What do you think of the Black history lessons in the PBS documentary about jazz pianist-singer Hazel Scott?
10.06.2025 04:06

Chicago Tribune
REFERENCES
# 2. Books
What was your best experience of having your navel touched?
It was never the same as it had been before and during World War II. When she died in 1981, she was almost forgotten by the general public.
** Jason Moren – a jazz musician
Reviewers praise the director for covering the life and career of an artist who had been almost forgotten.
(2010 = paperback)
“The Disappearance of Miss Scott: A Virtuoso Revealed on PBS,”
** Adam Clayton Powell III – a journalist – he is the son of Hazel Scott and Adam Clayton Power, Jr.
A two-player Elden Ring Nightreign PC Mod is already available - Eurogamer
** Gretchen Sullivan Sorin – an author
On IMDb it has a rating of 79 percent
Her show aired on NBC on 14 June 1939. But there was only one episode. Her show did not run on a weekly basis. In addition, not many people had a television set in 1939. Not many people were able to watch this show.
How to watch Apple’s WWDC 2025 keynote - TechCrunch
** Language: English
** Michael Eric Dyson – an author
J. B. Spins
Jevon Phillips
“American Masters: The Disappearance of Miss Scott,”
** Ashley Khan – a music historian
All international travelers should get measles vaccinations, CDC says - AP News
This film shows her talents as a musician, a singer and an actress. It also reveals the price she had to pay for speaking out. She was silenced so much that she was almost forgotten by the general public.
Hazel was a civil rights activist before there was an organized movement. She was almost on her own.
** Mickey Guyton – a country star
Her contract included a passage which stated that she was not going to perform in front of a segregated audience. This passage was important to her. If the organizers were not prepared to obey this passage, she refused to play.
Joe Bendel
** Marcia Chatelain – an author
The Best Tech Gifts for Father’s Day 2025 - Gizmodo
In the US, she became a famous pianist and singer. She was strongly opposed to racial discrimination and racial segregation.
The topic is important. The story deserves to be told, and in this film, it is done very well. I want to go all the way to the top with this product. I think it deserves a rating of five stars (100 percent).
The Hazel Scott Show ran for three months in 1950. But Hazel is not the first African American woman to host a television show about herself.
Trump's huge bill includes immediate gift for layoff-ridden Bay Area tech - SFGATE
By Karen Chilton
21 February 2025
She was born in Port of Spain in Trinidad. In 1924, when she was four years old, she moved with her mother and grandmother to New York City.
When Women Invented Television: The Untold Story of the Female Powerhouses Who Pioneered the Way We Watch Today
Her life and her career
She conducted a one-woman crusade for civil rights. She paid a high price when she insisted on her right to speak out and say what she believed.
□■□■
When she returned in 1967, she did not really feel welcome. Many members of the civil rights movement regarded her as someone who was out of touch with the current situation.
Hazel Scott: The Pioneering Journey of a Jazz Pianist from Café Society to Hollywood to HUAC
Hazel Scott: The Disappearance of Miss Scott is a documentary film which premiered on US television (PBS) in 2025. It is an episode of the long-running program American Masters. This film is about the life and career of the African American musician Hazel Scott (1920-1981)
Archive footage is used between the talking heads. Archive footage is used to support and supplement the statements made by the talking heads.
Several persons are interviewed in the film
Here is some basic information about this film:
In 1950, the US was in the middle of the Second Red Scare. Senator McCarthy was beginning his persecution of people who were suspected of being Communists.
“American Masters brings jazz giant Hazel Scott out of the shadows,”
Rick Kogan
** Excerpts from Hazel Scott’s unpublished memoirs are read by Sheryl Lee Ralph
19 February 2025
The Disappearance of Miss Scott
Some people decided she had to be taught a lesson. She was blacklisted and vilified so much and so hard that she felt she had to leave the country.
04 March 2025
20 February 2025
Hazel and Adam had a son who was born in 1946. The child, who was named Adam Clayton Powell III, appears in this film. He is one of the many persons who are interviewed here.
** Karen Chilton – author of a biography about Hazel Scott
** Camille Thurman – a jazz musician
In the beginning, things were going well. Hazel and Adam were a famous couple in the African American community. Later, things were not going so well. First, they separated. In 1960, they divorced.
What do reviewers say about this film?
She was married to the African American Baptist pastor and politician Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. They were married in 1945.
The Rebel Café: Sex, Race, and Politics in Cold War America’s Nightclub Underground
This item is placed behind a pay wall
PS. Hazel is often described as the first African American woman to host a television show which aired on a weekly basis. This description is true.
Life was easier for her in France, because there was no racial segregation there. She found that the French public appreciated her more than the American public did.
** Murray Horwitz – a playwright
Hazel was a talented pianist. She played jazz and classical music. She was a singer and an actress. She was a civil rights activist.
** Tammy L. Khernodle – a musicologist
** Dwayne Mack – Professor of History, Berea College
In this situation, she decided to go to France for a while. She went there several times in the following years. In 1957, she decided to stay there on a permanent basis.
The first episode aired on 03 July 1950. When she was named as a communist in the pamphlet, her show was cancelled. The DuMont Television Network said they could no longer find a sponsor for her show. The last episode aired on 29 September 1950
In the 1950s, she felt she was being pushed out of her own country. She moved to France. She disappeared from the US. Hence the subtitle of this film:
** Run time: 83 minutes
John Anderson
Hazel was the first African American woman to have her own television show which ran on a weekly basis. But her show did not last long.
** Lauren Schoenberg – a musician, a saxophonist
She performed occasionally in a night club and she had small roles on some television shows, but she was not able to rebuild her career.
Wall Street Journal
This item is placed behind a paywall
** Carole Stabile – Professor, University of Maryland
Here are the names of the participants
In 1950, Hazel was listed in a pamphlet with the title Red Channels. This pamphlet named more than one hundred persons who were accused of being communists. Hazel was included, because she was opposed to racial discrimination and racial segregation.
Listed in alphabetical order
Hazel was not only a talented pianist, a singer and an actress. She was also an outspoken person, but America was not to accept an artist who was opposed to racial segregation.
“Hazel Scott, a trailblazing entertainer and activist, was silenced. A PBS doc brings her to light,”
Los Angeles Times
This film covers the life and work of Hazel Scott in great detail. It covers the life of the African American musician from the beginning in 1920 until the end in 1981.
# 1. The following items are available online
(2008 = hardcover)
By Stephen R. Duncan
** Amanda Seales – an actress
She had been a popular artist in the US during the 1930s. During World War II, she and actress Lena Horne had performed for American troops abroad who were stationed with great success. But when the war was over, things began to change.
The cast
** Monica O’Donnell – author of dissertation about Hazel Scott
** Subtitles: English
** Farah Jasmine Griffin – Professor of English, Columbia University
** Mark Cantor – director of the Celluloid Archive
In 1967, when she returned to the US, she found that the country had changed in several ways while she had been away. A civil rights movement was active, but it was not easy for her to connect with this movement, because it operated in ways which were strange for her.
** Director and producer: Nicole London
This distinction belongs to the African American singer and actress Ethel Waters (1896-1977) who hosted a television show about herself before World War II.
(2018)
By Jennifer Keishin Armstrong
Ethel Waters is not mentioned in Nicole London’s documentary film about Miss Scott.
** Tracie Thoms – an actress
Since she was accused of being a communist, it was at first difficult and later impossible for Hazel to work as a musician in the US.
Reviews and ratings