www.chicagotribune.com/entertainment/chi-102208-rudy-ray-moore-obit-oct23,0,7135612.story
chicagotribune.com
Rudy Ray Moore, 81, 'Dolemite' star, precursor of rap, dies
By Douglas Martin
New York Times News Service
8:46 AM CDT, October 22, 2008
Rudy Ray Moore, whose standup comedy, records and movies related earthy rhyming tales of a vivid gaggle of characters as they lurched from sexual escapade to sexual escapade in a boisterous tradition, born in Africa, that helped shape today's hip-hop, died Sunday in Akron, Ohio. He was 81.
The cause was complications of diabetes, his Web site said.
Moore called himself the Godfather of Rap because of the number of hip-hop artists who used snippets of his recordings in theirs, performed with him or imitated him. These included Dr. Dre, Big Daddy Kane and 2 Live Crew.
Snoop Dogg thanked Moore in liner notes to the 2006 release of the soundtrack to Moore's 1975 film, "Dolemite," saying, "Without Rudy Ray Moore, there would be no Snoop Dogg, and that's for real."
Most critics refrained from overpraising "Dolemite," with the possible exception of John Leland, who wrote in The New York Times in 2002 that it "remains the 'Citizen Kane' of kung fu pimping movies." The film, made for $100,000, nonetheless became a cult classic among aficionados of so-called blaxploitation movies films that so exaggerate black stereotypes that they might plausibly be said to transcend those stereotypes.
Very little of Moore's work in any medium reached mainstream audiences, largely because his rapid-fire rhyming salaciousness exceeded the wildest excesses of even Redd Foxx and Richard Pryor. His comedy records in the 1960s and '70s most featuring nude photographs of him and more than one woman in suggestive poses were kept behind record store counters in plain brown wrappers and had to be explicitly requested.
But Moore could be said to represent a profound strand of African-American folk art. One of his standard stories concerns a monkey who uses his wiles and an accommodating elephant to fool a lion. The tale, which originated in West Africa, became a basis for an influential study by the Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr., "The Signifying Monkey: A Theory of Afro-American Literary Criticism."
In one of his few brushes with a national audience, Moore, in a startlingly cleaned-up version, told the story on "The Arsenio Hall Show" in the early 1990s. Other characters he described were new, almost always dirtier renderings in the tradition of trickster stories represented by Brer Rabbit and the cunning slave John, who outwitted his master to win freedom.
Moore updated the story of an old minstrel show favorite, Peetie (which he changed to "Petey") Wheatstraw, aka the Devil's Son-in-Law and the High Sheriff of Hell. Others in his cast were Pimpin' Sam and Hurricane Annie. Moore became a master at "toasting," a tradition of black rhymed storytelling over a beat in which the tallest tale or most outlandish insult wins.
Rudolph Frank Moore was born on March 17, 1927, in Ft. Smith, Ark., where he was soon singing in church. He moved to Cleveland at 15, found work peeling potatoes and washing dishes and won a talent contest. He was drafted in 1950 and performed for his fellow soldiers as the Harlem Hillbilly, singing country songs in R&B style.
After his discharge, he resumed his pre-Army act as the turbaned dancer Prince Dumarr. He made some records as a singer under the name Rudy Moore, doing songs like "Hully Gully Papa," who liked to "coffee grind real slow."
His life changed in 1970 when he found himself listening to the stories of Rico, a regular at the record store in Hollywood, Calif., where Moore worked.
He was particularly captivated by Rico's rude, rollicking stories of Dolemite, a name derived from dolomite, a mineral used in some cements. Moore perfected the Dolemite stories in comedy routines, most of which he recorded, then spent all his record earnings to make the movie "Dolemite." A sequel, "The Human Tornado," followed. A second sequel, "The Dolemite Explosion," also starring Moore, may be released later this year.
Fallout Entertainment bought the rights last year to remake the original movie. Bill Fishman of Fallout said some of Moore's famous lines would be used.
Moore is survived by four siblings; his daughter, Yvette Wesson, known as Rusty; and his 98-year-old mother, Lucille.
Violent scenes in Moore's movies included a man's guts being ripped out by another character's bare hands in "Dolemite." Almost none of the dialogue in any of his movies can be printed in a family newspaper, not to mention the language of his more than 16 comedy albums or even many of their titles.
But what is probably his most famous line is also his most typical:
Dolemite is my name
And rappin' and tappin'
That's my game
I'm young and free
And just as bad as I wanna be.
Copyright © 2008, Chicago Tribune
So passes one of the legends of the blaxplotation genre... he will be missed. Dolemite is one of the funniest movies I've ever seen. The story of a pimp with a heart of gold and his army of kung-fu hookers taking on an evil crime lord and a pair or racist white cops (one of them is even named White!). What's not to love? And some of the best dialogue in film history:
"Man, move over and let me pass 'fore they have be to pullin' these Hush Puppies out your mothaf**n' ass!"
"I'm so bad I kick my own ass twice a day!"
"B**ch, you bring me these goddamn cotton draw...you know I don't wear no f**kin' cotton draws!"