AUGUSTA, Ga. -- A year ago, I was en route here to visit my mother
for the Christmas holidays when James Brown died. This year, in what is
becoming an annual rite, I visited James Brown’s statute downtown and
also reflected on the 12 tumultuous months that followed his death. And what a year. We
were subjected to one of the longest gaps between a death and burial in
modern times, beginning with Brown’s pneumonia-related heart attack on
Christmas Day and his temporary burial March 10, 2007, three funerals
and almost three months later, in an above-ground crypt at his daughter
Deanna Thomas’ home in Beech Island, S.C. Plans are to eventually
create an Elvis Presley Graceland-like center on Brown’s Beech Island
estate and place him in a public mausoleum. Most of his
lifetime, Brown’s group was billed as “James Brown and the Famous
Flames.” Because he made them famous, we know many of them by name:
Maceo (Parker), Fred (Wesley), St. Clair (Pinckney), and “Jabo”
(Starks). The most famous of them all was singer Bobby Byrd. When
James Brown’s flame went out a year ago, so did the flame in many
around him. Bobby Byrd died September 12 of cancer. Danny Ray, the
famous emcee who also took over Byrd’s responsibility for placing the
drape over JB at the end of “Please, Please, Please,” has fallen on
hard times. Saying he is living only on Social Security, he lost his
house because of foreclosure and he owes about $80,000 in back taxes. With
an estate valued at more than $80 million, lawyers and relatives – some
of them belatedly coming forward – are fighting over the money. Brown’s
will was read Jan. 11, calling for his personal effects to be divided
equally between six of his children – Terry, Larry, Daryl, Venisha,
Yamma and Deanna. Not included in his will were his youngest son, James
Brown II, now 6 years old (questions were raised about his being
Brown’s son) or young Brown’s mother, Tomi Rae Hynie, who claims to be
his fourth wife (Like everything else, that, too, is being challenged).
After Brown’s death, others have come forth, with DNA results in
hand, claiming to be his child. So far, about 12 people have named
Brown as their father. A chart produced by the Augusta Chronicle list
the children as: Teddy Brown, born in 1954, to Brown’s first wife,
Velma Warren of Toccoa, Ga. He died in 1973 in a car accident. Also
born to the first wife were Terry (1955) and Larry (1958). The couple
divorced in 1969. Brown and one of his protégées, Bea Ford,
singer Joe Tex’s former wife, produced Daryl Brown in 1960. One of
Brown’s girlfriends in Houston, Ruby Shannon, and Brown produced a
daughter, Larhonda Petitt in 1961. Another musical protégée, Yvonne
Fair, and Brown had a daughter, Venisha Brown (1965). DNA tests showed
that Lea Jensen, who reportedly met Brown at a concert in Vancouver,
Canada, had a daughter, Nicole Parris in 1968. Mary Florence
Brown, founder and president of the James Brown Fan Club in Sacramento,
had a son with Brown in 1968 and named him Michael Deon Brown. Even
though they had the same last name, the singer was never married to
Michael’s mother. Deidre Jenkins of Baltimore, Brown’s second
wife, produced two daughters, Deanna B. Thomas (1969) and Yamma B.
Lumar (1972). Christine Mitchell met Brown at one of his concerts in
Miami and is said to have had a long-term relationship with him. The
couple had a daughter, Jeanette Mitchell in 1970. Brown and his
third wife, Adreinne Rodriguez, didn’t have any children. She died in
1996 after complications from liposuction surgery. Who will get
what as a result of Brown’s death is complicated by his decision to
leave the bulk of his holdings to a trust to fund the James Brown
Family Education Trust and the James Brown “I Feel Good” Trust. The
heirs named in the will petitioned to have the three original trustees
removed because assets were removed or were in danger of being moved.
Special trustees were later named to replace the three. One of
Brown’s trustees, David Cannon, was accused of mishandling $7 million
of Brown’s money. A judge later found him in contempt of court and
ordered him to repay $433,000, plus $50,000 in attorney’s fees and a
$10,000 fine by Jan. 25 or be sent to prison. Meanwhile, on Dec. 21, a
judge set a deadline of 120 days to determine whether Tomi Rae Hynie
was Brown’s common-law wife at the time of his death. When I
visit my mother in Augusta next Christmas, as I usually do, I am sure
there will be more developments to report. By then, I hope everyone
will be on “The Good Foot.”
Next Column:
The Poor are Targets Again
Back To Columns |