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James Brown's Body Arrives for Public Viewing in Harlem
By The Associated Press
December 29, 2006
Even
in death, James Brown can move a crowd.
Thousands
of people danced and sang in the streets outside the Apollo Theater on Thursday
in raucous celebration of the music legend's life as his body was displayed to
the public on the stage where he made his 1956 debut.
Music
thumped from storefronts and portable stereos. People sang on the sidewalk.
Brown's wails and growls even blasted inside the auditorium as fans marched
quietly, single-file past his open gold coffin.
Inside,
Brown lay resplendent in a blue suit, white gloves and silver shoes. Flanking
the casket were giant photographs of the singer performing. An arrangement of
red flowers on a white background spelled out his nickname: "Godfather."
It
was maybe the first time the hardest-working man in show business graced a stage
in stillness, but that didn't stop his fans from partying.
"This
is a celebration of his life," said Bryant Preudhomme, 41, from
Westchester
County.
"James Brown gave you heart. He lifted you up when you were down. He gave you
hope."
Brown,
who died of heart failure Christmas morning at 73, was scheduled to lie in
repose until 8
p.m. in
the theater that helped catapult him to fame and was the setting for a thrilling
live album in 1962. A program for family and close friends was planned for
6
p.m.
His
body was carried to the theater through the streets of Harlem on a
majestic white carriage drawn by two white horses.
Hundreds
of fans followed behind the caisson singing the chorus of Brown's anthem, "Say
it Loud—I'm Black and I'm Proud."
To
many, Brown was more than just the energetic performer once introduced to
audiences as "Mr. Dynamite."
As
Norman Brand, of Harlem,
waited for the procession to begin, the 55-year-old recalled hearing Brown's
"Say it Loud" anthem for the first time in his native
Alabama.
"It
really changed the attitude of most black people. It was like a wake-up call.
Before that, if you were called black, it was like an insult," Brand said. "Just
one song and one word can change a whole situation."
Mourners
came from far and wide to attend the first in a trio of services that will keep
Brown almost as busy in death as he was in life.
His
casket left a Georgia
funeral parlor at around 9
p.m.
Wednesday for an all-night drive to New
York. It
arrived at the Rev. Al Sharpton's Harlem
headquarters just before noon and
was quickly transferred to the carriage for a 20-block procession to the
theater.
Sharpton,
a close friend of the singer, accompanied the body from
Georgia and
walked behind the carriage Thursday.
On
Friday, a private ceremony is planned at a church near
Augusta,
Ga. A
second public viewing of the singer's body will be held Saturday at the James
Brown Arena in Augusta.
Some
fans arrived at the Apollo as early as midnight for
a chance to pay their respects.
More
than 100 people were in line outside the theater by 8
a.m.,
drawn to a man who left an indelible mark on soul, R&B, funk, disco and rap.
Later, the crowd swelled into the thousands and spilled over onto both sides of
125th
Street. The
line to get inside the Apollo stretched for blocks.
Brown,
who lived in Beech
Island,
S.C.,
continued to work to the end, dying less than a week before he was to perform
New Year's Eve in Manhattan at
B.B. King's blues club. Chaka Khan, the Grammy Award-winning rhythm and blues
performer, will play instead. (AP)
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