Leah Chase and Pat Mitchell: An interview with the Queen of Creole Cuisine
Leah Chase has spent the last seven decades serving her signature gumbo and hospitality to everyone from Martin Luther King Jr. to James Baldwin to Barack Obama. Full bioPat Mitchell - Curator, connector, convener and advocate for women's leadership
Pat Mitchell is a lifelong advocate for women and girls, known for her work as a journalist, producer, television executive and curator. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
like I'm looking at.
because you gave me permission,
about to make you a year older.
and parts start wearing out.
so I've got my mouth going.
the first time we were there,
who work with us at TED,
and you had already cooked lunch
as you do every day,
what you said to those young women.
I talk to young women all the time,
that had to really hustle and work hard,
the education you have today,
with all that education under their belt.
to use those resources.
just look at my mother,
we were all still living,
but we're still here.
and blah blah blah blah blah,
that you're in today.
and positions that we have today.
to integrate that Navy.
to really be integrated,
Urban League back there,
as maybe one of his cabinet members.
is integrate that Navy."
into the space program."
up in the sky at 60-something years old.
coming in the kitchen.
to see me, in the kitchen.
I meet all kinds of people.
that really uplifts me,
it is good for me.
flag-waving women.
out there waving.
any of you to do that.
you have to first look like a girl."
think like a man.
controlled the behavior of men.
and I tell you all the time.
education under his belt as you have,
to live with a mouse.
and do what he has to do.
a minute to take that in.
speak before I came out --
we were married 70 years --
just been like her,
all the time, and he said,
you've got to keep moving,
in the country, small town,
had to haul the water,
all that kind of stuff.
that we act nice,
to be any different than you are.
to have a conversation
to remember, always,
eat together in this city.
Tell me about that.
and he would go out --
and all the places,
we are very sophisticated --
to get his clients and all that,
this little sandwich shop,
for a long a time.
from a brewery.
a business today with 600 dollars
what she could do.
a bankrupt sister.
the restaurant open, though,
when people were protesting
that you and your husband made.
know how we did it,
was a kind, kind person,
on the police force at that time.
a little sandwich."
right in that restaurant,
the restaurant a safe haven
on civil rights,
you got inside those doors,
all their meetings.
serve them a bowl of gumbo
the course of America
and some fried chicken.
and some fried chicken,
and we'd do what we have to do.
to invite to lunch?
or what you are -- come together.
to a good thing and meet.
in that restaurant.
our children to go to jail.
were willing to go to jail
and A.P. Tureaud and all those people
to get in the door, waiting for them.
you're talking about?
But I loved Thurgood.
without offending anybody.
Ready or not, we're going to do this."
righteous children.
LC: And they brought the change.
hard things to make changes.
so many of those changes.
between the past and now,
young people today.
for what your grandfather did.
we don't like that."
a part of the system.
in the African-American community.
Moon Landrieu.
he took great, great risks
for a long time,
was going to help the city.
I tell Moon all the time,
and better than you.
P.T. Beauregard come down,
what this was all about.
it was a political move.
the next morning,
your pants, and let's go to work,
visibility to the city.
move on it, uplift yourself,
the formula for resilience. Right?
we could find anywhere of resilience,
and physical strength,
was George Patton.
hanging in my dining room
to reach those goals.
I'm going to ride on your coattails,
the coattails I've ridden upon.
in this city, in all cities --
maybe you won't have the pretty hair.
what it's all about.
a good woman to do that.
a good woman to do that.
what you have to do
you do every day in this community.
what this does for me.
and come together --
from all over the world.
why he came to this --
called "Chef's Charity."
I was the only woman there,
another woman come up there, too.
to carry me up there
so I could step down.
in my kitchen.
to ask you one question."
something about food.
hang around you?"
you may never come to my house.
for this special school,
what I see in your dining room."
to work to better your city,
and that's what we do in this city.
ABOUT THE SPEAKERS
Leah Chase - RestaurateurLeah Chase has spent the last seven decades serving her signature gumbo and hospitality to everyone from Martin Luther King Jr. to James Baldwin to Barack Obama.
Why you should listen
Leah Chase, named the "Queen of Creole Cuisine," has been the executive chef at Dooky Chase Restaurant in New Orleans since the 1940's. A longtime advocate for civil rights, her restaurant was a meeting place for the Freedom Riders and prominent civil rights activists, and one of the first places in the segregated south where blacks and whites could dine together. A lifelong resident of Louisiana, she is a patron of local artists, amassing a distinguished collection of African-American art displayed at Dooky Chase. The chef is widely considered to be a pioneer of soul food and an icon of American cooking.
Leah Chase | Speaker | TED.com
Pat Mitchell - Curator, connector, convener and advocate for women's leadership
Pat Mitchell is a lifelong advocate for women and girls, known for her work as a journalist, producer, television executive and curator.
Why you should listen
Pat Mitchell began her media career in print (at LOOK) and transitioned to television as opportunities opened up for women in the early 1970s. She was among the first women to anchor the news (WBZ-TV Boston) and host a morning talk show (Woman 74). She was the first woman to own, produce and host a national talk show, the Emmy-winning Woman to Woman, which also became the first television series to be placed in the archives of the Harvard-Radcliffe Schlesinger Library on the History of Women.
As the head of Ted Turner's documentary division, the programs she commissioned garnered 37 Emmys, five Peabodys and two Academy Award nominations. In 2000, she became the first woman President and CEO of the Public Broadcasting System. She led PBS through the transition to digital broadcasting, sustained government funding and added many new original series to the national schedule. As head of the Paley Center for Media in New York and Los Angeles, she guided an institution that leads discussion about the cultural, creative and social significance of media. Now as an independent consultant and curator, Mitchell advises foundations and corporations on issues of women’s empowerment and leadership development as well as media relations and governance. Mitchell is a trustee of the Skoll Foundation and Participant Media; chair of the Sundance Institute Board and Women's Media Center and a board member of the Acumen Fund.
In 2010, Mitchell launched and co-hosted the first TEDWomen and for the succeeding seven years, in partnership with the TED organization, Mitchell has curated and hosted TEDxWomen and TEDWomen conferences.
Pat Mitchell | Speaker | TED.com