Monday, August 27, 2007

Pioneering black women join together to honor Althea Gibson


-- A stadium full of tennis fans swayed and sang along as Aretha Franklin belted out the familiar refrain of her anthem:

R-E-S-P-E-C-T.

Respect was what black tennis players were denied before the late Althea Gibson broke the color barrier. Respect is what Gibson demanded with her historic championships a half century ago.

Franklin and nearly two dozen other pioneering black women were a formidable presence Monday at opening night of the U.S. Open. They came together to commemorate the 50th anniversary of Gibson's 1957 title at the U.S. National Championships, the forerunner to the Open, when she became the first black player, male or female, to win the tournament.

"It's a wonderful, magnificent group of women," Franklin said later of her fellow honorees, who wore broad grins as they clapped along behind her during the performance.

After the ceremony, two more women embodied the doors Gibson opened. The ensuing matches on the main court featured Venus and Serena Williams. The sisters narrated the video that opened the tribute, describing the glamorous lives they've been able to enjoy and contrasting that with Gibson, who "toiled in isolation."

"I have all the opportunities today because of people like Althea," Venus Williams, who was "so moved" watching the event before her match, said after beating Kira Nagy in straight sets.

"The Cosby Show" star Phylicia Rashad hosted the ceremony, which included Gibson's induction into the U.S. Open Court of Champions. Rashad noted how appropriate it was that the event took place in Arthur Ashe Stadium at the Billie Jean King National Tennis Center, facilities named after two other tennis pioneers.

King and Ashe's wife and daughter attended the event, as did Rachel Robinson, Jackie Robinson's widow. David Dinkins and Michael Bloomberg -- New York mayors past and present -- also spoke. Dinkins, a good friend of Gibson's, described the social context of her accomplishments. Bloomberg called the Harlem native "one of the city's legendary athletes."

A video recapping Gibson's life included commentary from Dinkins, King, tennis analyst Bud Collins, Rashad's former co-star Bill Cosby, Serena Williams and fellow player James Blake.

One by one, the trailblazing women were introduced. The list included former U.S. Senator Carol Moseley Braun; ex-WNBA star Cynthia Cooper; singer and songwriter Roberta Flack; Winter Olympians Vonetta Flowers and Debi Thomas; tennis player Zina Garrison; astronaut Dr. Mae Jemison; BET co-founder Sheila Johnson; and Olympic track and field champion Jackie Joyner-Kersee.

At the end, the crowd gave them a standing ovation.

Each woman received a Tiffany charm bracelet and a commemorative coin.

"It's a room full of greatness," Thomas said before the ceremony. "You walk in, you're just amazed that you're included in such an elite group. These are all people that they put their mind to do something special. They didn't let people discourage them."

The figure skater turned doctor, the first black woman to win a medal at the Winter Olympics, starts a new job Tuesday replacing knees and hips in Champaign, Ill. She always gets excited to see Jemison, the first black woman in space, whom she first met at Thomas' graduation from Stanford.

Franklin, a huge tennis fan who makes herself tea to drink while watching Wimbledon each year, was thrilled to meet Braun and Joyner-Kersee. She never had the chance to meet Gibson, but Flack did.

"She did it with passion, which is what I'd like to think I do with music," said Flack, the first person to win back-to-back Grammys for Record of the Year. "I think that's the reason I'm still performing and writing and recording, because there's a passion. Her game, she played it with all her heart."

Friends and admirers hoped Monday's ceremony would ensure Gibson's triumphs wouldn't be lost to history. Her lack of renown was starkly illustrated when three-time defending men's champ Roger Federer was caught off-guard when asked what he knew about Gibson after his first-round match Monday.

"Nothing, to be honest," he said. "It's before my time. Isn't much I can really say about it. I don't know, I'm sorry."

But others of his time know what she did and what she meant. Serena Williams grew up reading books about Gibson.

"I thought she was such a fighter," Williams said Saturday. "She always had this face that you couldn't break her. I thought that was interesting. Everything she would go through, you know, was like you couldn't break her. That inspires me a lot."

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