Do you recognize that we love the black love story and what is best than late actors and activists Ossa Davis and Ruby Dee? The couple met in 1946, when each of them were forged in the sport on Broadway. Initially, Dee was not impressed. “I really didn’t like him. I thought he was a very peculiar person,” said Angela Davis during a conversation during which the couple took part in PBS in 2002. “He was as great as beans and had an adam apple that got stuck. He was strictly from the country.”
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Only when she saw him at work, she began to have a look at her star in a different way. “But one day I remember, he was on stage and played the role of a returning soldier … and at some point he slowly and intentionally tied a tie in his soldier’s uniform. And I remember how he was sitting in the audience and looked at him and looked at him and looked at him and something very special happened,” she said. “I didn’t think about him in a certain way and I didn’t have romantic ideas about him. But when I watched him, I felt a kind of lightning.” Two years later, the couple got married.
Over the years, they welcomed three children who were in 1948-2005, when Davis died. Fifty -six years. Asked by the nice Susan L. Taylor in regards to the release of Essence from October 2005, what it meant to her so deeply loved and for therefore long, Dee said: “I even have a tremendous feeling of thanksgiving. When I feel like complaining, I remember how blessed I’m married to Ossa. Love, I do it and that he was sleeping
Davis had similar gratitude, as a number of years before his death he shared this jewel about what he took them together.
“Fifty years of marriage and what did I learn from it? I tell my other husbands – whose eyeballs can be covered with lust – that the way to have all women is good love of one woman,” he said. “Marriage is a place that love calls home.”
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Enjoy a number of photos of their love, over 56 years below. And learn more about their love history in our black love in two minutes of the movie above.
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Canada – 01 July: Ossie Davis from Ruby Dee (photo Barry Philp/Toronto Star by Getty Images)
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The African American actor Ossa Davis receives an award along with his wife Ruby Dee, 1973.
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Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee take part in the opening of the “I have a dream” art in New York on September 20, 1976 (photo Lynn Karlin/WWD/PENSKE Media by Getty Images)
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Portrait of Ossa Davis, actor and Ruby Dee, actress, husband and wife, 1980.
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Portrait of married American actors and activists for civil rights of Ruby Dee and Ossa Davis (1917–2005), who constitute on white origin, New York, New York, 1980. (Photo of Anthony Barboz/Getty Images)
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Ossa Davis and Ruby Dee in the course of the forty fifth annual Primetime Emmy Awards pretechnical Emmy at Pasadena Civic Auditorium at Pasadena, California, the United States. (Photo Jim Smeal/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images)
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Ruby Dee and Ossa Davis in the course of the forty eighth annual Tony Awards at Marriot Marquis Hotel in New York, New York, the United States. (Photo of Ron Galella/Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images)
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Portrait of a married American actors and activists for civil rights Ruby Dee and Ossa Davis (1917–2005) on the Recording Studio, New York, New York, 1990. (Photo of Anthony Barboza/Getty Images)
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A portrait of a married American actors and activists for Ruby Dee (1922–2014) and Ossa Davis (1917–2005) after they pose outside, on the turn of the Nineties or in the beginning of 2000. (Photo of Anthony Barboza/Getty Images)
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Los Angeles, United States: (files): This photo of March 11, 2001 emerged USS Ossa Davis (L) and Ruby Dee (R) actors, his wife, adopting the Life Achievement Award Award in the course of the seventh annual Guild Actors Guild Awards, in Los Angeles, California. Davis was found dead in February 4, 2005. His hotel room in Miami, the police said. He was 87 years old. Davis’s 65-year-old profession included loans as an actor, producer, director and author each on stage and on the screen. His film debut in “No Way Out” from the Nineteen Fifties was performed by Sidney Poitier, in addition to his wife Ruby Dee. Some of his most famous roles included “The Joe Louis Story” (1953) and “Gone Are the Days” (1963), a movie that he adapted from his own art “Purlie Victorious”. He also appeared in three movies Spike Lee – “School Daze” (1988), “Do The Right Thing” (1989) and the Fever (1991) jungle. In addition to the entertainment profession, Davis was an eloquent and outstanding figure in Movement for Civil Rights. He was a speaker on the funerals of each Martin Luther King Jr. I Malcolm X. AFP Photo/Files/Lucy Nicholson (a photograph loan ought to be read by Lucy Nicholson/AFP via Getty Images)
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Ossa Davis and Ruby Dee on the third annual director of the American Guild stand out in Waldorf-Astoria in New York. June 9, 2002 photo: Evan Agostini/Il
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New York – May 7: (Hollywood Reporter Out) actor Ozzie Davis and his wife actress Ruby Dee take part in the Black Filmmaker Foundation twenty fifth Anniversary Party on the Tribeca Film Festival on May 7, 2003 in New York. (Photo Myrna Suarez/Getty Images)
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(Exclusive, premium rates) Ossu Davis and Ruby Dee (photo Johnny Nunez/Wireimage)
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Washington – December 4: Honorees Writers, producers and actors of Ossu Davis and Ruby Dee come to the twenty seventh annual Honors Kennedy Center within the US Department of State, December 4, 2004 in Washington. (Photo Evan Agostini/Getty Images)
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This article was originally published on : www.essence.com
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