A look into Billie Holiday’s final year (2024)

If ever a singer were difficult to pin down, it was Billie Holiday (1915-59), whose harrowing life story was first told in an unreliable memoir published just three years before her death. WithLady Sings the Blues, the jazz legend known for her emotional honesty not only allowed herself to be misrepresented (after all, she wasn’t even a blues singer), but actively participated in fabricating the fake stories which proliferated through the book. Some of these — such as a misstatement of her place of birth — are still repeated to this day.

Two decades after the publication ofLady Sings the Bluesa steady stream of more accurate biographies began to appear. Paul Alexander’s contribution to the Holiday bookshelf is a superb and very welcome one which does a remarkable job of making readers feel that they are eyewitnesses to the final year of the life of someone who, despite her physical deterioration, wasn’t aware — or wouldn’t acknowledge — that she was facing her end.

Alexander approaches Holiday’s life in a dynamic manner, moving through her final year chapter by chapter while regularly pausing to flash back to earlier periods and incidents.Bitter Cropzooms back and forth, setting each new 1958-59 development in the context of earlier experiences, all of which help us to understand Holiday, her state of mind and what was driving her.

By breaking down the last year into chapters, Alexander shows that hers wasn’t a straightforward decline; it was considerably more complicated and nuanced than that. Constants throughout her final year included her elegant appearance (and Alexander pays great attention to her chic style, which was clearly important to her), the career opportunities which continued to come her way — after all, she had, in June 1958, released an album,Lady in Satin, which she came to believe was “one of the best I’ve done” — her ability to swing and to “put over” a song, and the devotion of the friends who tried to persuade her to seek medical treatment and who did what they could to care for her at home.

Her health may have been steadily seeping away (she was drinking neat gin in between the occasional heroin fix and was barely eating), and her body was becoming frail and emaciated, but the other key areas of her existence — the quality of her voice, the response of critics and audiences, her personal life — veered between highs and lows until the very end. Within the span of two weeks, she endured harassment by US Customs agents which sent her spiraling as she convinced herself that she would be sent back to prison (she had served time in the late 1940s for possession of drugs), yet, ten days after the final, grueling hearing, she gave an impressive and powerful performance of three songs on television in London. She looked and sounded stronger than she had in a TV show recorded the previous year.

Even during her final two-and-a-half month hospitalization, it seemed as if she was going to pull through until, in one last act of vindictive persecution, NYPD cops arrested her for possession of narcotics as she lay strapped to machines in an oxygen tent. To complicate matters, some of the events in Holiday’s later life were simultaneously high and low points, depending on whose account one chooses to believe. Alexander sets out both. Holiday’s performance at the Monterey Jazz Festival, in October 1958, inspired extended ovations from the audience, yet one critic dismissed her as “washed-up,” while another described her voice as “a mere parody of its former beauty.” Alexander sums up the situation neatly:

It had become commonplace for critics to bash Billie. For years, they had been lamenting her loss of voice or pretending surprise when she turned in a successful performance. What they did not seem to understand was that Billie’s audience… knew her voice was not in the pristine condition it was in during the 1930s… the fans were there to hear her performance of the songs, which remained sincere, deeply sensitive, almost confessional. Her audience… connected with her on an emotional level. Like Judy Garland and Edith Piaf, Billie Holiday may have ended up offering a flawed version of a song, but it was perfect in its authenticity. As the years passed, her performance — her art — became different not only because her voice changed but also becauseshechanged. As Miles Davis put it, “You know, she’s not thinking now what she was in 1937.”

With this book, Alexander is on a mission to correct what he sees as misrepresentations of Holiday’s life and personality, and to right the wrongs done to her, often by herself. She was, he says, talked out of giving her autobiography the titleBitter Crop— the last two words of “Strange Fruit,” her controversial protest song about a lynching — by the publishers. So here, in a book which aims to set the record straight, he becomes the first author to make use of the title she preferred.

The result is an extraordinarily compelling, vivid and often heartbreaking biography which is guaranteed to send readers straight to YouTube to form — or revise — their own opinion of the television appearances, final albums and that Monterey concert. In death, as in life, Billie Holiday provokes debate, divides opinion — and, thanks to Paul Alexander’s sensitive handling of the subject, inspires affection.

