Born on April 9, 1898, in Princeton, New Jersey, Paul Robeson
went on to become a stellar athlete and performing artist. He
starred in both stage and film versions of The Emperor Jones and
Show Boat, and established an immensely popular screen and singing
career of international proportions. Robeson spoke out against
racism and became a world activist, yet was blacklisted during the
paranoia of McCarthyism in the 1950s. He died in Pennsylvania in
1976.
When he was 17, Robeson earned a scholarship to attend Rutgers
University, the third African American to do so, and became one of
the institution's most stellar students. He received top honors for
his debate and oratory skills, won 15 letters in four varsity
sports, was elected Phi Beta Kappa and became his class
valedictorian.
Increasing political awareness impelled Robeson to visit the
Soviet Union in 1934, and from that year he became increasingly
identified with strong left-wing commitments, while continuing his
success in concerts, recordings, and theatre. In 1950 the U.S. State
Department withdrew his passport because he refused to sign an
affidavit disclaiming membership in the Communist Party. In the
following years he was virtually ostracized for his political views,
although in 1958 the Supreme Court overturned the affidavit ruling.
Robeson then left the United States to live in Europe and travel in
countries of the Soviet bloc, but he returned to the United States
in 1963 because of ill health.
Robeson appeared in a number of films, including Sanders of the
River(1935), Show Boat (1936), Song of Freedom (1936), and The Proud
Valley (1940). His autobiography, Here I Stand, was published in
1958.