[Later this
month, the sixth
and final season of my favorite current TV show (and one of my all
time-favs as well), Longmire, drops on Netflix. So this
week I’ve AmericanStudied a handful of Longmire’s
many fascinating characters, leading up to this special weekend post on indigenous
performers in popular culture!]
On three
performers who help us trace the evolution of 20th and 21st
century American popular culture.
1)
Nipo
Strongheart (1891-1966): I could very easily write this whole blog post
(and probably a whole blog series) about Strongheart, the Yakama artist and
activist who began performing with Buffalo
Bill’s Wild West Show as a child (his father was likely a white performer
for the show while his mother was a Yakama Native American, although these biographical
details seem ambiguous), launched his adult career giving presentations on
Native American culture for the YMCA
War Work Council during World War I, became a very successful lecturer and performer
on the Lyceum and Chautauqua circuits, and served as a technical advisor for
both silent
and talking films.
Moreover, while on the lecture circuit Strongheart
gathered numerous signatures on petitions advocating for Native American
citizenship, an effort that helped produced the 1924
Indian Citizenship Act that finally allowed Native Americans to become US
citizens. Quite simply, for all these reasons you can’t tell the full story of
Native American or American culture and history in the early 20th century
without including Strongheart.
2)
Jay
Silverheels (1912-1980): Strongheart continued to advise films throughout the
1950s, but that decade also witnessed the rise to popular prominence of Canadian
amateur athlete turned actor Jay Silverheels (born Harold Preston Smith on the Six
Nations Reserve of Ontario). After a successful 1930s
career as a traveling lacrosse player and boxer, Silverheels landed a
series of film roles in the 1940s and 50s, including in such prominent, diverse
films as Humphrey Bogart’s
Key Largo (1948) and Jimmy Stewart’s Broken Arrow (1950). But it was his
role as Tonto, stalwart friend and companion of the Lone Ranger on the 1949-1957 television
series (and in two spinoff films, The Lone Ranger
[1956] and The Lone Ranger and the Lost
City of Gold [1958]), that made Silverheels one of the century’s
best-known native performers. Like the show’s Western form itself, Tonto
straddled the line between serious and silly, respectfully complex and stereotypically
simplified. But compared to the brief, often one-note appearances by native
performers in many Western films or shows, Tonto played a central role throughout
the show’s run, giving Silverheels a
chance to invest this character with a depth and humanity that were
striking and remain hugely influential half a century later.
3)
Graham Greene
(1952- ): Born on the same Ontario Six Nations Reserve as Silverheels, Graham
Greene has gone on to enjoy a lengthy and impressively varied career in both
film and television (including as a Canadian sheriff in two episodes of Murder, She Wrote!). I would highlight three particular roles
as demonstrating both his breadth of talent and the evolution of parts for
native actors in the late 20th century: Kicking Bird, the 19th
century Sioux leader who becomes a vital friend to Kevin Costner’s John Dunbar
in Dances with Wolves (1990); Walter Crow Horse, a
1970s Sioux tribal policeman who starts as a frenemy of Val Kilmer’s FBI agent
in Thunderheart (1992) but ends the film [SPOILER
ALERT!] as a crucial co-protagonist; and Malachi Strand, a
disgraced Cheyenne police chief turned criminal mastermind who has served as
one of the chief villains on the last few seasons of Longmire. That I could have picked countless other Greene roles and
performances as well is a good bit of the point: thanks in part to the
groundbreaking work of performers like Strongheart and Silverheels, as well as
to their own talent, indigenous actors like Greene have become a central and
unremarkable (in the very best sense) part of American popular culture.
Next series
starts Monday,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other Native American texts or images you’d highlight?
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