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(photo by CNN)
Sue Mingus,
author of
Tonight
at Noon: A Love Story
In Tonight at Noon, Sue Graham Mingus gives us an elegant and unsparingly
honest memoir of a romance between American opposites: she, a product of
privilege, a former midwestern WASP debutante and Smith College graduate
who worked as a journalist in Europe and in New York; he, an authentic jazz
titan, a brilliant, eccentric, difficult artist, a scion of Watts, Los Angeles,
who would become one of America's foremost
composers.*
Sue Mingus answers a few questions about Charles and their relationship in
our Jerry Jazz Musician interview...
Interview by Paul Hallaman
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We walked for a few blocks and caught a cab in front
of the Plaza Hotel, where he said it was easier to find a driver who overlooked
the color of your skin in favor of the green inside your wallet. In
the middle of our ride, Mingus changed his mind about dinner and said there
was something important he needed to show me first. He ordered the
driver instead to Grand Central Station. When we arrived, he jumped
out of the cab and swiftly led me downstairs, hurrying through the halls
and corridors until we reached a corner that echoed our voices along a wall.
I waited at one end of the long wall while he spoke in a low whisper
from the other side, unexpected words of tenderness that roared across the
room, shy words of love that slid along the grimy walls of Grand Central
Station as distant and unreal as the graffiti they swept past.
"I love you," he was saying. "I want you to
be my woman." I laughed off his words. They were sounds in a
station from a man I hardly knew. Still, I went on listening.
- From Tonight at Noon, by Sue Mingus
Charles Mingus
Boogie Stop Shuffle
photo by Lee
Tanner
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JJM How did you come to write the book at
this point in time?
SM My initial intent was to write about the
experience of Charles dying in Mexico, because it so magnificently exposed
many sides of Charles that the public is not familiar with -- his spirituality,
his great humor, his heroism and courage -- and I wanted to write about this.
What got press for Charles, of course, was the side that hired and fired
musicians on stage, and yelled at bartenders and insulted the audience --
all of which were perfectly true -- but that was just one side of Charles.
There were so many others. There was Charles, for example, at the piano
composing, where he spent eight hours a day most every day. This is something
people didn't know. I was going to call the book "A Portrait of the Artist
as a Dying Man," and people starting talking to me about the project in quite
personal ways, so, it turned out to be a much more personal memoir than I
had intended it to be. That was the genesis of the book.
JJM The period in the book that focuses on
his final months is an eloquent and beautiful description of Charles and
your family dealing with the struggle to live and to try and conquer illness.
Did you kept a journal during this period?
SM I did keep a journal when we were in Mexico.
It was a way of hanging on, and a way of living those moments over and over.
There are a lot of reasons why people write, and part of it is certainly
to hang on and to record and remember. That part of this story could have
been the whole book as far as I was concerned, but there are readers who
find the other historical part interesting because it shines some light on
Charles that is a bit different and probably kinder to him than he was to
himself.
| JJM Yes, it's a very different portrait
than the one he paints of himself in Beneath the Underdog.
SM Part of that book was bravado. My
understanding is that someone told Charles to put a lot of sex in it and
it would sell! He had lots of anger to tell the world about that the world
wasn't quite ready to hear at that time. He had plans to do another book
just on music, because music was prominently missing from Beneath the
Underdog. I have all kinds of material of Charles' -- probably ten or
fifteen tapes where he discusses music, musicians, composition and the record
industry. One day I hope to put this work out, just "Mingus on Mingus and
music." That was an element that was sorely missing in Beneath the
Underdog, as interesting as it was on its own terms. Charles had so many
sides that to do him justice will require a great biographer. |
II B.S.  |
JJM I read an article by Owen McNally from
the Hartford Courant that describes the book in cinematic terms. Have
you been contacted by studios for film treatment?
SM I have been, but nothing has happened
so far.
JJM If a film were made, who would you see
in the leading roles?
SM I have thought about this through the
years, from James Earl Jones about twenty years ago to Denzel Washington
today. There have to be many capable actors out there that I don't know about.
Open Letter To Duke  |
JJM Who would play Sue Graham?
SM Who knows? Time goes by. I don't remember
who I thought of initially, but I can imagine Sissy Spacek, maybe Jodie Foster,
and probably hundreds of others we don't know about.
JJM Your background was very different than
Charles'. He grew up in Watts, and you are from Milwaukee
Did these
differences raise issues in your relationship?
SM I had already left Milwaukee long before
meeting Charles. I went to school in the east and lived in Paris and Rome.
I married an Italian who I had two children with. Then I moved to New York.
My life already expanded beyond Lake Michigan so it wasn't totally new, but
living in New York and being involved in bohemian, artistic, cultural
surroundings was somewhat different from the way I grew up. Charles, of course,
was unlike anything else I had experienced. He was a very unique individual. |
JJM You weren't a jazz fan when you met?
SM That's right. I knew nothing about jazz
when we met. I grew up in a classical music environment. My mother played
the harp and the piano, and my father was a "wanna-be" opera singer. We listened
to opera and classical music all the time, and I played piano for about fifteen
years. I liked a number of things that were jazz, for instance I loved Billie
Holiday and had a number of her records, but I didn't really know about jazz.
Jazz and Charles came as quite a surprise.
| JJM What are your favorite recordings
of his?
SM It's really hard to say because he left
such a diverse legacy. His music includes pieces that are European classically
oriented, that are bebop, that are drenched in the blues and gospel, even
dixieland and latin. There is almost everything. Part of the genius of Charles
was that he assembled all of these diverse musical genres, and they came
out magically Mingus. His sound was so distinctive. You hear three or four
notes and you know it is his work, the same way you hear two or three notes
of Miles Davis on his horn and you know it's him.
JJM Who did Charles Mingus most admire in
jazz?
SM Well, Duke Ellington, but he admired Bach,
Stravinsky, Beethoven, Jelly Roll Morton, Charlie Parker, and many other
musicians. |
Goodbye, Porkpie Hat
sketch by
Barbara Nislick |
JJM When Charles recorded for Impulse Records,
their logo included the phrase "The New Wave of Jazz is on Impulse!" He
objected to that phrase and had them change it on his album Mingus Mingus
Mingus to something like "The New Wave in Ethnic Folk Music" is on Impulse!
Do you remember that?
SM Well, there was a time when he said jazz
means "nigger music" and wanted to call it something like "jazzical." Charles
confronted just about everything and then went on to the next thing. There
were times when he said he didn't like music that was written out because
he felt it lost its spontaneity. He said he didn't like "pencil composers,"
and then five years later he was writing these gigantic scores that spilled
over the lecterns when the musicians were playing them. Cumbia and Jazz
Fusion is at least ten or fifteen pages long for each part. So, he never
pretended to be consistent, and he certainly confronted everything in his
path.
*
Editors note: In the 23 years since Charles Mingus' death, Sue Mingus has devoted herself to exposing his music through the Mingus Big Band. For information on these recordings, visit Amazon.com or Dreyfus Records.
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Tonight
at Noon: A Love Story
by
Sue Mingus
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Charles Mingus products at Amazon.com
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This interview took place on July 24, 2002
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*
If you enjoyed this interview, you may want to read our interview with Miles Davis historian Gerald Early.
*
Other
Jerry Jazz Musician interviews
* text from the book jacket
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