āNo white woman can do it like I did,ā Carol Channing told CNN host Larry King in 2003. The beloved singer and actress enjoyed more than 70 years of success on stage and screen before dying of natural causes on Tuesday morning in her home in Rancho Mirage, Calif. Channing was 97 years old.
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The Seattle, Washington-born Channing, best known for originating the titular role in Hello, Dolly on Broadway, as well as Lorelei Lee in Gentleman Prefer Blondes, amassed 28 theatrical credits and 29 film and television credits in her storied career. She earned four Tony awards (including two Lifetime Achievement awards) and seven nominations, an Olivier Award nomination for her role in Hello Dolly, a Drama Critics Circle Lifetime Achievement Award, and an Oscar nomination for Best Supporting Actress in the film version Thoroughly Modern Millie, for which she won the 1968 Golden Globe.
Channing was also an early and outspoken advocate for arts education and for the LGBTQ+ community, which she often credited with supporting her success. Channingās 2002 Lifetime Achievement Award Tony was granted for work with the Benefit for AIDS and The Actorsā Fund, which provides critical medical and financial assistance to many in the theatrical community.
In 2003, Channing published her bestselling autobiography, Just Lucky, I Guess: A Memoir of Sorts. In it, the then 83-year-old revealed learning at age 16 that her paternal grandmother was African American, and her father of German and black ancestry (listed as ācoloredā on his birth certificate). In an interview with the Chicago Tribune, Channing recalled that her mother told her as she was leaving to attend Bennington College, lest she be surprised to someday give birth to a black child.
āI know itās true the moment I sing and dance. Iām proud as can be of [my black ancestry],ā Channing said of her heritage. āItās one of the great strains in show business. Iām so grateful. My father was a very dignified man and as white as I am. My [paternal] grandparents were Nordic German, so apparently, I [too] took after them [in appearance].ā
In a transcript of her conversation with CNNās King, Channing gave a further glimpse into the phenomenon known as racially āpassingā in America, and revealed herself to be progressive beyond her era.
KING: So youāre proud of your mixed heritage?
CHANNING: Very, when I found out. I was 16 years old and my mother told me. And you know, the only reaction on me was, āGee, I got the greatest genes in show business.āKING: Some people years ago discovering that might have been disturbed by it?CHANNING: Yes, years ago because when I found out about it, you donāt want to do that. KING: You donāt say it. CHANNING: You donāt say it. Thereās a lot of it down South. KING: People are ashamed of it.CHANNING: [Iām] proud of it. KING: Iām glad to hear it. CHANNING: I really am. I mean look, what makes you, you? You donāt know. None of us knows our heritage. Not in the United States. KING: Weāre all immigrants. CHANNING: Exactly, this is the changing face of America. Iām part of it. Isnāt it wonderful?
(Updated 3/3/22 with new details)
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