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Gordon Heath
Gordon Heath
from Wikipedia

Gordon Heath (September 20, 1918 – August 27, 1991) was an American actor and musician who narrated the animated feature film Animal Farm (1954) and appeared in the title role of The Emperor Jones (1953) and Othello (1955), both live BBC telecasts, respectively directed by Alvin Rakoff and Tony Richardson. It featured several kisses between himself and Rosemary Harris and is a contender for the first interracial kiss on television.

Key Information

Biography

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Heath was born in New York City, his parents' only child. His father Cyril Gordon Heath had emigrated from Barbados to the US, where he met and married Hattie Hooper.[1] Gordon Heath showed an early talent for both music and art, but opted to pursue an acting career, working on stage and radio.[1] Joining the New York radio station WMCA in 1945 he became the first black staff announcer employed by a major US radio station.[1] In 1945 he appeared on Broadway to great success in the play Deep Are the Roots, written by Arnaud d'Usseau and James Gow, directed by Elia Kazan, and starring Barbara Bel Geddes. The play ran for 447 performances, and when it was subsequently produced in London's West End, Heath reprised his co-starring role in it.[1] After the six-month London run, Heath decided to settle in Paris, France, in 1948.[2]

He also acted in Paris, and in 1950 in London he played Othello on stage and later for BBC Television. He directed an English-speaking production company, the Studio Theater of Paris, for 10 years from the 1960s.[2] This company was responsible for gathering many of the regular English dubbing actors in the city, including Heath, Ginger Hall, Frederick Neumann, Barbara Sommers, Yves Brainville and Heath's music and life partner Lee Payant.[3]

He and Payant operated a Left Bank café in Paris called L'Abbaye, whose clientele included Josephine Baker, Yves Montand, Eartha Kitt, Rita Hayworth and other celebrities of the era, and where they were the entertainers.[4] Many of the duo's folk albums from the 1950s[4] were recorded there and released on various international labels, including Elektra Records. Payant died on December 14, 1976.

Heath died in Paris after a lengthy illness on August 27, 1991.[2]

Filmography

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Year Title Role Notes
1953 The Emperor Jones Emperor Brutus Jones TV movie
1950-1954 BBC Sunday-Night Theatre Rev. Ezekiel Selby / Stanley Atlas / Brett Charles 3 episodes
1954 Animal Farm Narrator Voice
1955 Captain Gallant of the Foreign Legion Charlie Episode: "The Prayer Rug"
1955 Mr. Arkadin Pianist Uncredited
1955 The Heroes Are Tired Sidney
1955 Othello Othello TV movie
1956 Le secret de soeur Angèle Le trompettiste
1956 Man of Africa Narrator Voice
1958 Storm Over Jamaica Coroner
1959 Sapphire Paul Slade
1961 My Baby is Black! Daniel
1962 My Uncle from Texas
1966 Lost Command Dia
1969 Staircase Postman
1969 The Madwoman of Chaillot The Folksinger
1970 Aladdin and His Magic Lamp Magician of Egypt English version, Voice
1972 La nuit Bulgare
1972 L'aventure, c'est l'aventure Le général africain
1983 L'africain Le ministre
1985 Asterix Versus Caesar Caesar English version, Voice
1986 Asterix in Britain
1989 Samuel Fuller's Street of No Return Black Bum (final film role)

Select discography

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  • Gordon Heath and Lee Payant Sing Songs of the Abbaye ‒ Elektra (1954)
  • Chants Tradionnels des Etats-Unis – Editions de la Boite à Musique LD 313 (1955)
  • Gordon Heath and Lee Payant Sing Encores from the Abbaye ‒ Elektra (1955)
  • Folksongs and Footnotes – Abbaye Record 1 (1956)
  • An Evening at L'Abbaye – Elektra (1957)
  • Abbaye Anniversary Album – Abbaye Record 2 (1959)
  • Gordon Heath Sings Spirituals – Abbaye Record 3 (1961)

References

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Bibliography

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Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Gordon Heath was an African-American actor, musician, and theater director known for his breakthrough starring role in the 1945 Broadway production of Deep Are the Roots and for his decades-long expatriate career in Paris, where he co-owned and performed at the celebrated nightclub L’Abbaye. His portrayal of a Black war veteran confronting racial prejudice in the American South earned widespread acclaim and marked him as a significant talent in postwar theater, leading to performances on Broadway and London's West End. Frustrated by limited opportunities and racism in the United States, Heath relocated to Paris in 1948, joining a tradition of Black American expatriates. With his partner Lee Payant, he opened L’Abbaye in 1949, transforming it into a beloved Left Bank venue where they performed American and French folk songs, spirituals, and blues for nearly 30 years until Payant's death in 1976. Heath continued acting in French and English-language productions, appeared in films such as The Nun's Story (1959) and Sapphire (1959), narrated the animated feature Animal Farm (1954), and played Othello in BBC television adaptations. In the 1960s and 1970s, he founded and directed the Studio Theater of Paris, fostering English-language theater for expatriates and staging works by American playwrights. He occasionally returned to the United States for roles, including in Oedipus and Samuel Beckett's Endgame at New York's Roundabout Theatre. Heath's memoir, Deep Are the Roots: Memoirs of a Black Expatriate, was published posthumously in 1992. He died in Paris in 1991.

