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James Earl Jones A Voice In The

James Earl Jones: A Voice In The Crowd Essay, Research Paper


James Earl Jones: A Voice in the Crowd


March 19, 1996


People all around the world know the voice of James Earl Jones. From


Star Wars fans listening to the voice of Darth Vader to news junkies who hear a


voice that dramatically intones AThis is CNN@ just before all the cable network=


s station breaks to children who hear the stately voice of the majestic Mufasa,


the king of the jungle in Walt Disney Pictures= animated The Lion King – people


know this deep harmonious voice belongs to this consummate actor of stage and


screen.


James Earl Jones was born January 17th, 1931, in Arkabutala Township,


Mississippi. His natural parents, Ruth and Robert Earl, moved away to the


Mississippi Delta when he was an infant. Raised for the rest of his young life


by his maternal grandparents, James Earl developed a close relationship with the


Connollys. AMaggie and John Henry were always there, day by day, and they became


for me, once and for all, my mama and my papa@ (18) .


Less than three years later, the Connollys moved to Dublin Michigan


where James Earl and his >brother= Randy grew up in a remodelled chicken barn.


His early school life had a great impact on his style of speech and diction. AOn


my first day at school, I could not believe my ears,@ recalls Jones, AThey


called me James Earrrrl instead of James Uhl, as it had sounded in the


South@(40).


After the initial shock of hearing Northern dialect, Jones Aquickly


absorbed this different rhythm and style@ and embarked on the first half of a


long vocal journey leading to his distinctive speaking style. Until he was 14


years old, James Earl Jones rarely spoke mostly due to shyness, preferring


silence to the sound of his own voice.


Around the age of 10, James Earl Jones witnessed his brother, Randy,


having an epileptic seizure. His grandmother applied the only remedy she knew -


a thimbleful of bluing dye – and told James Earl to run for help. After


travelling a mile through a Michigan blizzard and recalling the sight of his


brother on the floor with Ablue liquid spilled out of his mouth,@ Jones= epic


battle with stuttering began. At a local store, Jones panicked and couldn=t


speak. After a time, he Afinally calmed down and the words came. The doctor was


called. Randy recovered. But the stuttering – that stayed.@(42)


The same year his brother almost died, Jones was sexually assaulted by


the minister of a church he attended. The incident scarred him for life. Jones


recalls, AI was afraid and very confused. I was on my guard from then on…I had


no need for words@(54).


The Aturning point@ in Jones= ability to cope with stuttering


came in Professor Donald Crouch=s English classroom in high school. After


falling in love with Longfellow=s AThe Song of Hiawatha,@James Earl was inspired


to write a poem about his love for grapefruit. He patterned his work after


Longfellow=s cadence and rhyme scheme. When Professor Crouch accused Jones of


plagiarism Jones was forced to recite his work from memory in front of the class


(63).


Considering his honour of greater value than the teasing of his


classmates James Earl approached the front of the room to avoid academic


disgrace: AI was shaking as I stood up, cursing myself. I strained to get the


words out, pushing from the bottom of my soul. I opened my mouth — and to my


astonishment, the words flowed out smoothly, every one of them. There was no


stutter. All of us were amazed, not so much by the poem as by the


performance@(66).


The voice of James Earl Jones was a new sound to himself and everyone


around him. AMy voice had changed, almost without my awareness, so in addition


to the novelty of being able to speak, I could now speak in a deep, strong


voice@(67). Crouch and Jones became inseparable for the remaining three years


of high school, resurrecting the powers of speech in the young lad through


public speaking, debating, orating and acting.


The training he received from Crouch enabled Jones to win a public


speaking championship and a college scholarship to the University of Michigan.


In 1947, he enrolled intending to pursue a medical degree. He worked several


jobs and enrolled in US Army Reserve Officers Training Corps to support his


college career. But science took its toll on Jones, and he changed majors to


the study of drama but Atechnically, because there was not an official degree in


drama then at the university, (his) degree had to be in English@(75).


James Earl Jones= first introduction to the semi-professional theatre


was a casting call for a campus production of The Birds by Aristophanes.


