Biography
Born in Puerto Rico in 1938, actor and musician Juan Candido Washington Landron spent his formative years in Boston’s Roxbury neighborhood. While majoring in theater arts at Emerson College, he performed regularly in area coffeehouses as Jackie Washington and soon became recognized as one of the most engaging figures on the Cambridge folk circuit at the start of the early-1960s revival. A polished professional and skilled guitarist, he issued multiple albums under that name yet failed to achieve the prominence enjoyed by several other Boston folk artists of the period; nonetheless, his adaptation of the traditional British riddle song “Nottamon Town” supplied the melodic basis for Bob Dylan’s “Masters of War.”
A dedicated civil-rights worker, Landron headed south to assist with Black voter-registration drives and briefly served as personal aide to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. before returning to New York to continue his acting career, now billed as Jack Landron. His stage credits include engagements with the Puerto Rican Traveling Theater, the Negro Ensemble, the Caribbean American Repertory Theater, and the Free Southern Theater; he also appeared regularly on the NBC Saturday-morning series The First Look. He remains active in commercials, industrial films, and television productions and has held a seat on the Screen Actors Guild board.
Although most of his recordings are currently unavailable, three selections credited to Jack Washington Landron—“Freedom School,” “Song for Ben Chaney,” and “Father’s Grave”—are featured on the double-CD anthology Freedom Is a Constant Struggle: Songs of the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement.
A dedicated civil-rights worker, Landron headed south to assist with Black voter-registration drives and briefly served as personal aide to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. before returning to New York to continue his acting career, now billed as Jack Landron. His stage credits include engagements with the Puerto Rican Traveling Theater, the Negro Ensemble, the Caribbean American Repertory Theater, and the Free Southern Theater; he also appeared regularly on the NBC Saturday-morning series The First Look. He remains active in commercials, industrial films, and television productions and has held a seat on the Screen Actors Guild board.
Although most of his recordings are currently unavailable, three selections credited to Jack Washington Landron—“Freedom School,” “Song for Ben Chaney,” and “Father’s Grave”—are featured on the double-CD anthology Freedom Is a Constant Struggle: Songs of the Mississippi Civil Rights Movement.
Albums
