"At a White House party on Duke Ellington's birthday, President Nixon pumped Cab Calloway's hand with such special warmth that Cab assumed that the President was a fan of his. Then Nixon said, "Mr. Ellington, it's so good you're here. Happy, happy birthday. Pat and I just love your music." Cab thanked him and stepped on down the receiving line."
Part I of an 1963 interview for Swedish television:
"Duke loved the company of women, and had a number of stock lines with which he charmed them. He'd say, "I can tell that you're an angel; I can see the reflection from your halo shining on the ceiling." Or "My, but you make that dress look lovely!" When he spotted a female to whom he hadn't been introduced,he would usually say, "Whose little girl are you?" ...
Duke's band was booked on a concert with Louis Armstrong. Louis's vocalist at the time was Big Maybelle...Harold Baker said that when Duke first encountered Maybelle backstage he automatically raised his eyebrows, turned on his 1000-watt smile, and murmured, "Well! And whose little girl are you?" Maybelle snapped back indignantly in her stevedore's voice, "What the fuck you mean, whose little girl am I?" The whole band nearly died laughing as Duke graciously backpedalled and moved on to chat with someone else."
Part II:
"Paul Gonsalves, Duke's star tenor player after 1950, was a liberal user of alcohol, among other things. When a critic deplored Gonsalves's condition on the bandstand one night, Ellington defended him, claiming that Paul was a war veteran who had served in the South Pacific where he had contracted malaria. Jimmy Jones described some incidents involving Gonsalves: "Paul fell down on the stand at the Sands in Las Vegas, and he was sober as a judge that night. Just fell off his chair. He stood up and held his horn up to let everybody know he was all right. And Duke walked to the mike and said, "Isn't that amazing? This man doesn't even drink!"
- Bill Crow, Jazz Anecdotes, 1990.
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