Intending to read for one of the minor parts, Jones was surprised when he was


asked to audition for, and was later cast as the lead role of Epops, the King of


the Birds. Less than a year later Jones was cast in his first professional


theatre production, as Verges in Much Ado About Nothing.


Robert Earl Jones moved away when his son, James Earl, was an infant.


James Earl was not allowed to communicate with his father, who was considered no


good since he was Aoff in New York with a new wife, trying to make it as an


actor, instead of doing real work@ (62). Later his career turned sour when he


found himself Aon the blacklist during the McCarthy days@(79).


Robert Earl wanted to see his son for Aa long, long time..and was hurt


by the family=s constant refusal@ to let him see his son(79). But when James


Earl was 21, they were reunited in New York for a week as father showed son the


sights on and off Broadway. Jones attributes his father, Robert Earl, with Athe


best acting advice..=Pay attention to the little things actors do=@(Culhane 122).


After two years in the Army at Camp Hale near Aspen, Colorado, Jones


decided to commit to acting. AThere was nothing to lose, I thought. I could use


my GI Bill to go to acting school, and if it didn=t work out, I could step back


into my Army career@(Jones 83).


Jones lived by the premise AActing can never really be taught. It must


be learned in a thousand ways, over and over again. Learning to act is ongoing,


a lifelong process, and the responsibility rests with the actor@(89). Under


this idea, Jones felt the only place to learn was in New York, and in 1955 he


packed his bags.


Once they were reunited in New York, Robert Earl let his son move in and


they pursued separate careers. Recalling a childhood nickname, Jones assumed the


stage name of Todd Jones and, at the age of 24, was accepted by the American


Theatre Wing. One year later, after an argument with his father, James Earl


Jones rented his own Acold-water-flat@ and went back to his full name. After


receiving his diploma at the Theatre Wing in 1957, Jones auditioned for Tad


Danielewski=s acting workshop, where he was accepted and set to work on scenes


from three memorable plays: Othello, Of Mice and Men, and Miss Julie.


In October, Jones received his first chance to be in a Broadway


production as an understudy for Lloyd Richards who played the role of Perry Hall


in The Egghead, starring Karl Malden and directed by Hume Croyn at the Ethel


Barrymore Theatre. The understudy=s dream did not come true then , but three


months later Jones received a speaking part on Broadway, playing the valet in


Dore Schary=s Sunrise at Campobello, a drama about Eleanor and Franklin D.


Roosevelt, starring Ralph Bellamy (105).


With only three lines to deliver as Edward the valet, Jones= Aworst


fear@ came true one night on stage as he stuttered delivering the line AMrs.


Roosevelt, supper is served@(105). AMary Fickett, the actress playing Mrs.


Roosevelt, just stood there and (Jones) got through it…(he) recovered..and


miraculously it never happened again@(106.)


Two teachers at the American Theatre Wing noticed Jones while he was a


student: director Joseph Papp and acting teacher Lee Strasberg of the Actors


Studio in New York. Jones auditioned seven years in a row and was never invited


to become a member of the Actors Studio. But he did manage to come up with the


funds to enroll in Strasberg=s private school. While he didn=t find Strasberg


an Aeffective@ director, he did find Strasberg to be a Agreat teacher@. Jones


later learned that Strasberg, Cheryl Crawford and Elia Kazan Ashared the


consensus that there were actors such as (Jones) who, by following their own


particular drumbeat, had already found an effective technique. Rather

than pull


(Jones) back and them the Method,@ they decided to Alet (him) go (his) own


path.@(107.)


Papp gave Jones his first acting breakthrough opportunity as Micheal


Williams in Shakespeare=s Henry V. Papp was credited with injecting a Adash of


social conscience by casting Williams..as a negro (ably played by James Earl


Jones)@ (Gelb 23). Papp was a visionary who enjoyed bringing his productions to


a different setting. Henry V was performed in Central Park with no admissions


charge.


