Early years The original members of the band had met in Mississippi in 1938 at the
Piney Woods Country Life School, a school for poor and
African American children. The majority who attended Piney Woods were orphans, including band member
Helen Jones, who had been adopted by the school's principal and founder (also the Sweethearts' original bandleader),
Laurence C. Jones. Holloway said the Swinging Rays were understudies for the Sweethearts, performing for them when the Sweethearts had to attend school after missing too many classes. Members from different races, including Latina, Asian, Caucasian, Black, Native American, Indian and Puerto Rican, lent the band an "international" flavor, and the name International Sweethearts of Rhythm was given to the group. Composed of 14- to 19-year-olds, the band included Pauline Braddy (tutored on drums by
Sid Catlett and
Jo Jones), Willie Mae Wong (sax), Edna Williams and thirteen others, including
Helen Jones Woods, who was the daughter of the Piney Wood School's founder.
Anna Mae Winburn became bandleader in 1941 after resigning from her position leading the
Cotton Club Boys in
North Omaha, Nebraska, which featured guitarist
Charlie Christian and
Fletcher Henderson. Winburn led the band until her retirement. About the group's self-titled recording,
Lewis Porter wrote, "The sixteen recordings here reveal the dynamic blues playing and driving riffs for which the band was noted, as captured in
Armed Forces Radio Service broadcasts of 1945 and 1946." The venues where they performed were predominantly, if not only, for black audiences. These included the
Apollo Theatre in Harlem, the
Howard Theatre in Washington, D.C., the
Regal Theatre in Chicago, the
Cotton Club in Cincinnati, the Riviera in St. Louis, the Dreamland in Omaha, the Club Plantation and
Million Dollar Theater in Los Angeles. Although the International Sweethearts of Rhythm were successful, as they made two coast-to-coast tours in their bus, a few impediments remained. During the 1980 Kansas City Women's Jazz Festival, saxophonist
Roz Cron said, "We white girls were supposed to say 'My mother was black and my father was white' because that was the way it was in the South. Well, I swore to the sheriff in El Paso that that's what I was. But he went through my wallet and there was a photo of my mother and father sitting before our little house in New England with the picket fence, and it just didn't jell. So I spent my night in jail." They made relatively little money as a traveling band. According to saxophonist Willie Mae Wong Scott, "The original members received $1 a day for food plus $1 a week allowance, for a grand total of $8 a week. That went on for years, until we got a substantial raise—to $15 a week. By the time we broke up, we were making $15 a night, three nights a week." The band enjoyed a large following among African-American audiences. They played battle-of-the-bands concerts against bands led by
Fletcher Henderson and
Earl Hines and sold out large venues such as the
Rhumboogie Club in Chicago. According to D. Antoinette Handy, the band received a larger vote than was given to
Erskine Hawkins and his band. During
World War II, African American soldiers overseas wrote the band letters, asking them to come to Europe to perform. When the band toured France and Germany in 1945, the members became the first black women to travel with the
USO. They also performed at the eighth Cavalcade of Jazz concert on June 1, 1952 when Anna Mae Winburn was leading. In 1980, jazz pianist
Marian McPartland convinced the organizers of the third annual Women's Jazz Festival in
Kansas City to reunite the Sweethearts. Rae Lee Jones continued to fight for the Sweethearts, but after 1946 the key instrumentalists had left and the band began to unravel with Jones's death in 1949. Guitarist Carline Ray Russell said musical tastes were changing. Jazz writer Frank Tirro said that bebop musicians such as
Dizzy Gillespie,
Charlie Parker,
Thelonious Monk, and
Kenny Clarke were trying to change jazz from dance music to a chamber music art form. ==Legacy==