Lawrence also hosted and directed the 1969 festival, held in
Mount Morris Park on Sundays at 3 p.m. from June 29 to August 24, 1969. Sponsors included
Maxwell House Coffee, and what was then the Parks, Recreation, and Cultural Affairs Division of the City of New York (later separated into
Parks and Recreation and
Cultural Affairs). The Festival also involved the participation of community activists and civic leaders including
Jesse Jackson. The series of six free concerts had a combined attendance of nearly 300,000. For the concert featuring Sly and the Family Stone on June 29, 1969, the
New York City Police Department (NYPD) refused to provide security, and it was instead provided by members of the
Black Panther Party. Film maker Hal Tulchin used five portable
video cameras to record over 40 hours of footage of the Festival. Tulchin, his crew, and his video equipment did not capture the final week of the festival because they were hired away to shoot pilot episodes for
Sesame Street. One of the acts they missed was the outdoor performance of the vocal group Listen My Brother which included a young
Luther Vandross before he was famous. However, Listen My Brother was soon brought into the
Sesame Street studios to sing about counting – this footage survives. Although the majority of Tulchin's video tape of the Harlem Cultural Festival was not released,
CBS broadcast a one-hour special on July 28, 1969, featuring the 5th Dimension,
the Chambers Brothers, and Max Roach with Abbey Lincoln. A second hour-long special followed on September 16 on
ABC, featuring Mahalia Jackson, the
Staple Singers, and Reverend Jesse Jackson. According to
Metacritic, which assigned a
weighted average score of 96 out of 100 based on 38 critics, the film received "universal acclaim". On March 27, 2022,
Summer of Soul won the Best Documentary award at the
94th Academy Awards.
50th anniversary festival A 50th Year Anniversary celebration of the 1969 Harlem Cultural Festival took place August 14–17, 2019, in Harlem, hosted by Future x Sounds and
City Parks Foundation Summerstage. The event featured musical performances by
Talib Kweli,
Cory Henry,
Alice Smith,
Georgia Anne Muldrow,
Keyon Harrold,
Braxton Cook,
Freddie Stone (who performed at the original event),
George "Spanky" McCurdy,
Nate Jones On Bass, was curated and co-produced by Neal Ludevig and was musically directed by Igmar Thomas. The event also featured conversations with
Jamal Joseph,
Felipe Luciano,
Gale Brewer,
Toni Blackman,
Juma Sultan, and
Voza Rivers, among many others, at Harlem Stage and the Schomburg. ==Proposed later events==