Before Henry V opened, Jones was also given a job as the leading role in


Lionel Abel=s play The Pretender directed off Broadway by Herbert Machiz. Jones


Afared better with the critics than the play did, but not by much. @One critic


said Jones was Afirst rate,@(Jones 113) while others gave considerably less


praise saying that Jones as the character of Jesse Prince, Aplays the part of


the novelist as well as anyone could.@(Atkinson 42).


In 1961, James Earl Jones moved into high gear and had what he termed a


Abreakthrough year@ in 1961 (Jones 123). Papp again cast Jones in a production,


this time as Oberon in Midsummer Night=s Dream at the New York Shakespeare


Festival. Although his performance was not critically acclaimed, Jones began to


get small parts on television with roles on APlayhouse 90,@” The Brighter Day,@A


The Catholic Hour,@A Camera Three,@ and the popular APhil Silvers Show@(382).


Jones left the cast of The Blacks in the fall of 1961 to play a featured


role in a new comedy by Josh Greenfield, Clandestine on the Morning Line. The


production opened in the Actors Playhouse to mixed reviews that generally agreed


that Asome likable characters (were) interrupted by a story@(Gelb 30). The show


had a short run and helped Jones land a role in another experimental drama, Jack


Gelber=s The Apple.


The production opened at the Living Theatre in December 1961 and was


billed as Experimental theatre with a vengeance@ (Taubman 31.) And for the next


several years, Jones struggled off Broadway Abulling his way to success@ where


Ain play after play Jones (was) never guilty of underplaying; he invariably


(came) on strong, and often effective@ (qtd in Jones).


Jones has a self-expressed passion for Othello. He has played Othello at


seven different time in his life in the theatre beginning at the age of 25 in


Michigan and ending at the age of 50 at the Winter Garden Theatre in new York in


1981(377-381).


The year 1964 produced two major Othello=s, one in London which cast Sir


Lawrence Olivier as the title role. The second major production cast James Earl


Jones as the moor and debuted in Central park with the Summer Shakespeare


festival and re-opened in October at the Martinique. Calling it Aunjustly


neglected,@ Life magazine compared Jones to Olivier and called Jones Aimmensely


moving,@ as a reminder of Acivil rights and race relations@ (qtd. in Jones).


Producer Joe Papp and director Gladys Vaughan fought over how Jones


should play the tragic stranger in service to the Duke of Venice. Jones recalls


AJoe wanted me to play Othello tough, because in time of racial tension, Othello


should be tough and militant@ (158). But Vaughan fought to give the character a


sensitivity and benevolence and Jones took her up on the idea. Critics loved it.


Believing Othello could fall into the trap set by Iago has never been easy, Abut


Mr. Jones succeeds in giving it credibility throughout. He is genuinely moving


in his deep affection for (his) wife… His disintegration into a man in whom


Iago has unloosed the furies is well prepared and pitiful to behold. Restrained


and soft in speech up to this moment, (Jones) has deep strength and force as he


propelled along his wrath and grief…@(Funke 48). For his work as Othello,


Jones was honoured with the Drama Desk-Vernon Rice Award.


When the production began to wane some 224 performances after opening


night in the Martinique, director Vaughan closed Othello and formed a repertory


company with the cast.


One of the turning points in the life of James Earl Jones came inside


the gloves of the first black heavyweight boxing champion, Jack Johnson.


Playwright Howard Sackler wrote about Jack Johnson=s turbulent life and career


in The Great White Hope. For legal reasons Sackler named his boxer Jack


Jefferson.


Director Edwin Sherin and playwright Sackler recruited Jones for the


lead, treating him as if they Ahad found a gold mine@(Jones 188). Using the


same trainer that brought Olivier into shape for Othello, Jones prepared for the


role with grueling roadwork and intellectual exploration he later compared to


basic training in the Army (189). After six weeks of rehearsal, The Great White


Hope opened on December 7 at the Arena Stage in Washington, D.C., for a seven


week run with Ed Sherin directing.


