Talk:Canada Lee
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References needed
We need to add some references to this article.
Amazon.com doesn't know Blacklist: Recovering the Life of Canada Lee so I can't find the author, etc.
But it does have Becoming Something : The Story of Canada Lee by Mona Z. Smith published in August 2004. ISBN: 0571211429 — Preceding unsigned comment added by RJFJR (talk • contribs) 00:35, 9 December 2005 (UTC)
- It looks like Blacklist: Recovering the Life of Canada Lee is a documentary that is currently in production. I did a 'google' search and found it at the Internet Movie Database Website: http://www.us.imdb.com/title/tt0498328/.
- The author of the abovementioned book-Becoming Something : The Story of Canada Lee by Mona Z. Sm-does have a website that should be added as an extenal link if it has not been already.
- Also I agree about the article needing to be cleaned up. The information in the first two paragraphs is redundant and the article itself reads more like a testimonal, or rather a marketing piece for the upcoming documentary than an encyclopedia entry. The information it contains is good but it needs to be organized according to standard.Ladydayelle (talk • contribs) 12:05, 6 March 2006
Hyperbole
This article doesn't even mention Paul Robeson, who was the true pioneer in Hollywood and who was as persecuted -- if not more (his passport was taken away and he might have been a victim of the CIA, according to some accounts) than Canada Lee. Lee is to Robeson as say, Luther Adler is to Marlon Brando (in Method actors).
As for the contention that Alfred Hitchcock let Canada Lee rewrite his dialog, John Steinbeck who wrote the scrip despised Hitchcock as a racist who did all he could to turn Canada Lee's cahracter into a stereotype, by suberting Steinbeck's dialogue.
Something is wrong here. This person has gone overboard in praising Lee, thus creating distortions. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Timmy Toole (talk • contribs) 16:43, 18 December 2006 (UTC).