Roger Ebert's website today contained a review of two biographies recently written about Lincoln Perry, better known as Stepin Fetchit (http://rogerebert.suntimes.com/apps/pbc ... R/51208001). Stepin Fetchit, for those who don't remember, was a very popular black comic actor of the first half of the 20th century who specialized in playing servile, slow witted, lazy characters. By the 1950s and later, Stepin Fetchit was widely viewed as an embarrassing anachronism if not worse. Stepin Fetchit's character was typical of Hollywood's treatment of black actors in the 1930s and 40s, at least as presented in movies primarily aimed at white audiences. Anyone who has watched The Three Stooges, The Marx Brothers, or other comedies from that era can recall similar examples of this stereotype.
The few (relatively) positive portrayals allowed during this period were indeed unique. There was Paul Robeson, Bill Bojangles Robinson, and Hattie McDaniel - and Eddie "Rochester" Anderson.
Until Jack Benny and his producers introduced Anderson into the cast in 1937, Anderson had a productive career as a vaudeville performer and then movie actor but, at least in the movies, his roles were mostly of the servile porters and butlers that were offered to black actors of that era. While a listener today would find much of Rochester's dialogue to be borderline (or occasionally over the line) racist (from the drinking and craps jokes, to his role as Benny's valet to jokes about his skin color, to his addressing Jack and the others characters as "Mr. Benny (or Boss)," "Miss Livingstone," etc. while they always called him simply "Rochester."
However, these are surface criticisms. The main thing was that Rochester was every bit Jack's and the other castmembers' intellectual and moral equal on the show. As with the others in the Benny Program, he gave back to Jack far more than he received in putdowns and sarcastic cracks. It's hard to overstate just how revolutionary this was to 1930s and 40s America. Rochester may have held a subordinate position to Jack but he wasn't a servile character looking to please the boss a la Stepin Fetchit. Indeed, Rochester was more of a friend to Jack than an employee. Jack and his writers deserve praise for the courage they showed in taking full advantage of Anderson's comic gifts without demeaning him (or themselves) with the common ugly racism of their time. But the greatest credit belongs to Eddie Anderson who created this unique and beloved character at a time when such characters simply did not exist in radio or general audience movies.
It's most definitely not an exaggeration to say that Eddie Anderson helped pave the way for later black comedians such as Bill Cosby, the great Richard Pryor (whose genius was cut short far too early), Chris Rock, Dave Chappelle, and Bernie Mac. Eddie Anderson's Rochester had dignity, a sense of life's absurdities, and absolutely terrific comic timing that made him unique in his time and a model to later comedians who performed in a more enlightened era.