesthetic and sexual
independence from her protective mother. The mother, Alma Gold (Kim
Weston-Moran), runs a beauty shop, located on the first floor of a
brownstone she apparently owns. Suspicious of unregulated glamour and
Rainbow's dreams of studying dance, she keeps a close eye on her
daughter. In the Baker sample, Alma celebrates her birthday with
friends, and at one point they gather for a group picture. Before the
photographer can click the shutter, all eyes turn toward the Baker
impersonator, Ruby Gold (Mizan Nunes). Singing "Happy Birthday" in
French and wearing a costume worthy of Baker, which she shows the rapt
audience by turning around slowly, the display is much more her
spectacle than it is a tribute to her sister. Predictably, they clash
throughout the movie, as this Bakeresque character contrasts with her
mother, who is financially responsible but repressed and cautious about
romance. They do find ways to come to terms with each other and their
particular struggles through their shared experiences performing in an
all-girl singing group. They both confront the bundle of ambition,
artistry, and folly that this period in their lives represents.
Alma's Rainbow shares Tree Shade's concerns with audacity
and self-expression in constructions of beauty and womanhood,
highlighting the risk and release involved in them through evocations of
Baker.
Finally, Madame Sata is based on the story of Joao Francisco
de Santos (Lázero Ramos), who was a well-known Brazilian transvestite
performer with the stage name Madame Sata and an early contemporary of
Baker's. The movie he has inspired features an excerpt from Baker's
film, Princess Tam Tam. The clip serves to paint a picture of De
Santos' interior life, where his wishes are playful yet tinged with
desperation. Following a sequence in which De Santos discusses his ideal
life of leisure and beauty with a friend, they are seen in a cinema
audience watching the extended production sequence from Princess.
Madame Sata, out of costume, gazes at the screen intently, studying
Baker's moves, taking in every detail of her presentation, perhaps for
use in his own show. The position of the Princess Tam Tam excerpt
in the movie invites connection between movie viewing and daydreaming.
Moreover, it indexes Baker's status as an international feminine icon
that, in this case, embodies intersecting fantasies of
self-absorption/self-expression, leisure, stardom, and glamour. The
highly constructed, illusory nature of gender—and race, for that
matter—in Baker's performance helps to make it available for
impersonation and sampling by both men and women.
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