Dick Gregory is a comedian, social satirist, Negro, pioneer. In little more than a year he has climbed from $10 a day car washer to $5000 a week headlinerdoing what some said he shouldn't do, most said he couldn't do, but what Gregory knows he must do -- tell the truth about segregation so that it brings smiles instead of hurt, and insight, even to the insensitive. His method: "Once I get them laughing, I can say anything."
Richard "Dick" Gregory was an American civil rights activist, social critic, writer, entrepreneur, comedian, motivational speaker, author and actor. He became the first black comedian to successfully cross over to white audiences.
Reading James Baldwin in my later teens really pointed a direction for me as i set about to get educated. JB set a high bar and his brilliant fiery and tender writing introduced me to worlds unimagined. DG in his wise and witty way brought it all closer to home. I couldn't march on Washington, but i could take myself to the back of the bus where for a couple of weeks on my commute I read this until my cheap paperback copy came apart- I remember reading the last chapter with it being held together with an elastic band' and feeling such an affinity
A kind of throwaway piece of vital history, if that makes any sense, a black entertainer from 1962 breaks cultural ground by giving free voice to cultural frustrations. And since he's a comedian, it's pretty funny stuff. The name Dick Gregory may have been lost to time, but he deserves to be remembered.
I was expecting longer material, as opposed to quotes, but even with that being said, Dick Gregory was, in the words of my father, "a baaaaaad man." As such, and despite being slightly disappointed, I can't help but give this a four.
Was an interesting read. Majority of the book is qoutes from his various acts. I will give him credit for saying things that most people wouldn't dream of saying in the 1960s, even as a joke.
"You gotta say this for the white race - its self-confidence knows no bounds. Who else could go to a small island in the South Pacific where there's no poverty, no crime, no unemployment, no war, no worry - and call it a "primitive society". "
Cleverly written, great comedy, and unceasingly intriguing.
"Isn't it fantastic that George Washington Carver found over 300 uses for the lowly peanut - but the south never had any use for George Washington Carver?"
A treasury of trenchant one-liners culled from Gregory's stand-up routine (I'm guessing). It is what it is on the score of the text, but it should be noted that it's beautifully photographed -it reminded me of at times for some reason.
A really awesome piece of segregation history that is a worthy addition to any library. Some of the jokes may fall a little flat or seem unhumorous to a modern audience, but there's a couple gems in there that genuinely made me crack a smile. Even those jokes that don't match modern wit or pacing contain interesting glimpses into the era
One of my favorite books for many years I read over and over. I kept it right next to a Lenny Bruce paperback on my very small pre highschool bookshelf.... "How to talk dirty and influence people" . And there as a "Don Martin bounces back" in there somewhere. All got read over and over again. I should do that now.... re read in a regular basis.