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Indiana University Bloomington

Collection | Special Collections | Louis Guida Collection

Louis GuidaThe Louis Guida Collection features the complete film footage and recordings used in the production of the filmmaker's 1992 documentary, Saturday Night, Sunday Morning. The award-winning film presents the life of blues singer and songwriter the Rev. Arnold Dwight "Gatemouth" Moore, best known for his hit, "Did You Ever Love a Woman?" The film includes interviews and performances by the musician and preacher Al Green, former NAACP Director Benjamin Hooks, blues great B.B. King, and rhythm and blues veteran Rufus Thomas.

Winner of an American Film and Video Festival blue ribbon, the documentary explores the links and tensions of the sacred and secular in African American culture, as well as chronicling Moore's life from band leader to evangelical preacher. Described by King as "one of the greatest blues singers ever," Moore first gained fame singing in Chicago and Memphis during the 1930s and 1940s. Moore was converted to Christianity in a Chicago night club in 1949, causing him to leave the blues behind at the height of his career. He later became the South's first Black religious disc jockey and a pioneering civil rights radio reporter.

The Louis Guida Collection includes:

Film footage highlights include:

Guida is an award-winning producer and director. His other documentaries include When You Make a Good Crop, a CINE Golden Eagle winner about Italian American farmers, and All Day and All Night, a New Directors/New Films entry about the music of Beale Street.

Date of Deposit
October 1993