Outtakes

Liner notes from the archives

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Beale Street Stories: Sweet Willie Wine [Archive]
Memphis, Beale Street, Black power, Civil Rights Elise Lauterbach Memphis, Beale Street, Black power, Civil Rights Elise Lauterbach

Beale Street Stories: Sweet Willie Wine [Archive]

One of the great characters of Beale Street lore is Sweet Willie Wine. He worked the street as a booster, pickpocket, and con man, got locked up in the state penitentiary at Nashville, and returned to the street after his release in the midst of the race riot that preceded Martin Luther King’s assassination. The experience converted the crook into an activist, but he managed to keep his visibility high among both constituencies. Here’s Sweet Willie Wine’s (he is now known as Minister Suhkara Yahweh) poignant recollection, from our recent interview, of a particularly hair-curling set of circumstances that led some humble folk of Forrest City, Arkansas to believe he was the Messiah in summer 1969.

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Chitlin’ Circuit Landmark: W.C. Handy Theatre [Archives]
Landmarks, Chitlin' Circuit, Memphis Elise Lauterbach Landmarks, Chitlin' Circuit, Memphis Elise Lauterbach

Chitlin’ Circuit Landmark: W.C. Handy Theatre [Archives]

The broke-down orange building at 2535 Park in Orange Mound is one of the silent witnesses to Memphis music history. It opened in 1946 as the W.C. Handy Theatre, with investors including future Holiday Inn founder Kemmons Wilson, and blackface entertainer Chalmers Cullins to “showcase the finest in Negro entertainment,” in the language of the day. They hired longtime Beale Street band booker Robert Henry to provide said entertainment.

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