Jean Bach Explained

Jean Bach should not be confused with Jean Back.

Jean Bach (September 27, 1918 – May 27, 2013) was an American documentary film director, radio producer and jazz aficionado. Bach directed the 1994 documentary, A Great Day in Harlem, based on a 1958 photograph of the same name.[1]

Bach was born Jean Enzinger in Chicago on September 27, 1918, and raised in Milwaukee.[1] She made frequent trips to Harlem and the Apollo Theater as a student at Vassar College.[1] She became a fixture in New York's jazz scene for the rest of her life.[1]

The black-and-white photograph which formed the basis of A Great Day in Harlem is a portrait of fifty-seven prominent jazz musicians who were photographed in front of a brownstone at 17 East 126th Street in the Harlem neighborhood of upper Manhattan. Bach learned that jazz bassist Milt Hinton had a home movie from the day of the photo shoot in 1958.[1] She acquired Hinton's home movie and used it for archival footage for her own film, A Great Day in Harlem, an hour-long documentary released in 1994.[1] Her film won the top award from the Chicago International Film Festival and earned an Academy Award for Documentary Feature nomination in 1995.[1] [2]

Jean Bach died at her home in Manhattan on May 27, 2013, at the age of 94.[1] Her husband, Bob Bach, a production coordinator on What's My Line?, whom she married in 1948, died in 1985.[1]

Notes and References

  1. News: Douglas. Martin. Jean Bach, Jazz Documentarian and Fan, Dies at 94 . . 2013-05-28 . 2013-06-19.
  2. Web site: NY Times: A Great Day in Harlem . https://web.archive.org/web/20110521134612/http://movies.nytimes.com/movie/134318/A-Great-Day-in-Harlem/details . dead . 2011-05-21 . Movies & TV Dept. . . 2011 . 2008-11-20.