British Columbia
Known as Canada’s first lady of jazz, Eleanor Collins broke barriers by headlining her own national television series and worked with everyone from Dizzy Gillespie to Oscar Peterson.
Trailblazer headlined her own national TV show, worked with other greats like Dizzy Gillespie
Jon Azpiri · CBC News
· Posted: Mar 03, 2024 8:04 PM EST | Last Updated: 2 hours ago
Jazz singer Eleanor Collins performs with the Ray Norris Quintet in February 1951. Collins died Sunday at age 104. (Jack Lindsay/CBC)
Canadian jazz legend Eleanor Collins, who began performing in the 1930s and worked with other greats like Dizzy Gillespie and fellow Canadian Oscar Peterson, has died at the age of 104.
A family member confirmed to CBC that Collins, known as Canada’s first lady of jazz, died on Sunday.
Collins made her television debut in 1954 on CBC Vancouver’s Bamboula: A Day in the West Indies, the first Canadian television show with a mixed-race cast and the first live music TV show broadcast from Vancouver.
She later starred in The Eleanor Show, becoming the first woman and first Black artist to headline their own national television series.
WATCH | The debut episode of The Eleanor Show:
The Eleanor Show makes its debut
Watch the opening act from the very first Eleanor show on June 12, 1955.
Speaking to CBC News ahead of her 100th birthday, Collins recited lyrics from the Shirley Horn song, Here’s to Life.
“No complaints and no regrets, I still believe in chasing dreams and placing bets. But I have learned that all you give is all you get, so give it all you’ve got.”
“I definitely have no regrets,” Collins said of her decades-long career.
Collins was born on November 21, 1919 in Edmonton. Her parents had joined hundreds of Black homesteaders who migrated from Oklahoma and settled on the Prairies. By 15, Collins won a singing contest which lead her to sing on radio station CFRN.
By the the late 1930s she moved to Vancouver, where she sang on the radio with the gospel group Swing Low Quartet.
In 1942, she married Richard Collins and began a family. They moved to Burnaby, B.C., where they were the first Black family in the neighbourhood. Almost immediately, the white community started a petition to prevent them from living there — but Collins and her the family moved in despite the racism they faced.
Collins began to volunteer at her children’s school and taught music there in an effort to counter the stereotypes her family had to face.
Her actions in the face of racism serve as an example of how to live a life of grace and courage, said Marcus Mosely, a Vancouver-based musician, who got to know the singer in her later years.
“To use love and to use engagement … as a way of bridging adversity,” Mosely said. “I love that about her.”
WATCH | A look back at the life of Eleanor Collins when she turned 100:
Eleanor Collins on living life to the fullest
Songstress Eleanor Collins is turning 100.
In the 1950s, Collins was recording songs with the Ray Norris Quintet and performing in several stage productions. In 1952, she also sang in a concert at Vancouver’s Stanley Park. By this time she was becoming known as Vancouver’s first lady of jazz — and still had a monumental career ahead of her.
Mosely described Collins as a performer with a commanding stage presence. He recalled seeing Collins perform Bein’ Green, a song made famous by muppet character Kermit the Frog, at a Black History Month concert he helped organize.
“A 95-year-old Black woman standing before hundreds of people … for a Black History Month concert and she chooses to sing the song, It’s Not Easy Being Green,” he said. “Within a few seconds of her starting — her delivery, her performance — she had the audience in the palm of her hand and you knew you were in the presence of a master.”
In 2014, at the age of 95, she was invested into The Order of Canada for her work. Canada Post unveiled a stamp honour Collins in 2022.
Collins was married to Richard (Dick) Collins for 70 years. They had four children. (Franz Lindner/CBC)
For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians — from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community — check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.
(CBC)
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Jon Azpiri is a reporter and copy editor based in Vancouver, B.C. Email him with story tips at jon.azpiri@cbc.ca.
Follow Jon Azpiri on Twitter
With files from Lien Yeung and The Canadian Press
>>> Read full article>>>
Copyright for syndicated content belongs to the linked Source : CBC News – https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/eleanor-collins-obituary-1.7132681?cmp=rss