In a Facebook post, Christian Gregory
did not give the cause of death but said his father started feeling ill
on August 9, and was admitted to a hospital on August 12. He died in
Washington.
"A life well-lived but heavily sacrificed, has definitively taken its toll," the son said. More details were to be released in the coming days.
Gregory
performed in the country's top clubs in the early 1960s and was not shy
about confronting his white audiences with the realities of racism.
"A Southern liberal?" he once said, according to the Washington Post. "That's a guy that'll lynch you from a low tree.
" Or
his line about trying to order at a restaurant in the segregated South
and being told by the waitress, "We don't serve colored people here."
Gregory
replied, according to the New York Times, "That's all right, I don't
eat colored people. Just bring me a whole fried chicken."
Gregory was credited with laying the groundwork for black comics who would come later, particularly Bill Cosby and Richard Pryor.
Later
on in the 1960s, he became a fervent front-line activist on various
racial and social causes. He staged a modest write-in campaign for
president in 1968 that garnered fewer than 50,000 votes.
In
later decades, he became known variously as a prodigious hunger
striker, conspiracy theorist, diet guru and health food advocate.
Prominent Americans paid tribute to Gregory late Saturday.
"He
taught us how to laugh. He taught us how to fight. He taught us how to
live. Dick Gregory was committed to justice. I miss him already. #RIP,"
civil rights activist the Reverend Jesse Jackson said.
"Dick
Gregory, Truth teller, make you fall on your face laughing Comedian,
health man before it was cool & crazy expensive unapologetic About
being black in America Dick Gregory has passed away, Condolences to his
family and to us who won't have his insight 2 lean on," actress Whoopi
Goldberg tweeted.
Gregory's death came at
a time of anguished national debate over racial relations, a week after
a suspected neo-Nazi at a white supremacist rally in Virginia drove his
car into a crowd of counter-protesters, killing a woman.
President Donald Trump defended some far-right protesters at the rally as "very fine people."
Gregory,
whose Instagram account was checkered with promotions for his many club
appearances around the country, touched on the issue in a post from
March.
"As I approach my 85th revolution
around the sun this year, I wonder why has it been so difficult for
humankind to be kind. So difficult to be loving and lovable," Gregory
said.
"For my militant brothers and
sisters, please don't misconstrue loving and lovable to be weak or
submissive. Love will always be triumphant over hate.
"I
know I will not be here forever, nor do I desire to be. I have seen
progress like most cannot appreciate because they were not there to bear
witness. I dedicated my life to the movement. By doing so, I never
thought I'd still be here."
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