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Black Journal: 26; Alice Coltrane

African American Museum

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Object Details

Produced by

National Educational Television, American, 1954 - 1970
William Greaves, American, 1926 - 2014

Directed by

Stan Lathan, American, born 1945

Subject of

Alice Coltrane, American, 1937 - 2007
John Coltrane, American, 1926 - 1967

Owned by

Pearl Bowser, American, 1931 - 2023

Caption

This 16mm film is a documentary segment focusing on the life of Alice Coltrane and her children in the wake of the death of her husband, famed jazz musician John Coltrane.

Description

The 16mm color film print is a short documentary made for a segment of National Education Television's Black Journal television program. The segment focuses on the life of Alice Coltrane and her children in the wake of the death of her husband, famed jazz musician John Coltrane. This film was shot sometime during 1970; three years after the death of John Coltrane.
This film opens with a collage of photos of jazz musician John Coltrane with a voice-over of a male narrator communicating the musical genius and personal demeanor of the renowned music artist. The voice-over ends with an open-ended statement on John Coltrane's family, leading into an interview with his wife, Alice Coltrane. Alice Coltrane discusses the influence her late husband has had on her life, both musically and spiritually. She speaks of him being a spiritual person, although not tied to one organized religion, his vegetarian diet, and how he carved time out of his days to meditate. There is footage of their children playing in the yard and walking with their mother. Alice plays the harp and talks about how her music is a manifestation of her spirituality.
She discusses her musical career and how she balances that with being a mother and paying tribute to her late husband, but also not wanting to be defined as an extension of John Coltrane's music. Instead, when she finds herself playing some of the music he wrote, she sees herself as sharing in what he produced throughout his career. Footage of her playing the piano at a small jazz concert with a few other musicians plays for two minutes. In the final minutes of the segment, Alice Coltrane explains her relationship with a higher power and the personal enlightenment she has felt and gained through meditation. The film ends with a dolly-out/zoom-out long shot of Alice Coltrane and her children waving from their home.

Credit Line

Collection of the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture, Gift of Pearl Bowser

Date

1970

Object number

2012.79.1.16.1a

Restrictions & Rights

© National Educational Television
Permission required for use. Proper usage is the responsibility of the user.

Type

sound films
color films (visual works)
16mm (photographic film size)

Medium

acetate film

Dimensions

Physical extent (film): 580 ft
Duration: 17 min.

Place filmed

Dix Hills, Huntington, Long Island, New York, United States, North and Central America

See more items in

National Museum of African American History and Culture Collection

Collection title

Pearl Bowser Collection

Portfolio/Series

Black Journal

Classification

Time-based Media - Moving Images

Data Source

National Museum of African American History and Culture

Topic

African American
Families
Film
Jazz (Music)
Motherhood
Musicians
Profile films
Public television
Spirituality

Metadata Usage

CC0

Link to Original Record

http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/fd5cc27a5ab-2c2f-4077-9403-28720a470ace

Record ID

nmaahc_2012.79.1.16.1a

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