Charles Lampkin Explained

Charles Lampkin
Birth Date:17 March 1913
Birth Place:Montgomery, Alabama, US
Death Place:San Jose, California, US
Alma Mater:John Carroll University, Cleveland School of Music
Occupation:Actor, Musician and Lecturer
Years Active:1951–1989

Charles Lampkin (1913–1989) was an American actor, musician and lecturer.

Early life

Charles Lampkin was born on March 17, 1913, in Ward 4 of Montgomery, Alabama. He was the third son of Edgar Lampkin and Sarah Bidell. His paternal lineage is traced to British slave-owners and his maternal ancestors were Africans enslaved in the British colonies of Virginia and Georgia before the American Revolution of 1776. His great-grandmother Ann Lampkin, an emancipated slave, was one of the first people to befriend a twenty-five-year-old Booker T. Washington when he arrived in Alabama in 1881. She secured land and along with her church sisters raised funds for the Tuskegee Institute. Edgar Lampkin moved his family from Montgomery to Cleveland in the 1920s, part of the Great Migration.[1]

Career

Lampkin was a pioneer of Spoken Word in the 1930s and winner of Ohio debating cups in 1939, 1940 and 1941. In Arch Oboler's Five, the first science fiction film about a nuclear holocaust, Lampkin introduced Oboler to The Creation by James Weldon Johnson and convinced him to include excerpts of it in the script of Five. It would become Lampkin's soliloquy and may be the first time that wide audiences in the United States, Latin America and Europe were exposed to African-American poetry, albeit not identified as such.

Charles Lampkin served as Music Director of the American Peoples' Chorus from 1943 to 1945. On June 26, 1944, he conducted Paul Robeson and the APC at the historic Negro Freedom Rally[2] at Madison Square Garden. Uta Hagen and Cardinal Spellman were in attendance.[3]

He composed a piano concerto in G minor before 1955 and in 1969 was appointed Artist-in-residence, Professor of Music and Theatre Arts, at Santa Clara University until 1981.[1]

He was nominated for an Emmy Award in 1979 for his performance in the ABC after-school special Home Run for Love, which aired on national television in the United States in October, 1978 and was re-broadcast in April, 1980.[4] In 1979 Lampkin played Professor Loman in Alex Haley's . In the 1960s and 1970s Lampkin was a pioneer of multi-cultural pedagogy in California.[1]

Lecture-recitations

In his college classes, Charles Lampkin divided original African-American music into four parts: Spirituals, the Shout Song, the Work Song and the Blues.[5]

Charles Lampkin's performances of the poetry of the Harlem Renaissance set to music he composed were recorded in 1957 for the National Association of English Teachers. The records were distributed to thousands of schools across the United States. The original recording are available at the Charles Lampkin Foundation web site.[6]

The centerpiece of the Charles Lampkin lecture platform was the Black American classic (whose status he helped secure) The Creation from the imaginative sermon series of James Weldon Johnson's God's Trombones.[5]

Academia

In January 1969, Lampkin joined the College of Humanities faculty at the University of Santa Clara as an Artist-in-residence, teaching a course in Beginning Acting and another one in Ethnic Music (until his retirement in 1981). He was also a lecturer at the University of the Pacific (Black Studies Program).[1]

Charles Lampkin Foundation

In 2011, Charles Lampkin's grandson Daniel Bruno created the Charles Lampkin Foundation as a non-profit that aims to counter anti-Intellectualism and the degrading effects of contemporary culture via awareness of the Harlem Renaissance.[6] The foundation produced a series of videos which utilize Charles Lampkin's 1957 narration combined with relevant historical figures. A two-hour documentary Dreams From My Grandfather combines a movie review of Arch Oboler's Five along with rare historical footage of World War II and the nuclear arms race. With a music score including Sibelius, Holst, Vaughn Williams, Mahler and Bing Crosby, Daniel Bruno's narration includes geopolitical analysis of Japan's motives for siding with the Axis powers and Roosevelt's foreknowledge of the attack on Pearl Harbor. Outstanding renditions of Negro spirituals by Paul Robeson are heard throughout and in a final twist of irony, the documentary closes with the 10,000 strong Osaka volunteer choir performing Beethoven's "Ode To Joy" in 2009.

