Nina Simone's music and this movie

Kaleb 2022-01-22 08:04:51

For Colored Girls, adapted from a stage play, condenses the stories of 8 women of color in a small apartment in Harlem. The ending song is the daughter of my favorite female jazz singer, Nina Simone. It covers her 1966 song "Four Women". Nina Simone’s record is one of the few that I will be complained about when I play it in the car, because the listeners don’t understand her simplicity. Where does the deep anger in music come from.

Nina Simone sang "The House Of The Rising Sun" earlier than many rock and folk singers. A girl who loves an alcoholic by mistake, goes home without face, and finally boarded the train to the New Orleans brothel. Nina Simone's famous quote: Jazz is a white term for black music. I said my music is black classical music.

Nina Simone's life has been fighting for racial rights instead of making kitsch music. This movie uses her music and her daughter is also a special memorial.

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Extended Reading

For Colored Girls quotes

  • Man #2: Wait, wait, wait. Look, I got something to tell you. I only have about $80 on me.

    Tangie: What are you talking about?

    Man #2: That's all I have. If you want to go to the ATM, we can do that.

    Tangie: You think I'm a hooker?

    Man #2: Aren't you?

    Tangie: No!

    Man #2: I'm sorry. I'm drunk.

    [starts laughing]

    Tangie: What is so funny?

    Man #2: I guess I'm just old-fashioned. What kind of woman picks a man up in a bar and brings him back to her place if she's not a hooker?

    Tangie: One that likes to fuck.

    [the man starts laughing again]

    Tangie: Don't laugh at me.

    Man #2: I'm sorry.

    Tangie: Don't laugh at me.

    Man #2: This is some sick shit.

    Tangie: You men with your double standards. You can do it, but a woman can't. Get out. *Get out*!

    Man #2: That's a good idea. You seem to do this too often to be healthy.

    Tangie: You think I have some kind of disease?

    Man #2: If it ain't in your body, it is definitely in your head.

    Tangie: You ain't one to judge me you son of a bitch!

  • Jo: I went to my gynecologist, and before you, every level in my body was fine.

    Carl: Baby, are you sick? Talk to me.

    Jo: Tell me the truth, Carl. Who have you been sleeping with?

    Carl: Jo, I promise you since... Since you and I have been together, I have not slept with another woman, and I promise you that.

    Jo: What about a man?

    Carl: What the fuck did you just ask me?

    Jo: I see the way you look at them when you think I'm not paying attention. I see it. The pool boy in the Hamptons, my driver, the guy the other night at the opera. I see it all, Carl.

    Carl: You have no idea how much I hate coming up into this motherfucking house sometimes. Every day, Joanna, if it ain't you telling me what to wear, how to look, calling the shots over my head.

    Jo: Are you gay?

    Carl: How you gonna ask me a question like that?

    Jo: How did you marry a woman, and then turn around and let a man bend you over?

    Carl: Ain't nobody bending me over.

    Jo: So you doing the bending? Is that what it is?

    Carl: I don't wake up holding another man, walking down the street holding some man's hands. That's gay, okay? That ain't me.

    Jo: You're saying a lie, Carl. You're saying a lot without saying nothing at all.

    Carl: I'm saying that your husband is a man, Jo. I'm a man every day of the week. I'm a man. I'm just a man who enjoys having sex with another man, Jo. No attachments, no fucking... No relationship, just sex, you know? That's what I'm saying, and I'm sorry. I'm sorry, Jo, for my truth.