An immersive article spotlights choreographers who are carrying forward the legacy of Black dance forms that flourished 100 years ago. By Marcelle Hopkins Marcelle Hopkins is a visual editor for the ...
Greats Of Harlem Renaissance Honored At Far South Side School’s Black History Month Stage Production
Mount Vernon Elementary School students marked Black History Month 100th anniversary with a celebration of the Harlem Renaissance, which took place at the same time as the birth of the commemorative ...
The performance features Afrocentric choreography, ancestral storytelling and what organizers describe as a “cosmic ...
This Black History Month, we recognize one of the most extravagant dances ever to exist, the Lindy Hop. The style born during the Harlem Renaissance has evolved to live on in its home neighborhood.
Harlem has long been a cultural epicenter of New York — most famously in the Harlem Renaissance and more recently in the Litefeet movement. If you’re a fan of street dances or are just a pop culture ...
After paying Netflix to end its acquisition deal, Paramount Skydance is now officially buying Warner Bros. Discovery. The FCC ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by As Harlem Stage’s E-Moves dance series turns 25, Bill T. Jones and other major choreographers discuss its impact on Black dance in New York. By Brian ...
Subscribe to The St. Louis American‘s free weekly newsletter for critical stories, community voices, and insights that matter. Montague Simmons, chair of the Organization of for Black Struggle said ...
Early influences on Black concert dance -- Hemsley Winfield -- Edna Guy, Randolph Sawyer, and Ollie Burgoyne -- Charles Williams -- Asadata Dafora -- Katherine Dunham -- Pearl Primus -- 1950s-1990s: ...
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