New Documentary 'Billie' Explores Mysteries Of Billie Holiday And Her Biographer (2024)

Billie Holiday performs in New York City in 1947. Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images hide caption

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Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

New Documentary 'Billie' Explores Mysteries Of Billie Holiday And Her Biographer (2)

Billie Holiday's life and artistry have been analyzed, scrutinized, interpreted and embellished more than any other jazz singer in history. But the first biographer to fully immerse herself in the world of Lady Day was a New York journalist and avid Holiday fan named Linda Lipnack Kuehl. For some eight years in the 1970s, Kuehl interviewed everyone she could find who had a personal association with Holiday — musicians, managers, childhood friends, lovers and FBI agents among them. Then, before she could finish her biography, Kuehl died: In 1978, her body was found on a Washington, D.C. street. Her death was ruled a suicide.

Kuehl left behind a trove of notes, transcripts and some 200 hours of interviews on cassette tapes — mostly in shoeboxes, some labeled, some not. That archive is where director James Erskine first began pulling together the story Kuehl was never able to finish. His new documentary, Billie (out Dec. 4 on VOD and in select theaters), is about both Holiday — as told through the voices of people who knew her — and Kuehl's obsession with crafting her biography.

"I'd like to write something that is real," we hear Kuehl tell one of her interviewees in the film, "that is really Lady Day, and people who don't see her in any sentimental way, you know? Really, as she is."

Erskine describes Kuehl as "a brilliant interviewer" who tracked down everybody from various stages of Holiday's life. "What was extraordinary was it felt like an archaeological journey," he says, "because it felt like we were excavating voices lost to the past." Those now-deceased jazz voices include Count Basie, Charles Mingus, John Hammond, Jo Jones and Sylvia Syms.

Before her death in 1978, Linda Lipnack Kuehl spent eight years trying to write the definitive biography of Billie Holiday. Courtesy of Kuehl's sister Myra Luftman hide caption

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Courtesy of Kuehl's sister Myra Luftman

New Documentary 'Billie' Explores Mysteries Of Billie Holiday And Her Biographer (4)

Before her death in 1978, Linda Lipnack Kuehl spent eight years trying to write the definitive biography of Billie Holiday.

Courtesy of Kuehl's sister Myra Luftman

"She excited me with just three notes," drummer Roy Harte tells Kuehl. "She looked like a panther. It's the only way I can describe it. With the most unbelievable face in the world," marvels Syms, singer and Holiday's friend.

To give the documentary a cohesive structure — and to make sense out of the 200 hours of interview material — Erskine says, "We had a discipline that people speaking in the film should only be speaking about an event that they actually witnessed ... because otherwise the material was just sort of overwhelming."

One of most provocative moments in the documentary is Kuehl speaking with Jones, a jazz drummer who toured the country with Holiday when they were both in Basie's band. Jones questions whether Kuehl, a white woman, is capable of understanding the racism they faced.

"Miss Billie Holiday didn't have the privilege of using a toilet. The boys at least could go out in the woods," Jones tells Kuehl. "You don't know anything about it because you never had to subjugate yourself to it. Never."

For Farah Jasmine Griffin, author of If You Can't Be Free, Be a Mystery: In Search of Billie Holiday, Kuehl's interview with Jones is "extraordinary."

"I found his passion, his truth-telling, all of his wisdom ... his honesty, his courage — I found him so compelling," Griffin says. "And I was very happy that the filmmakers gave him as much space as they did."

The film reaffirms some oft-told legends about Billie Holiday: She could curse up a storm; had affairs with men and women (according to some, Tallulah Bankhead among them); liked to get high from cannabis, heroin and cocaine; and often surrounded herself with men who treated her horribly.

We're also reminded that when Holiday sang "Strange Fruit," she was "fighting inequality before Martin Luther King, Jr," as Mingus puts it. (Holiday sang the haunting indictment of lynching to white and Black audiences as early as 1939.) Mingus tells Kuehl, "That might be why the cops were against her. Not just junk" — alluding to Holiday's arrest, in 1947, for narcotics possession, another event in Holiday's life that Kuehl probed.

In her interview with Jimmy Fletcher, the narcotics agent assigned to conduct surveillance of Holiday, Kuehl asks him whether a big star like Holiday "would have been a target because it would have been a lot of publicity for an agent." Fletcher concedes, "Well, not just for an agent. For the Bureau of Narcotics."

