Pete Seeger

Pete Seeger

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Birthday: 
3 May 1919, New York, New York, USA
Birth Name: 
Peter R. Seeger
Height: 
191 cm
Sixteen-year-old Pete Seeger enrolled at the Avon Old Farms School in Connecticut and then decided to become a hermit. His life since then has been one social cause after another, buoyed by an almost indefatigable career as a self-described "sing-along leader."During the 1930s he attended Harvard, from which his musicologist father Charle... Show more »
Sixteen-year-old Pete Seeger enrolled at the Avon Old Farms School in Connecticut and then decided to become a hermit. His life since then has been one social cause after another, buoyed by an almost indefatigable career as a self-described "sing-along leader."During the 1930s he attended Harvard, from which his musicologist father Charles Seeger (a member of the Industrial Workers of the World and a conscientious objector during World War I) had graduated in 1908. As an alternative to his major, Sociology (which he disliked), he played tenor banjo (failing to make the Harvard Jazz Band) and participated in the pacifist/communist Harvard Student Union so much that he lost his scholarship, leaving Harvard in 1938. In 1939 actor/folksinger 'Will Geer' organized the "All-American Left-Wing Folk-Song Revival Movement," a benefit concert for migrant workers in California. It was there that Pete met Woody Guthrie and began touring with him. In 1940 Seeger started the Almanac Singers with Lee Hays, Pete Hawes and Millard Lampell; during his tours with this pro-union, anti-war group the FBI began a file on him. The group broke up at the start of World War II (Seeger enlisted in the army; Guthrie entered the Merchant Marine). After the war he started People's Songs (later Sing Out!), and in 1949 formed a new group, The Weavers, with Lee Hays, Fred Hellerman and Ronnie Gilbert'. For years he had trouble with the House UnAmerican Activities Committee and was, effectively, blacklisted. He recorded dozens of albums (Columbia, Folkways) and wrote thousands of songs, among which are "Where Have All the Flowers Gone," "If I Had a Hammer," and "Turn, Turn, Turn" (which in the 1960s became a huge hit for The Byrds). He helped start the Greenwich Village music magazine Broadside in the 1960s and reorganized the Newport Folk Festival. In 1996 the North American Folk Music and Dance Alliance awarded him its first Lifetime Achievement Award. He helped start Clearwater, an organization which sails a 106-foot boat along the Hudson River to show children the dangers of pollution. Show less «

Pete Seeger's FILMOGRAPHY

American Masters - Season 37

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Sesame Street - Season 54

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Sesame Street - Season 53

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The 2022 Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony

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Sesame Street - Season 52

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Sesame Street - Season 51

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Sesame Street - Season 50

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Recorder: The Marion Stokes Project

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Sesame Street - Season 49

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ReMastered: Tricky Dick and the Man in Black

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Echo in the Canyon

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Sesame Street - Season 48

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Sesame Street - Season 47

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The Winding Stream

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GasLand

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Let Freedom Sing: How Music Inspired the Civil Rights Movement

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The Internationale

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Reading Rainbow - Season 16

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Reading Rainbow - Season 15

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Reading Rainbow - Season 13

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Reading Rainbow - Season 14

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Reading Rainbow - Season 12

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Reading Rainbow - Season 11

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