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For years, a photograph supposedly showing American jazz singer Ella Fitzgerald in jail for singing to a mixed-race audience in 1955 has circulated online. A Facebook account that describes itself as her official fan page shared the photo in October 2020, for example, and Snopes came across it via the below-displayed meme in February 2022. It was true that the photo showed Fitzgerald (right) in police custody in October 1955 after she and other performers held a show for an integrated audience at the Houston Music Hall, according to the Houston Public Library's digital archives and other evidence. Georgiana Henry, the jazz singer's assistant, was the person photographed sitting next to her (left), as outlined in the center's description of the photo. But the photo's caption asserting the nature of Fitzgerald's arrest deserved extra context. On paper, police arrested her and other performers for supposedly breaking gambling laws. For those reasons, we rate this fact check a Mixture of truth and falsehoods. At the time of the 1955 incident, public spaces in Houston were indeed largely segregated by race, despite the fact that racial segregation laws were abolished the year prior. However, Jean-Baptiste Illinois Jacquet (a tenor saxophonist from the city) and jazz producer Norman Granz, who was Fitzgerald's manager, did not want racial segregation in jazz spaces, according to a 2010 piece by Aimee L’Heureux for Houston History Magazine. They considered jazz a vehicle for social change to fight discrimination and segregation with the potential to change people's racist views. So, while setting up a national tour featuring performers such as Fitzgerald, Jacquet and Dizzy Gillespie, Granz included a non-segregation clause in contracts with venues, according to All About Jazz, a website dedicated to jazz history and culture. That applied to the Houston Music Hall, where, according to L’Heureux: In other words, a group of police officers that was supposedly tasked with cracking down on illegal gambling, sex work, drug use, etc., went undercover by forgoing uniforms and getting backstage access to the performance. The jazz concert consisted of two sets, and, before the start of the second one, the vice squad arrested Fitzgerald, Henry, Gillespie, Jacquet, and Granz on suspicion of illegal gambling, according to L’Heureux. The now-defunct Houston Post newspaper reported that Fitzgerald dabbed tears from her eyes as she was being booked, per the Houston Chronicle's retelling of the ordeal in a 2011 blog post. The officers took the crew of performers to the police station, where the in-question photo was taken by Post photographer Pete Vazquez, according to the Houston Public Library's digital archives and the Houston Chronicle. A number of photographers and reporters were supposedly waiting for the performers at the government facility when they arrived with law enforcement. The Houston Metropolitan Research Center now owns the rights to the image, as well as another photograph taken in the same moment that depicts Gillespie and Jacquet in police custody, as well. The description for that image on the library's digital archival website says: The performers paid a fine and were released shortly after the photographs were taken, according to sources including the Houston Chronicle and L’Heureux. They made it back to the concert to play the show's second set without the audience knowing about their arrests. In sum, Fitzgerald and other performers were indeed arrested during a show for a mixed-race audience in Houston. And, afterwards, Granz said he believed police targeted them because of the crowd's demographics, according to All About Jazz. The whole thing was just jive, Granz reportedly said. They [didn't] like the idea that we'd 'mix' everything because...if you could prove that Black and white could sit next to each other, you could break up a lot of shit down there. In Granz's 2001 obituary, The Guardian summarized the ordeal (and its aftermath) like this: In a 2022 article, Jordan Potter, a writer for the London-based Far Out Magazine, concluded: [It's] quite plain to see, the true motivation behind the arrests was the police department’s unwillingness to accept the new laws that allowed Black and white people to mix at events. [See also: Did Marilyn Monroe Help Ella Fitzgerald Book Mocambo Gig?]
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