Charles Sullivan (promoter)

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Born
Charles Williams

1909
Mobile, Alabama, U.S.
DiedAugust 2, 1966 (aged 5657)
San Francisco, California, U.S.
Othernames"The Mayor of Fillmore"[1]
Occupation(s)Concert promoter and businessman
Charles Sullivan
Born
Charles Williams

1909
Mobile, Alabama, U.S.
DiedAugust 2, 1966 (aged 5657)
San Francisco, California, U.S.
Other names"The Mayor of Fillmore"[1]
Occupation(s)Concert promoter and businessman
Known forThe Fillmore
SpouseFannie Sullivan

Charles Sullivan (born Charles Williams; 1909–2 August 1966)[2] was the Black American concert promoter and businessman who created San Francisco's Fillmore Auditorium.

Charles Sullivan was born in 1909, in Mobile, Alabama.[2] At age 2, decades after the Emancipation Proclamation, his mother Bell[e] Mary Williams signed him into indenture "to learn the art, trade, occupation and mysteries of farming ... until he is 21 years of age."[3] When he was 13 or 15, Charles ran away from his "master" Robert Sullivan, a Black farmer in Mobile County, Alabama, who was reportedly vicious and alcoholic.[4][3] Lacking formal education, he came to California at age 19 and worked as a car washer, machinist, chauffeur, and after leaving Los Angeles in 1934 started a San Mateo hamburger stand, "Sullivan's".[3][1] He prospered, operating bars, liquor stores, a chain of cigarette vending machines, and began promoting musical productions.[3]

The Fillmore and "Harlem of The West"

Sullivan owned a successful jazz club, the Booker T. Washington Lounge, bought from the colorful Shirley "Fats" Corlett.[1] Lending money to Slim Gaillard, who started a chicken and waffle eatery on Post Street, Sullivan eventually sued and won, renaming it Jimbo's Bop City.[1] Taking over a segregated roller-skating rink in 1952, Sullivan re-opened it as the Fillmore Auditorium.[5] As the largest promoter of black music on the west coast, a who's who of acts, including B.B. King played at the venue.[6] Longtime San Francisco promoter Bill Graham in his memoir says of Sullivan that he "booked a lot of the best R&B acts" such as James Brown, Duke Ellington, Bobby Bland, and The Temptations.[7]

Later life

References

Further reading

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