Avon Long (June 18, 1910[citation needed] – February 15, 1984) was an American Broadway actor and singer.
Early years
Long was born in Baltimore, Maryland.[1] He had typhoid fever when he was 2 years old, and he later said that the disease affected his feet, giving him "the hard bone structure a dancer needs".[2] He attended Frederick Douglass High School, where he was especially influenced by the Latin teacher and drama coach, Nellie A. Buchanan.[3][4] In 1928 he learned that a deficiency of one credit was going to prevent him from graduating. Rather than return for another year for that credit, he dropped out of school.[5] Late in the 1920s he moved from Boston to New York and began working at the Lafayette Theatre in Harlem.[6]
Career
In 1933 Long performed in a production of Hot Chocolates,[5] and he was featured at the Cotton Club in Harlem, singing "Brown Boy".[7]
Long performed in a number of Broadway shows, including Porgy and Bess (as Sportin' Life in the 1942 revival), and Beggar's Holiday (1946).[8] Long and Lena Horne co-introduced the Harold Arlen–Ted Koehler composition "As Long As I Live" in Cotton Club Parade (1934) when Horne was only 16 years old.[citation needed] In 1946 he was featured in the East Harlem Players' production The Pied Piper of Hamelin.[9] A review in The New York Times said that Long was "wasted" in a 1945 production of Carib Song: "A fine singer and dancer, he gets one good song — "Woman Is a Rascal" — and not a great deal more."[10]
He reprised his role of Sportin' Life in the 1951 Columbia recording of Porgy and Bess, the most complete recording of the opera issued up to that time. He also appeared with Thelma Carpenter in the 1952 revival of Shuffle Along, which was recorded by RCA Victor.
Long originated the role of John in Bubbling Brown Sugar on Broadway, which opened at the August Wilson Theatre (then-ANTA Playhouse) on March 2, 1976, and closed on December 31, 1977, after 766 performances.
Long also appeared in a number of films and television shows. He performed a specialty number in Centennial Summer (1945).[11] He played the elderly Chicken George Moore in Roots: The Next Generationsminiseries, and had small roles in Trading Places (1983) – memorable as Ezra, the servant to whom Ralph Bellamy gives a miserably small Christmas bonus ("maybe I'll go to the movies – by myself"), The Sting (1973) ("Flat rate!"), and Harry and Tonto (1974). He was originally cast to play George Jefferson in "All in the Family", but was replaced based on negative feedback from Carroll O'Connor.[12]
Personal life and death
At the time of his death, Long was married to the former Gretchen Cotton. They had two daughters. He died of cancer on February 15, 1984, in Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center, aged 73.[6]
^Peters, Ida (August 26, 1975). "Nellie Buchanan Night". The Baltimore Afro-American. p. 17. Retrieved March 31, 2019 – via NewspaperArchive.com.
^ abMatthews, Ralph (September 16, 1933). "Looking at the Stars". The Afro-American. Maryland, Baltimore. p. 18. Retrieved December 26, 2024 – via Newspapers.com.