Pioneering Booking Agent Ruth Bowen Passes

PIONEERING BOOKING AGENT RUTH BOWEN PASSES Entertainment Business Leader Broke Race and Gender BarriersRepresenting Music Legends Including Aretha Franklin, Dinah Washington, Ray Charles, Sammy Davis, Jr. andOthers Press Release For Immediate Release (New York, NY - April 23, 2009) - Ruth Bowen, founder of The BowenAgency Ltd., passed away on Tuesday, April 21, 2009 in New York Cityafter battling a brain tumor. Bowen was the first black female booking agent and first black female to establish a theatrical booking agency. For 55 years, Ruth Jean Bowen-Bryant booked and guided the careers ofsome of the most well-known and successful entertainers in the world.Bowen's musical journey began in 1944 when she met and married William"Billy" Bowen, one of the original Ink Spots, a group known as one ofthe first black entertainment acts to break the racial barrier. While traveling and handling her husband's business affairs, he introduced her to Dinah Washington, known as "Queen of the Blues." Soon after theirfirst conversation, Dinah offered Bowen a job as her publicist. Bowen accepted and in no time she was handling the blues/R&B/jazz singer's publicity and management. Dinah insisted on Bowen obtaining her booking license and in 1959, with the help of her lawyer (former New York City Mayor David Dinkins), Bowen founded Queen Booking. Once established as an agent, her agency grew rapidly, with Dinah Washington as her best salesperson. As Dinah performed and traveled across the country, she met other artists that needed Bowen's expertise. In the beginning, Queen Booking started booking acts at the Howard Theatre in Washington D.C., the ApolloTheatre in Harlem and the Regal Theatre in Chicago. When Dinah Washington died in 1963, Queen Booking was only a few yearsold, but in 1964, Bowen expanded the business which became Queen Booking Corporation (QBC). The roster and staff grew, and in 1969, QBC hadbecome the largest black-owned entertainment agency in the U.S. - if not the world - with a roster that included a who's who in entertainmentincluding "The Queen of Soul" Aretha Franklin, Ray Charles, Sammy DavisJr., The Isley Brothers, Dionne Warwick, The Four Tops, Kool and theGang, Bobby Womack, Teddy Pendergrass, and a host of other top black singing stars. In the same year, Bowen was recognized as one of the country's outstanding black women achievers. In 1974, Bowen changed the name of her agency from QBC to RenaissanceTalents, which later became The Bowen Agency Ltd., and remains untilpresent date. After the death of her husband, William "Billy" Bowen,she married her longtime friend, Clarence "Billy" Bryant. In addition to the day-to-day operations of running the agency, Bowen found time to be one of the co-founders and president of a civic and social club called the Rinkydinks. The club was primarily made up of notable musicians' wives including Mrs. Basie, Mrs. Bostic, Mrs. Hinton,Mrs. Jacquet and other distinguished women. The group members encouraged and supported minority children to advance in their education pursuits. Ruth Bowen-Bryant departed this life on Tuesday April 21, 2009 leavingher husband Billy, brother James Edward Goode and sister-in-law Jean, aswell as a host of nieces, nephews, cousins and loving friends. Services are scheduled to be held in New York City (see below). In lieu of flowers, the family is requesting donations be made to the Rhythm &Blues Foundation. Checks can be made payable to: The Rhythm & BluesFoundation, sent in care of The Bowen Agency Ltd. attn: Mr. Gary James,301 E. 79th Street, New York, NY 10075. All checks will be presented tothe foundation upon receipt. ### ViewingSunday, April 26, 20092:00 p.m. - 8:00 p.m. Benta's Funeral Home630 St. Nicholas Avenue (@ 141st Street)New York, NY 10030(212) 281-8850 Funeral Monday, April 27, 200911:00 a.m.Canaan Baptist Church132 W 116th Street (Cross Streets: Between Lenox Avenue and Seventh Avenue) New York, NY 10026 (212) 866-0301