Hairston sang with the
Hall Johnson Choir in
Harlem for a time but was nearly fired from the all-black choir because he had difficulty with the rural dialects that were used in some of the songs. He had to shed his Boston accent and relearn the country speech of his parents and grandparents. Johnson had told him: "We're singing ain't and cain't and you're singing shahn't and cahn't and they don't mix in a spiritual." He wrote and arranged spirituals for Hollywood films as well as for high school and college choirs around the country. Hairston wrote the song "
Mary's Boy Child" in 1956. He also arranged the song "
Amen", which he dubbed for the
Sidney Poitier film
Lilies of the Field, and arranged traditional
Negro spirituals. Hairston starred in
John Wayne's
The Alamo (1960), in which he portrayed "Jethro", a slave owned by
Jim Bowie. In 1962’s
To Kill a Mockingbird Hairston portrayed the uncredited role of the father of accused rapist Tom Robinson. In 1967’s
In the Heat of the Night, Hairston portrayed the butler of a wealthy racist being investigated for murder. In both films, Hairston shot scenes alongside men who won an
Academy Award for Best Actor in those respective films for portraying white Southerners navigating their jobs through a racially divided culture. In 1961, the
U.S. State Department appointed Hairston as
Goodwill Ambassador. He traveled all over the world teaching and performing the folk music of the slaves. In the 1960s, he held choral festivals with public high school choirs, introducing them to Negro spiritual music, and sometimes led several hundred students in community performances. His banter about the history of the songs along with his engaging personality and sense of humor endeared him to many students. He composed more than 300 spirituals. He was the recipient of many honorary doctorates, including a doctorate from the
University of Massachusetts in 1972 and a doctorate in music from Tufts in 1977. Hairston appeared on the television situation comedy ''
The Amos 'n' Andy Show as society sophisticate Henry Van Porter and portrayed the character of Leroy on both the radio and television Amos 'n' Andy'' programs. at a time when foreign visitors would rarely appear there. ==Death==