Billie Holiday Strange Fruit 1939 〈Cross-Platform LIMITED〉
Holiday first performed the song at , New York’s first integrated nightclub. To ensure the message hit with full force, the club established strict rules for its performance:
: All service stopped, and the room went completely dark. Billie Holiday Strange Fruit 1939
: Only a single beam of light illuminated Holiday’s face as she sang. Critical Impact Holiday first performed the song at , New
: Holiday always closed her set with it; no encore was allowed. Critical Impact : Holiday always closed her set
Billie Holiday ’s 1939 recording of is widely considered the first great protest song of the 20th century. Originally a poem by Abel Meeropol, a white Jewish teacher from the Bronx, the song uses a haunting metaphor—fruit hanging from poplar trees—to describe the horrific reality of lynchings in the American South. The Performance: Art as Resistance