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Ethiopian singer Muluken Melesse dies at 73

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Ethiopian singer Muluken Melesse dies at 73

Ethiopian singer Muluken Melesse.

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Muluken Melesse Family


Ethiopian singer Muluken Melesse.

Muluken Melesse Family

Renowned Ethiopian singer Muluken Melesse died on Tuesday in Washington, D.C., after a long illness, according to his family. He was 73 years old.

The vocalist rose to fame at a time of enormous political and social unrest in Ethiopia, as the 1974 Ethiopian Revolution gave way to a military dictatorship.

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Muluken’s songs from the 1970s and 80s were filled with love and longing for better times.

“He came through at a time when people were really down,” said Sayem Osman, who has contributed articles about contemporary Ethiopian music to blogs and magazines. “He got to the core of people’s hearts.”

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Muluken was born in the Gojjam province of Northern Ethiopia in 1951.

His mother died when he was young, and so he moved to the capital, Addis Ababa, to live with an uncle. But the arrangement didn’t work out. Muluken wound up in an orphanage, where he studied singing with a visiting musician who taught lessons there.

“And Muluken at that time got the [music] bug,” Sayem said.

Muluken started performing in local clubs in the 1960s when he was barely a teenager, and eventually became a big star. Love songs like “Mewdeden Wededkut” (“I Love Being in Love”), “Hagerwa Wasamegena” (“She’s from Wasamegena”), and “Nanu Nanu Neyi” (“Come Here, Girl”) became hits.

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“He’s the king of the love songs for me,” said Sayem. “It’s all about how you treat a woman, how you see a woman.”

Sayem said Muluken’s popularity had a lot to do with the talented female lyricists he worked with on these songs, including Shewaleul Mengistu and Alem Tsehay Wodajo. “Who else but a woman would know how to be described or how to be looked upon?” said Sayem.

Muluken Melesse Muluken started performing in local clubs in the 1960s when he was barely a teenager.

Muluken Melesse Family

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But it was tough to be an artist in a country under military rule. “There was very heavy, heavy censorship,” Sayem said.

Many musicians left Ethiopia. Muluken stuck around for a while. He converted to Evangelical Christianity. Eventually, in 1984, he moved to the United States and settled in the Washington, D.C., area.

He continued performing groovy love songs for a time, before giving them up entirely in order to focus on his newfound faith.

“And that was it. He was done,” said Sayem. “And he never performed this music ever again.”

Instead, Muluken took to singing gospel songs at church events.

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“He was a very good and sincere person, who loved people and feared God,” said Muluken’s widow, Mulu Kaipagyan, also a devoted Christian, in an online statement shared with NPR.

“YeYesus Wetadernegn” (“I’m Jesus’s Soldier”) — one of many songs Muluken Melesse sang after converting to evangelical christianity.

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Even though Muluken turned his back on secular music during his later years, his early work has continued to influence younger generations of musicians.

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“He became like a conduit into getting even deeper into the traditional music of Ethiopia for me,” said Ethiopian-American singer, songwriter and composer Meklit Hadero.

Muluken Melesse as a young vocalist.

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Muluken Melesse family

Meklit’s 2014 version of the folk song “Kemekem” — which the singer describes as “a love song for the person with the perfect Afro” — was inspired by a version Muluken made famous decades ago.

“I felt such a link to him,” she said. “And I will be so forever grateful to him.”

Meklit added she will never be able to get enough of Muluken’s singing.

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“It has so much movement and vibrance in it. It’s alive. You don’t know where he’s going to go. You just are kind of on a river following his tone and it’s captivating,” she said. “The whole human experience was contained within that voice.”

Audio and digital story edited by Jennifer Vanasco; audio produced by Isabella Gomez Sarmiento.

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‘Sanford and Son’ co-star Demond Wilson dies at 79

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‘Sanford and Son’ co-star Demond Wilson dies at 79

Demond Wilson (right) in a still from a 1974 episode of Sanford and Son. The actor played Lamont Sanford, the disgruntled offspring of Redd Foxx’s Fred Sanders (left), in the hit 1970s NBC sitcom.

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Demond Wilson, the actor best known for playing Lamont Sanford, the son in the popular 1970s NBC primetime comedy series Sanford and Son, has died.

The actor died from complications related to cancer Friday at his home in the Palm Springs area of Southern California. He was 79. Wilson’s publicist, Mark Goldman, confirmed the death in an email to NPR.

“I had the privilege of working with Demond for 15 years, and his loss is profoundly felt,” said Goldman. “He was an unbelievable man, and his impact will never be forgotten.”

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Wilson was in his 20s when he landed the role of Lamont Sanford, the put-upon offspring of the cantankerous Fred Sanford, played by Redd Foxx. The dad got all the best lines, but junior held his own in their frequent disputes. Wilson reminisced about his time on the series in his 2009 memoir Second Banana: The Bitter Sweet Memoirs of the Sanford and Son Years.