At the age of 37, Jones realized he was involved in a Asignificant


theatre experience@ but was Acompletely unprepared for the critical praise, the


later fame, and the thunderous response of (the) audience@ (192). Comparing his


performance to that Marlon Brando=s in Tennessee Williams= Streetcar Named


Desire, critics acclaimed Jones an Aovernight success@(qtd in Jones). Calling


it Aimmeasurably moving,@Clive Barnes wrote in the New York Times: AWith head


shaved, burly, huge, Mr. Jones stalks through the play like a black avenging


angel. Even when corrupted by misery, his presence has an almost moral force to


it, and his voice rasps out an agony nearly too personally painful in its


nakednessA (Barnes 58).


In October the following year, The Great White Hope opened on Broadway


at the Alvin Theatre. Catapulted into the limelight, A..Jones was receiving a


standing ovation of the kind that makes Broadway history@(Barnes 58).


Since then Jones has gone on to become critically acclaimed film and


television actor. He has appeared in over 200 films and even had his own weekly


television show called, AGabriel=s Fire.@ Jones has journeyed far from the boy


who never spoke a word to anyone who walked on two legs. James Earl Jones has


delighted millions of people across the country with his body and voice, but for


himself, life is nothing more that AWords, Words, Words@ (Jones 190).


Works Cited


Atkinson, Brooks.@The Pretender by Lionel Abel.@ New York Times 25 May


1960: 42:1.


Barnes, Clive. White Hope: Tale of Modern Othello Opens in Capital.@ New


York Times 14 Dec. 1967 58:1.


Culhane, John. How james Earl Jones Found His Voice.@ Reader=s Digest


Nov, 1994: 51-53.


Funke, Lewis. Theatre: Fun and Frolic.@New York Times 3 Aug. 1961: 13:1


Theatre: Othello from the Park Festival Production is at the Martinique.@


New York Times 13 Oct. 1964: 48:1.


Gelb, Arthur. @A rousingly Paced >Henry V=.@ New York Times 30 Jun. 1960:


23:1. A Clandesting on the Morning Line Opens.@ New York Times 31


October 1961: 28:1.


Gilroy, Harry. Rain and Praise Shower on MacBeth.@ New York Times 29


Jun. 1966: 38:1.


Hughes, Allan. Theatre: Boston Festifal O=Neil=s Emperor Jones is revived


– 12 dancers act as scenery.@


New York Times 6 Aug. 1964: 20:4. Dancers Are Scenery in Emporer Jones.@


New York Times 16 Aug 1964: II,5:1.


Jones, James Earl., and Penelope Niven. James Earl Jones: Voices and


Silences. NY: Macmillan, 1993.


Kauffman, Stanley. Theatre: Bohikee Creek at Stage 73.@ New York Times


29 Apr. 1966: 39:1.


Kerr, Walter. You Can=t Just Watch.@New York Times 24 Dec. 1967: II,3:1.


Leahy, Michael. Gabriel’s Ire.@ TV Guide 27 Oct. 1990: 8-12.


MacKenzie, Robert. Review: Gabriel=s Fire.@ TV Guide 8 Dec. 1990: 48.


The Dynamo.@ Newsweek. 2 Dec. 1963.


Oliver, Edith. Interlude 1897: Fences.ANew Yorker 31 May 1993: 136.


Taubman, Howard. Jack Gelber’s The Apple.@ New York Times 8 Dec. 1961: 44.


Theatre: Man=s Solitude.@ New York Times 28 Nov. 1963: 69:2.


Theatre: A Penatrating Play.@New York Times 3 Mar. 1964: 30:2.


Othello= in the Park.@ New York Times 15 Jul. 1964: 29:1.


Theatre: Brechtian Tale of Decadence.@New York Times 07 May 1965: 33:2.


Theatre: Coriolanus in Central Park: Gladys Vaughn Gives Production Vigor.@


New York Times 15 Jul. 1965: 23:1.


Theatre: Danton=s Death at Beaumont.@ New York Times 22 Oct. 1965: 46:1.


Woolson, Jennifer Daack. James Earl Jones: A Voice of Hope.@ Vim & Vigor


Fall 1995: 14-18. ??


Prepared for Dr. Gene Muto


by Mike Sleeper


352

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