This article was originally published inThe Spectator’s April 2024 World edition.

A look into Billie Holiday’s final year (2024)

FAQs

What was Billie Holiday's last word? ›

Don't be in such a hurry.” —Billie Holiday, musical artist, on July 17, 1959.

What is Billie Holiday's most famous quote? ›

Top 10 Billie Holiday Quotes to Inspire and Uplift Your Soul
  • I never hurt nobody but myself and that's nobody's business but my own. ...
  • People don't understand the kind of fight it takes to record what you want to record the way you want to record it.
Dec 13, 2023

What was Billie Holiday's message? ›

During her lifetime, Billie Holiday battled internal and external demons, yet rather than give in to the pain and hardships she experienced, she used her voice to sing about and bring attention to racial injustices that she had witnessed.

How did Billie Holiday's career end? ›

Because of personal struggles and an altered voice, her final recordings were met with mixed reaction but were mild commercial successes. Her final album, Lady in Satin, was released in 1958. Holiday died of heart failure on July 17, 1959, at age 44.

Did Billie Holiday have any kids? ›

Billie Holiday - Lady Day had a lot of ups and downs before she died at the age of 44 in 1959, but no children. Instead, her legacy lives on through her timeless music.

Who was Billie Holiday's closest friend? ›

Today is National Friendship Day! The intensely intimate but totally platonic relationship that developed between Young and Holiday from 1934 was publicly recognized during their lifetime. In the 30s Billie Holiday and Lester Young recorded a series of memorable sides together.

What was tragic about Billie Holiday's death? ›

After years of substance abuse, Holiday's body had grown weary of the abuse and she died from heart failure on July 17, 1959, at age 44.

What is Billie Holiday favorite color? ›

Billie was 22 years old at the time. As I mentioned earlier, this article states her favorite colors as being "black, white, and green", but most of what she has in her dressing room that evening strays from this.

What did Billie Holiday do when she was a kid? ›

Born Eleanora fa*gan in Baltimore (or some say Philadelphia) in 1915, Holiday's childhood was marred by horrific abuse—despite the best efforts of her beloved mother, Sadie, who was only 13 when she had Holiday. Always a self-starter, Holiday began singing as a child, while cleaning neighbors' homes for money.

Why was Billie Holiday remembered? ›

Today, Billie Holiday is remembered for her musical masterpieces, her songwriting skills, creativity and courageous views on inequality and justice. Holiday (born Eleanora fa*gan Gough) grew up in jazz-soaked Baltimore of the 1920s.

Did Billie Holiday write any of her songs? ›

But she didn't just sing; she also wrote around 15 songs. A handful of those became Jazz Standards that have been recorded by hundreds of artists and are still performed today. For example, "Don't Explain" is a song from 1946, with words by Billie Holiday and music by Arthur Herzog. God Bless the Child.

Where is Billie Holiday's grave? ›

Detailed map of New Saint Raymond's Cemetery in Bronx NY. Holiday's burial site is in the St. Paul section, Row 56, Grave #29. Grave marker of Billie Holiday.

Why did Billie Holiday change her name? ›

Thus, from seemingly nowhere, a new star was born out of Eleanora fa*gan who had long since changed her name to Billie Holiday – Billie in honor of her favorite actress and Baltimorean Billie Dove and Holiday due to her infatuation with her erratic father and the recognition the name could earn her in Harlem's nightlife ...

What happened to Billie Holiday's hair? ›

Before a performance at the start of her career she scorched her hair with an overheated curling tong. In the club's cloakroom there was a girl selling gardenias to guests, so Billie bought a couple to hide the holes in her hairstyle. It was such a success that it became her trademark.

What was Billie Holiday's favorite color? ›

Billie was 22 years old at the time. As I mentioned earlier, this article states her favorite colors as being "black, white, and green", but most of what she has in her dressing room that evening strays from this.

What was Billie Holiday's nickname on stage? ›

- Count Basie

Billie Holiday and saxophonist Lester Young formed a tight bond of friendship while performing with Count Basie's Orchestra in the 1930s. It was Lester who gave Billie the nickname LADY DAY, and she in turn dubbed him PREZ.

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