For Erskine, Kuehl's tireless efforts to uncover the truth about Holiday lead to all kinds of revelations. "You certainly get the sense that the more interviews Linda did, the closer she did get to this sort of underground, seedy world," he says. In the documentary, Kuehl's sister says the family does not believe she died by suicide. Erskine isn't sure. "You do start to wonder," he says, "if she was maybe doing a lot more than just uncovering Billie's life, but also the political forces that wanted to silence her."

This story was edited for broadcast by Nina Gregory.

New Documentary 'Billie' Explores Mysteries Of Billie Holiday And Her Biographer (2024)

FAQs

What happened to Linda Lipnack Kuehl? ›

In 1978 she was found dead on a Washington, D.C. sidewalk, after attending a Count Basie concert. "Police deemed it suicide, Kuehl having supposedly jumped from her hotel room, although there was no proof of this", and her family believes she may have been murdered.

Is there a movie about Billie Holiday's life? ›

Lady Sings the Blues – A 1972 biopic of Billie Holiday, starring Diana Ross. Lady Day at Emerson's Bar and Grill – A 1986 play and 2016 television movie, starring Audra McDonald.

What is the United States vs. Billie Holiday movie about? ›

What is the name of Billie Holiday's autobiography? ›

Holiday's autobiography, Lady Sings the Blues, was ghostwritten by William Dufty and published in 1956. Dufty, a New York Post writer and editor then married to Holiday's close friend Maely Dufty, wrote the book quickly from a series of conversations with the singer in the Duftys' 93rd Street apartment.

Who owns Billie Holiday's estate now? ›

And when McKay died of a heart attack in 1981, Holiday's estate went to his heirs, including his widow, Bernice McKay, who in 2012 sold it to the independent publisher Bicycle Music — which three years later merged with Concord Music Group.

How accurate is the United States vs. Billie Holiday? ›

As you can, see the general story of Holiday's life is depicted accurately in The United States vs. Billie Holiday. But, as the film focuses on Holiday and Fletcher, details had to be created to tell that story and some presumptions made about their relationship.

How old was Billie Holiday when he died? ›

After years of substance abuse, Holiday's body had grown weary of the abuse and she died from heart failure on July 17, 1959, at age 44.

What did Frank Sinatra think of Billie Holiday? ›

'' Sinatra made no secret of his debt to Holiday: ''It is Billie Holiday ... who was, and still remains, the greatest single musical influence on me,'' he said in 1958.

Did Billie Holiday have children? ›

Billie Holiday - Lady Day had a lot of ups and downs before she died at the age of 44 in 1959, but no children. Instead, her legacy lives on through her timeless music.

Was Billie Holiday beaten? ›

Holiday would fight back: “She hit him over the head with a co*ke bottle or something and kinda laid his head open, and they both went to the hospital,” says trombonist Melba Liston of one such episode. But these men squeezed the life out of her, chipping away at her confidence, physically and mentally beating her down.

What is Billie Holiday's most famous quote? ›

No two people on earth are alike, and it's got to be that way in music or it isn't music. If I'm going to sing like someone else, then I don't need to sing at all.

Where is Billie Holiday buried? ›

On a hot summer day in 1959 Billie was laid to rest in Saint Raymond's Cemetery in the Bronx. She was 44.

What did Billie Holiday's dad do for a living? ›

Her father, Clarence Holiday, was a jazz guitarist in Fletcher Henderson's band, a very popular Black band of his day, who shirked the responsibilities of fatherhood in favor of traveling with his band and being a visitor.

Where can I see the new Billie Holiday movie? ›

Streaming on Roku. The United States vs. Billie Holiday, a jazz movie starring Andra Day, Trevante Rhodes, and Garrett Hedlund is available to stream now. Watch it on Hulu or Disney Plus on your Roku device.

Can you watch Lady Sings the Blues on Netflix? ›

Lady Sings the Blues is not available for streaming.

Who plays Billie Holiday in the Netflix movie? ›

In this biopic, Billie Holliday navigates addiction, love and deception as the FBI launches a sting operation to ensnare the singer on drug charges. Watch all you want. Andra Day won a Golden Globe for her performance. Trevante Rhodes co-stars in director Lee Daniels' biographical drama.

How many Billie Holiday movies are there? ›

Billie Holiday appeared in four feature films and many television shows. Billie Holiday, born Eleanora fa*gan, was an American jazz singer with a career spanning nearly thirty years. Nicknamed "Lady Day" by her friend and music partner Lester Young, Holiday had a seminal influence on jazz music and pop singing.

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