
Melba
Moore’s spiritual side shows through during testimony
Article
and photos by Tomi Morris Johnson. Digital images edited by Kurk D. Johnson.
MPN Metro Correspondent / tomij@wingcomltd.com
©2002 WingcomLtd. All Rights Reserved.
April 21, 2002…In1989,
Melba Moore’s voice was featured in the animated movie All Dogs Go to Heaven
in which she played a little girl who talks to animals and has a magic
touch. Now this Tony and Grammy Award
winner is reaching out again to her adoring fans, with a CD released April 22
entitled I’m Still Here and a musical concert, A Night in St. Lucia,
to be released on May 28, 2002
on DVD and VHS tape.
(Photo from Moore’s new CD I’m Still Here)
Moore, who realized the importance of holding onto the Bible
and God’s teachings while she was going through a torrid divorce and child
custody battle, recently gave her testimony at Atlanta’s
New Hope AME
Church in
Buckhead where she defined her new songs as “double prayers with ties to the
soul.” The occasion was Spring Praise
Celebration 2002.
Moore knows
firsthand the importance of security within the religious community and good
public relations techniques. “If you
have a problem, publish it at the gate,” Moore
said.
A well-known singer and actress, Moore
was born Melba Hill in New York City, New
York on October
29, 1945. By age 25, Moore
had already starred in Hair and then became a hit in Broadway’s Purlie
(1970) that led to a recording and acting career. By the 1990’s, however, Moore
faced financial problems. Since then, her musical career has been spotty, with
a Broadway appearance in Les Miserables in 1996,
an album Happy Together released the same year, and a one-woman
autobiographical musical show, Sweet Songs of the Soul, in 1998.
Moore says she has made it
through violent, low points in her life using God as a safe haven. “I didn’t
know I was being sued for divorce until I got the papers out of the
mailbox. My husband and I were still
having conjugal relations and were living together in the same house.
“I had to explain what adultery meant to my daughter,” Moore
said. “My child was in real danger because my manager/husband was abusive. It
was then that I started using the Bible as a weapon.”
Moore is currently touring with
Michael Matthew’s stage play Who Can You Trust and stops by a church
whenever she lands an opportunity to sing and testify. Her new manager, Donald
McIntyre, doubles as her musical director and on-the-road DJ.
For more information on Melba Moore’s repertoire of songs, go to: http://www.soulwalking.co.uk/Melba%20Moore.html.

New
Hope’s Adult Choir, with soloist Tangela McFarlane, led off the praise
celebration with the song, Somebody Ought to Testify.

Melba Moore packed
the small church in Buckhead for a rare performance. The event’s MC was Radio
Announcer Larry Tinsley.
Moore’s performance featured songs
from her new CD, I’m Still Here. 

Senior Choir Member Denise Jones consoles Moore after spiritually uplifting
performance, while visiting minister Rev. Tolefree looks on.

LaTonya Reid, Celebration Chairlady, presents roses to Moore.

Posing with Moore
are (l to r) Concert M.C. Larry Tinsley, on-air announcer for Atlanta’s gospel
station WAOK radio; New Hope’s First Lady Barbara Bishop; and New Hope’s
Minister, Rev. David R. Bishop, IV. “I was so excited that Melba Moore came to
visit our church,” Bishop said.

Mary Milner stands
in line to receive a copy of Moore’s autograph. Don
McIntyre, Moore’s new manager, accompanied her to church.
Click on this link - MPN Metro Correspondent
to e-mail Tomi Morris Johnson about this article, any suggestions, or other
news stories of like relevance and interest to MPN viewers and subscribers. This
information is the opinion of the author and, therefore, should not be
construed as libelous. ©2002
WingcomLtd.
All Rights Reserved.
