He
sang with both Earl Hines and Duke Ellington. He gained popularity
with African-American movie audiences as a singing cowboy billed as
“The Bronze Buckaroo” in a series of Westerns.
But
Jeffries, who died on May 25 in West Hills, California, from heart
failure, was a mystery to fans and the press alike.
Over
the course of his life he changed his name, altered his given age,
and married five times, his second wife being famed stripper Tempest
Storm. A naturally talented singer with a near falsetto singing
voice, he worked on expanding his range until he could sing closer to
a baritone. His choice of music was originally jazz, then on to
country with the influence of his films, and back to jazz.
Born
Umberto Alejandro Ballentino in Detroit on September 24, 1913 (or
1914), he was of Irish descent on his mother’s side, but his
father’s side was a mystery. Over the years the story on his
father’s background as Jeffries told it would change from
African-American to mixed race, and eventually to Sicilian,
Ethiopian, French, Italian, and Moorish descent. Late in life he
switched gears again and said that his father, Howard Jeffrey, was
actually his stepfather, and that his real father was Domenico
Ballentino, a Sicilian man who died in World War I.
Jeffries
grew up in a racially mixed neighborhood and took a strong interest
in singing as a teenager, often found hanging out and occasionally
singing with the Howard Buntz Orchestra at various Detroit clubs. He
moved to Chicago, earning his living as a club singer, working for Al
Capone among others. Erskine Tate signed the 19-year old Jeffries as
a vocalist with his orchestra at Chicago’s Savoy Dance Hall. It was
there Earl “Fatha” Hines spotted him and hired him in 1931 for a
number of appearances and recordings.
He
left Hines in 1934 and after touring with Blanche Calloway’s band,
Jeffries settled in Los Angeles, where he found work as a vocalist
and emcee at Club Alabam, where Duke Ellington spotted him, leading
to a 10-year career as a vocalist for Ellington’s band. On the
advice of Billy Strayhorn, Ellington’s long-time arranger, Jeffries
lowered his range. He had several hits with "In My
Solitude," "I Got It Bad and That Ain't Good," "When
I Write My Song," "Jump for Joy," and his signature
song "Flamingo," which became a huge hit in 1941, selling
more than 14 million copies. Because of this, Ellington’s studio,
RCA, gave him carte blanche in the 1940s.
It
was only a matter of time before Jeffries would make the transition
to film. He was a tall (6’ 7”), debonair, light-complexioned man
with blue eyes who projected a handsome Latin look. But because he
was black - and furthermore identified himself as black - Hollywood
had no room for him, unless he wanted to play the stereotyped
“darkie.”
Notorious
Poverty Row producer Sam Newfield (Samuel Neufeld) caught Jeffries’
singing act and signed him for what would be the first
African-American Western of the talking era: Harlem on the
Prairie (1937), with Herb in the Gene Autry mold as a
singing cowboy. Given the production values and Newfield’s
direction, the film looks amateurish, wasting the talents of not only
Jeffries, but also those of Mantan Moreland and Spencer Williams, Jr.
Jeffries had makeup applied to make him look even darker and almost
never removed his white Stetson, lest the audience glimpse his light
brown hair. The film was a hit, though, and led to more of the
same, Two-Gun Man From Harlem (1938), Rhythm
Rodeo (1938), The Bronze Buckaroo (1939),
and Harlem Rides the Range (1939). All were made on a
shoestring and each returned a good-sized profit from an audience
hungry for African-American entertainment.
Not
that Jeffries passed totally unnoticed outside the African-American
community. Cowboy star Buck Jones was highly impressed with Jeffries
and wanted him to go to South America and immerse himself in both
Spanish and the local culture. The idea was to give Jeffries a new
name and identity when he returned so he could star in a series of
Westerns produced by Jones for white audiences. Jeffries, however,
turned the idea down flat, stating that he was what he was and
nothing could change that.
Despite
the wretched production values of his movies, the whip snapping,
pistol-toting, melody-gushing Bronze Buckaroo still managed to
come across as an alternative to the demeaning Hollywood image and
one of the few positive role models available to the black America of
the time.
Harlem
Rides the Range would be the last film Jeffries made until
1951, when he took a supporting role in Allied Artists’ Disc
Jockey, about a deejay fighting to prove that radio is just as
popular as ever despite the incursion of television. He filled in the
gap singing with Ellington, a high point of which was his appearance
with Dorothy Dandridge, Big Joe Turner, and Ivie Anderson in
Ellington’s all-black revue, “Jump for Joy,” in 1941.
In
the 1950s, Jeffries worked in Europe, mainly in France, where he
owned a couple of nightclubs. Returning to America, he recorded jazz
records, including “Say It Isn’t So,” a critically-acclaimed
collection of ballads from 1957. He also cashed in on the burgeoning
calypso craze, starring (along with his Calypsomaniacs) in Allied
Artists’ Calypso Joe (1957), with Angie Dickinson
and Ed Kemmer.
Come
the ‘60s and Jeffries became a guest star on television, appearing
in such series as I Dream of Jeannie, The
Virginian, Hawaii Five-O, and a recurring role in
Hanna-Barbera’s animated football sitcom, Where's
Huddles? He also wrote and directed the nudie
crime/comedy, Mundo Depravados, starring then-wife
Tempest Storm, in 1967. Tempest stars as a stripper (what else?)
whose coworkers are being murdered. Two goofy detectives are assigned
to the case and eventually bring the killer to justice. The film is
notable only for the talents of its star and her attempts to read her
lines from cue cards. Other than that, the film makes little or no
sense.
In
the mid-1990s Westerns again became popular and Jeffries appeared as
himself in the 1996 TV-movie, The Cherokee Kid, as well
as recording “The Bronze Buckaroo Rides Again” for Warner
Western. In 2003, he was inducted into the Cowboy Hall of Fame and
received an invitation to sing for President George W. Bush at the
White House. Refusing to retire, he was also a regular performer at
Café Aroma in Idyllwild, California.
Besides
his wife, Savannah, daughters Romi West, Ferne Aycock, and Patricia
Jeffries, sons Robert and Michael, and several grandchildren and
great-grandchildren also survive Jeffries.
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