Queen Ida Guillory Honored in Louisiana

Terrance and Cynthia Simien can now check off the box that reads “Get Queen Ida Guillory properly honored in her home state of Louisiana!” In April 2013 the Simien’s, the City of Lake Charles and New Orleans Jazz and Heritage Festival did just that. Louisiana welcomed her home with love and celebration to honor her for  her accomplishments and invaluable contributions to Louisiana music. Ida has been retired for nearly 10 years and had shoulder surgery making it impossible to hold an  accordion, but she can still entertain with style and grace! She also still sings with great power and clarity.  She did both during two performances with Terrance and his Zydeco Experience band mates. WTG Team Queen! We are forever grateful to the Calcasieu Parish Police Jury, Mayor Randy Roach, Visit Lake Charles, Arts & Humanities Council Lake Charles and Quint Davis’ office for helping honor this extraordinary woman and artist! NEA – 2009 NEA National Heritage Fellow “Queen” Ida Guillory Daly City, CA Zydeco Musician

“Queen” Ida Guillory was born in Lake Charles, Louisiana, into a family of Creole rice farmers. As a child, Guillory helped cook for 30 to 40 field hands and later drove a tractor during the planting season. She grew up hearing French lullabies as well as zydeco, the vigorous blues-inflected music played at weekend fais dos dos (dance parties). When she was 18, her family moved to San Francisco along with many other Louisiana emigrants to pursue work in the shipyards. After marrying Raymond Guillory, she raised three children and drove a school bus for a living. As the children grew, she pulled out her accordion and began to sit in with her brother’s band. Combining auditory and gustatory arts, Guillory would also cook big pots of gumbo for the band’’s club dates. In 1975, she was chosen as Queen of the Mardi Gras at a church celebration and a reporter for the San Francisco Chronicle dubbed her ‘Queen Ida.” Assuming leadership of the band soon after, she was booked at the San Francisco Blues Festival and the Monterey Jazz Festival. Guillory’s touring and recording career subsequently took off, and in 1982 her On Tour album won a Grammy. Queen Ida and her Bon Temps Zydeco Band have toured nationally and internationally, in addition to appearing on programs such as A Prairie Home Companion and Austin City Limits. She also has published a popular cookbook, Cookin’ with Queen Ida. There have been several kings of zydeco over the years, but there has been only one Queen Ida.

Read Interview by Josephine Reed for the NEA Photo by Irene Young