Producers Norman Lear and Bud Yorkin based Sanford and Son on the well-known 1960s-early 70s British TV comedy series about a blue collar father-son relationship, Steptoe and Son. Sanford and Son was groundbreaking in offering a glimpse into Black family life rarely seen on network television at the time. “The character between the son and the father was very interesting to me and to Norman in the sense that, despite the fact that they lived together and complained and so forth, they couldn’t live without each other,” said Yorkin in a 2008 interview with NPR.

Wilson went on to star as a struggling gambler in the sitcom Baby…I’m Back! in the late 1970s, and as the more laid-back of the divorcees in The New Odd Couple, a TV show based on Neil Simon’s hit play The Odd Couple. His film credits include Cotton Comes to Harlem (1970), The Organization (1971), Full Moon High (1981) and Hammerlock (2000).

Wilson was born in Valdosta, Ga., in 1946 to a working class Catholic family and grew up in New York City’s Harlem neighborhood. He studied dance as a child and performed on Broadway. He went on to serve in the U.S. Army in Vietnam. Upon his return, he appeared in various shows on- and off-Broadway, and eventually moved to Los Angeles. In 1971, Lear cast him in an episode of the popular sitcom All in the Family. The following year, Sanford and Sons set him on a path to stardom.

Wilson carried a strong Christian faith since childhood. After suffering a life-threatening rupture to his appendix at age 12, he sought to find a way to devote his life to God. In the 1980s, he was ordained as a Pentecostal minister, and went on to lead parallel careers in acting and preaching. His 1998 book, The New Age Millennium: An Expose of Symbols, Slogans and Hidden Agenda, is a critique from a Christian perspective of the New Age movement and Freemasonry, among other quasi-spiritual approaches.

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Pieter Mulier Exits Alaïa After 5 Years

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Pieter Mulier Exits Alaïa After 5 Years
As the first creative director to succeed founder Azzedine Alaïa, Mulier rejuvenated the Paris-based brand with highly-refined, sculptural styles, bringing runway drama and spawning commercial hits like the Teckel bag and mesh ballerina flats.
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‘Melania’ is Amazon’s airbrushed and astronomically pricey portrait of the First Lady

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‘Melania’ is Amazon’s airbrushed and astronomically pricey portrait of the First Lady

Melania Trump.

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Muse Films/Amazon MGM Studios

If you’ve seen the trailer for The Devil Wears Prada 2 — prominently featuring shots of stiletto heels walking down corridors — you’ve got the general drift of what director Brett Ratner is up to in Melania. Melania is a high heels-forward documentary.

It covers the 20 days prior to her husband’s second inauguration, when much planning is required of a First Lady: Ball and banquet invitations, place-settings for a candle-lit dinner in Washington D.C.’s National Building Museum. Her staff previews for her the golden egg that will be that meal’s first course, and wonders whether the rectangular tablecloths should have broad gold stripes, and the round ones narrow stripes, or vice versa. So many decisions, and she’s on top of all of them.

The once-and-future President makes an occasional appearance, including in what appears to be a staged flashback to an election-night phone call. At another point, she drops by with her camera crew as he’s rehearsing his inaugural speech, and she suggests that he identify himself as a peacemaker “and a unifier. He incorporates it on the big day — in the film to a big burst of applause, which inspires a quick nod to his wife in gratitude. That’s not quite how it played out in real life; the applause and the nod are editing tricks. But never mind, the film Melania is her story, and — as not just its leading lady, but also an executive producer — she’s entitled to tell it any way she wants, peppered with needle drops from her favorite songs, including Michael Jackson’s “Billie Jean.”

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It’s a story that’s not without hiccups — the blouse collar that’s loose in the back, and not high enough; Former President Carter’s inconvenient death just before the inauguration, with his funeral falling on the first anniversary of her mother’s death. The First Lady talks in scripted voiceover through this section about missing her mom, and in decidedly unspontaneous voiceovers elsewhere about the Capitol building’s history, and her respect for the military, and at one point about the “elegance and sophistication of our donors,” as the camera drifts past Jeff Bezos, whose company Amazon did indeed donate $1 million for the inaugural.

It also paid $40 million to buy this film. That price makes Melania arguably the most expensive infomercial in history. It also makes it inconceivable that the film will return a profit — it’s only expected to take in a paltry $5 million dollars worldwide this weekend. That’s prompted speculation in Hollywood circles about what else Amazon thinks it bought when it purchased the film.

But that will be fodder someday for a far better documentary than the curated, airbrushed, glamorously dressed portrait that is Melania.

Editor’s note: Amazon is among NPR’s recent financial supporters and pays to distribute some NPR content.

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