Early life

Family background and childhood

Gordon Heath was born on September 20, 1918, in the San Juan Hill district of Manhattan, New York City, an area later renamed Columbus Hill during his youth. He was the son of Cyril Gordon Heath, who had emigrated from Barbados to the United States, and Harriette (Hattie) Heath, a second-generation American of African and Indian descent. Heath had a half-sister named Bernice and was raised in New York by his parents. His father worked as a steward for the Hudson River Night Line, which provided steady employment. During his childhood, Heath developed an early interest in music and performance by singing in the St. Cyprian’s Church choir and learning to play the violin and viola. This exposure to the arts in New York City marked the beginning of his lifelong engagement with music and acting.

Education and early interests

Gordon Heath received his early education at the Ethical Culture Society School in Manhattan and later attended Hampton Institute, where he developed a keen interest in the theater. As a child, he sang in the St. Cyprian's Church choir and learned to play the violin and viola with some skill, earning acclaim for his musical abilities. Despite this early recognition in music, Heath's attention increasingly turned toward acting after he won a state-wide drama competition while still in high school. This achievement prompted him to take acting more seriously, perhaps partly in response to his father's aspirations for a musical career. During his time at Hampton Institute, he acted in several plays directed by his childhood friend Owen Dodson. Heath also began formal acting training around this period with a group of African American actors guided by Marian Wallace. In 1938, he expanded his early creative pursuits by writing and performing sketches for radio station WNYC. These amateur and educational experiences in music and theater laid the foundation for his later professional path.

Early career in the United States

Initial theater roles and nightclub performances

Gordon Heath began his professional performing career in the late 1930s primarily through radio and stage training in New York City. In 1938, he started writing and performing sketches for the municipal radio station WNYC, continuing as a script writer and performer on WNYC and WMCA through 1946. Around the same time, he trained with a group of African American actors under director Marian Wallace, building his skills in acting. During his college years at Hampton Institute, Heath appeared in several plays directed by his childhood friend Owen Dodson, gaining early stage experience in a collegiate setting. His first documented Broadway appearance came in 1943, when he played the second lead in Lee Strasberg's production of the play South Pacific (a work unrelated to the later Rodgers and Hammerstein musical). Heath was also associated with the American Negro Theatre (ANT), founded in Harlem in 1940, which provided training and performance opportunities for African American artists and helped launch careers through its productions and programs focused on contemporary Black life. While specific ANT roles for Heath are not detailed in archival records, his name appears among those whose talents were exhibited by the company in its early years. No verified sources document professional nightclub singing or guitar performances by Heath in New York venues during this pre-1945 period, though his early musical training included instruments and choir work that informed his later cabaret activities abroad.

Breakthrough on Broadway

Deep Are the Roots

Gordon Heath's breakthrough on Broadway came with his starring role as Brett Charles in the original production of Deep Are the Roots, a drama by Arnaud d'Usseau and James Gow directed by Elia Kazan. He portrayed a decorated African American lieutenant returning to his small Southern hometown after World War II, confronting deep-seated racism from family, community, and authorities in a narrative that boldly addressed racial injustice in the post-war era. The play opened at the Fulton Theatre on September 26, 1945, with Heath's performance anchoring the cast alongside Barbara Bel Geddes as Genevra Langdon. The production ran for 477 performances, closing on November 16, 1946, marking a substantial success for a serious drama tackling racial themes during that period. Deep Are the Roots won the Pulitzer Prize for Drama in 1946, recognizing its powerful exploration of prejudice and its dramatic impact. Critical reception praised his nuanced acting; Langston Hughes described the play as the best he had seen on the race problem and commended the character's portrayal as a man demanding equal treatment. The role established Heath as a significant talent in American theater, propelling his career forward at a time when opportunities for Black actors remained limited.

Relocation to Europe

London production and move to Paris

In 1947, Gordon Heath reprised his role as Brett Charles in the West End production of Deep Are the Roots, reprising the character he had originated on Broadway. The play opened at Wyndham's Theatre on July 8, 1947, transferred to the Criterion Theatre on September 29, 1947, and closed on November 8, 1947. Following the London run, Heath relocated to Paris in 1948, where he settled permanently. He found Paris more hospitable to Black artists and more accepting of his long-term relationship with his white partner, fellow actor Lee Payant, whom he had met in New York in 1947, and he viewed the city as a haven from the racism and homophobia prevalent in the United States at the time. This move marked a decisive shift in his career toward a long-term expatriate life in France.