Filmography

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YearTitleRoleNotes
1951FiveCharlesFilm
1961 Surfside 6Monsieur ServatTV series
1962 Rider on a Dead HorseTaylorFilm
1962 The Law and Mr. JonesHeadwaiter / Tom Redford / Hecktel, The Storyville GangTV series
1962 Saints and SinnersHayes / Mr. HowardTV series
1963 Alcoa PremiereZimmyTV series
1963 The UntouchablesHal TempleTV series
1963 Toys in the AtticGus, HandymanFilm, Uncredited
1963Twilight of HonorMr. Simmons Film, Uncredited
1963 Mr. NovakRobert DesmondTV series
1963 Dr. KildareEddie, CustodianTV series
1964 One Man's WayLafeFilm
1965 Please Don't Eat the DaisiesMr. BriggsTV series
1962-1965 Ben CaseySamTV series
1966 The Rare BreedPorterFilm, Uncredited
1965-1966 The Long, Hot SummerAndrewTV series
1967 Run for Your LifeDr. Herbert GarrisonTV series
1967 TarzanMatumbaTV series
1967Accidental FamilyCharlieTV series
1967 Cowboy in AfricaDr. MerarTV series
1968 The Wild Wild WestClerkTV series
1968 Journey to ShilohEdward Film, Uncredited
1968 The Thomas Crown AffairElevator OperatorFilm, Uncredited
1968 It Takes a ThiefGardener / Professor KilghiTV series
1968-1969 JuliaCharley / ElectricianTV series
1969 The OutsiderRichardTV series
1969 CouncilmanTV series
1969 Marcus Welby, M.D.Mr. MurtreeTV series
1969 Hello, Dolly!Laborer Film, Uncredited
1968-1970 Mayberry R.F.D.Ralph BartonTV series
1970 The Name of the GameRubanoTV series
1970 Watermelon ManDr. CatlinFilm
1970 Barefoot in the ParkTV series
1967-1970 That GirlJanitor / Mr. HansenTV series
1969-1970 Barber / Ralph MillerTV series
1970 The Most Deadly GameGriggsTV series
1970 BreakoutCookTV movie
1970 IronsideTruck DriverTV series
1971 Family AffairSuperintendentTV series
1971 The Partridge FamilyHeavyTV series
1971 The Bill Cosby ShowHarold MorganTV series
1971 ClerkTV series
1971 The InternsJudge DavidsonTV series
1964-1971 My Three SonsHarry West / Herman / MailmanTV series
1972 The Bold Ones: The New DoctorsMailmanTV series
1972 JigsawTV movie
1972 The ManCongressman WaldingFilm
1972HammerBig SidFilm
1972 The Odd CoupleBrother LowellFilm
1972 McMillan & WifeJudge Clement WilliamsTV series
1972 The Delphi BureauJason ThomasTV series
1973 Emergency!Airport EmployeeTV series
1973 The Streets of San FranciscoBenjy HoskinsTV series
1969-1973 The F.B.I.Hargroves / The BrokerTV series
1973 Love StoryFatherTV series
1974 The Black GodfatherDanny's FatherFilm
1974 That's My MamaWill HarringtonTV series
1974 HurricaneWyn StokeyTV movie
1974 The LawJudge Rathman - Melendez TrialTV movie
1974 Panic on the 5:22George LincolnTV movie
1974 The RookiesSam ReeseTV series
1971-1975 Adam-12Henry Ward / Johnson / Myron BradleyTV series
1975 Wide World MysteryTV series
1975 Cornbread, Earl and MeFred JenkinsFilm
1976 Special DeliveryMailmanFilm
1976 Gemini ManPop KingstonTV series
1977 Islands in the StreamConstableFilm
1977 Irvin McDuffieTV movie
1977 The Sanford ArmsWalter CalvinTV series
1978 The Incredible HulkJoeTV series
1978 ABC Afterschool SpecialsDavy HendersonTV series
1979 LomanTV mini-series
1979 FriendsTug SummerfieldTV series
1980 House CallsTV series
1975-1980 Barnaby JonesBenny / Mort RogersTV series
1981 Quincy M.E.Dr. JamisonTV series
1981 S.O.B.ButlerFilm
1981 First Monday in OctoberJustice Josiah ClewesFilm
1982 Father MurphyTV series
1982 Too Close for ComfortMr. ChristmasTV series
1983 Second ThoughtsJudge RichardsFilm
1983 Bare EssenceTV series
1984 Last of the Great SurvivorsElroyTV movie
1984 Scarecrow and Mrs. KingMr. FellerTV series
1984 The JeffersonsOtisTV series
1984 Highway to HeavenDocTV series
1984 Ghost WarriorWillie WalshFilm
1985 HunterJudgeU.S. TV Series
1985 Street HawkArtie ShankTV series
1985 CocoonPopsFilm
1985 Night CourtGrampa RobinsonTV series
1986 He's the MayorEzraTV series
1987 WebsterSamTV series
1987 227FelixTV series
1987 The Last Innocent ManJudge Clement AutleyTV movie
1987-1988Frank's PlaceTiger ShepinTV series, (final appearance)

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Charles Lampkin - Biography . Charles Lampkin Foundation . March 14, 2012 . April 30, 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130430025438/http://www.charleslampkin.org/biography.html . dead .
  2. Web site: Negro freedom rally . University of Virginia Library . 2013 . 11 June 2013.
  3. Web site: Cleveland Call Post . July 23, 1942 . March 14, 2012 . April 30, 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130430025438/http://www.charleslampkin.org/biography.html . dead .
  4. Web site: Charles Lampkin . Sandra Brennan. https://archive.today/20120711000606/http://movies.nytimes.com/person/40199/Charles-Lampkin/biography . dead . July 11, 2012 . Movies & TV Dept. . . March 14, 2012.
  5. Web site: Charles Lampkin: Remembering the actor and music man who was Santa Clara University's artist-in-residence from 1969-1981 . James Torrens . Santa Clara Magazine . Summer 1991 . March 14, 2012 . April 30, 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130430025438/http://www.charleslampkin.org/biography.html . dead .
  6. Web site: Charles Lampkin Foundation . Charles Lampkin Foundation . March 14, 2012.