Acting career in France

Stage, film, and television credits

After relocating to Paris in 1948, Gordon Heath continued his acting career with a series of stage, film, and television roles primarily in France and Britain, often in supporting capacities while balancing other professional pursuits. On stage, Heath performed in various productions across Europe during the subsequent decades. These included a 1950 production of Othello, Heroes Are Tired in 1955, Cranks from 1955 to 1956, For the Defense in 1956, Mon Oncle Du Texas in 1962, La Putain Respectueuse in 1962, Les Petits Renards in 1963, Requiem for a Nun in 1965, La Nuit Bulgare in 1969, and The Lady From Maxim’s in 1970. Many of these were French-language or expatriate English-language works mounted in Paris or toured regionally. In film, Heath took on supporting and character roles in several European and international productions. Early credits included Sapphire (1959), The Nun's Story (1959), and My Baby Is Black! (1961). Later appearances featured Mon oncle du Texas (1962), Lost Command (1966), Staircase (1969), The Madwoman of Chaillot (1969) as the Folksinger, Money Money Money (1972), L'africain (1983), and Street of No Return (1989). He also provided voice work for animated films, including Julius Caesar in the English versions of Asterix Versus Caesar (1985) and Asterix in Britain (1986). Heath's television work featured prominently in British anthology series and adaptations during the 1950s and beyond. He appeared in multiple episodes of BBC Sunday-Night Theatre from 1950 to 1954, played the title role in a 1955 BBC production of Othello, starred in The Emperor Jones (1953), and took a role in ITV Play of the Week in 1958. Additional credits included appearances in Cry, the Beloved Country (1958 television adaptation) and various other European broadcasts.

Cabaret and music career

Founding and operation of L'Abbaye

In 1949, following his relocation to Paris the previous year, Gordon Heath became co-owner of the cabaret L'Abbaye with his partner Lee Payant. Situated on the Left Bank in the Saint-Germain-des-Prés district, behind the abbey church of St. Germain des Prés, the small, intimate venue operated as a folk-music cabaret illuminated by candlelight. Heath and Payant ran the club seven nights a week, developing a dedicated following among American expatriates, tourists, students studying abroad, and local French patrons. The venue quickly gained popularity, filling to capacity as early as 1949 and earning recognition as a beloved institution by the 1950s, with mentions in publications such as National Geographic, Ebony, and various travel guidebooks including Frommer’s and Fielding’s. Its clientele included celebrities such as Rita Hayworth and other notable figures of the era, contributing to its status as a cultural stop on organized Paris tours. L'Abbaye remained in operation for nearly thirty years until December 1976, when Lee Payant died of cancer at age 52. Devastated by the loss, Heath closed the cabaret shortly thereafter, unable to continue without his longtime collaborator.

Repertoire and performances

Gordon Heath regularly performed as a singer and guitarist at L'Abbaye, the cabaret he co-founded with Lee Payant, which served as the primary venue for his musical career in Paris. Their performances featured duets and solo acts, with Heath often accompanying himself on guitar. The duo's repertoire blended American folk songs, Negro spirituals, French chansons, creating a distinctive program that drew from diverse cultural traditions. This mix of musical styles sustained their collaboration for more than 30 years, defining the intimate, eclectic atmosphere of their cabaret performances.

Personal life

Partnership with Lee Payant and life in Paris

Gordon Heath and Lee Payant formed a long-term personal partnership after Heath's relocation to Paris in 1948, living together in the city for nearly three decades until Payant's death. Payant, an American singer, shared both a domestic life and professional collaboration with Heath in the French capital, including co-owning and performing at the nightclub L’Abbaye. Heath integrated into the vibrant artistic and bohemian circles of the Left Bank, particularly in the Saint-Germain-des-Prés neighborhood where they resided and worked. This community provided a supportive context for his creative pursuits amid a diverse international expatriate scene. Heath and Payant maintained their partnership in Paris until Payant's death from cancer in 1976, after which Heath continued living in the city with a later longtime companion, Alain Woisson. Their shared life exemplified the experiences of many Black American artists who sought greater personal and artistic freedom in postwar Europe.

Death and legacy

Final years and death

In the years following the closure of L'Abbaye in 1976 after Lee Payant's death, Gordon Heath returned to the United States for a period of about five years, where he engaged in some acting and directing work. He eventually returned to Paris, resuming his expatriate life there and living with his longtime companion Alain Woisson. Heath died on August 27, 1991, at the Clinique Edouard Rie in Paris after a long illness. He was 72 years old. Alain Woisson informed the press of his passing. No immediate survivors were reported, and no public details of funeral or memorial arrangements were documented in contemporary accounts.

Posthumous recognition

Gordon Heath's legacy has received limited posthumous recognition, particularly in mainstream American theater history, where his pioneering Broadway role in Deep Are the Roots (1945) overshadows his extensive career in Paris. His memoir, Deep Are the Roots: Memoirs of a Black Expatriate, was published in 1992, providing a detailed personal account of his life and expatriate experiences in Paris. No major biographies, documentaries, revivals, or formal tributes are known to have been produced in his honor.
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