MoBBallet Inspires More ‘Dark Stars of Ballet’

Deborah Austin, the first Black dancer to be hired by an American ballet company, and Teresa Howard, fonder and curator of MoBallet.

Article and photos by Hannah Junco for The Miami Times

 

Donald Byrd, choreographers Jennifer Archibald and Helen Pickett, and students of the MoBBallet Symposium’s Pathways to Performance choreography program.

Pink pointe shoes that do not match the tone of their skin and being shamed for their natural hair are only a couple of the struggles that Black ballet dancers must navigate with every day.

Enter Memoirs of Blacks in Ballet (MoBBallet), an organization seeking to end racism in ballet companies and curriculums and celebrate the vast contributions made to the art form by Black and brown artists. Its 2022 MoBBallet Symposium M.I.A. (Motivation, Innovation, Activation) recently brought students and renowned Black dancers from around the globe together to create a safe space where they not only learned about dance and dance history – they learned about their own history.

The symposium was hosted last week by nonprofit Sanctuary of the Arts in Coral Gables, with numerous activities also taking place at nearby St. Mary’s Missionary Baptist Church, the first Black church in Coral Gables, founded in 1924. Sanctuary of the Arts also facilitated the use of Armour Dance Theatre’s space in South Miami for dance intensives.

The symposium offered programs in four tracks: a dance educator course, ballet courses, a dance scholar forum and Pathways to Performance, a choreographer program. The event functioned as a weeklong dance intensive as well as a dance scholarship conference.

 

Raquel Smith performs an excerpt from “Giselle” at the MoBBallet Symposium

MoBBallet has partnered with many organizations, such as Knight Foundation, and with contributors such as Blendz, a company that manufactures ballet tights for darker skin tones.

An inclusive history

When people think of Black ballet dancers – if they can think of any at all – they often recall Misty Copeland, who caught the eye of the media in 2015 when she was named a principal dancer of the American Ballet Theatre. But Copeland was not the first groundbreaking Black dancer in ballet history – nor will she be the last.

“I am not trying to recreate anything,” said Theresa Ruth Howard, founder of MoBBallet. “I want to rearrange it explained.”

She says that Black figures in dance history must be brought forward, and that support for Black dancers isn’t there because it doesn’t exist – yet.

“We need to build it,” she said.

Da’Von Doane and Kobe Atwood Courtney perform an excerpt of Doane’s choreography to the ancestral sounds of the African kora.

She’s proud of MoBBallet’s partnership and collaboration with Williams College, where students were assigned to research a Black dancer in history and contribute to her Constellation Project, a digital archive for the stories of the “Dark Stars of Ballet.”

One of these is Deborah Austin, the first Black ballet dancer to be hired by an American dance company. Austin herself was a mentor and choreographer at the MoBBallet Symposium M.I.A. Students were able to engage with her and be inspired by her history and her work.

Austin directed and mentored 23-year-old Raquel Smith, a promising ballet dancer who was awarded a scholarship to fly in from Nashville, Tenn., for the symposium. She received a scholarship for the San Francisco Ballet and is currently an apprentice for Nashville Ballet. Smith met Howard at the International Association of Blacks in Dance conference in 2015, where they held the first audition for women of color. Howard pulled her aside after the audition and has been her mentor ever since.

“This event really feels like a community, like a family,” said Smith about the symposium. “It feels like a space of healing. Just being in a space full of beautiful Black dancers, it’s just incredible and life changing.”

What Smith appreciates most about MoBBallet is its mentorship program, which is unlike any other because it pairs individual students with professional Black dancers.

Deborah Austin, the first Black dancer to be hired by an American ballet company, and Teresa Howard, founder, and curator of MoBBallet.

“In predominantly white spaces, oftentimes I’m the only dancer of color in the room,” said Smith. “As a dancer of color, there is not always someone who understands what you’re experiencing, so having this space and shared experience with other dancers of color and mentors of colors who have also lived through similar experiences is really incredible.”

Smith says she hasn’t experienced ostracization for her body type in any studio that she has been with; she feels that’s because times are already changing so much. But her reality does not reflect that of many other dancers of color, and that’s what drove Howard to found MoBBallet.

MoBBallet’s driving force

A professional dancer, curator, writer, and social worker, Howard experienced what she called “terrorism” from some of the leaders and faculty of many dance organizations, despite her illustrious career.

“They can make the space unsafe with their language, behavior – if we are going to reform this culture and bring Black and brown bodies into these historically white spaces, they need to be safe.”

She says such behavior makes spaces unsafe even for even white bodies.

Howard was inspired to create the “My Body My Image” blog when she taught a successful workshop on body image at The Ailey’s School in New York. She explained that students were struggling with body image and eating disorders, and she taught the workshop “to try to solve the problem.”

“The first step,” Howard said, “is acceptance, appreciation and respect, and to create a standard of beauty that includes yourself.”

Reframing the narrative

Theresa Ruth Howard
(AlvinAiley.org)

World famous choreographer and social justice worker Donald Byrd works with Howard on changing the derogatory way the Black body is perceived in ballet.

“I don’t think you can fight it,” he said. But “you can neutralize it by acknowledging that it’s there and calling out when it’s there, and then creating an environment where it is not acceptable.”

Byrd worked for the Kennedy Center as part of “Reframing the Narrative,” a remarkable three-week residency that centered around Black dancers who worked in predominantly white companies.

One of the young dancers at “Reframing the Narrative” was Portia Soleil Adams, a 24-year-old rising star who received a scholarship to attend MoBBallet Symposium M.I.A. Adams was flown in from Monaco, where she has been training for the past seven years with Les Ballets De Monte Carlo.

Raised and trained in a predominantly white space, Adams says she hasn’t faced ostracization for her color in the U.S. However, she has experienced illicit biases about body image in European spaces, where she believes things have not changed at all.

Raquel Smith
(Nashville Ballet)

“I would say America is where they are more focused on what you can do,” she said. “But in Europe, they focus on the aesthetic.”

And the preferred aesthetic in Europe appears to be white and wispily thin.

From dance to town hall

On the last day of the symposium, the dancers performed an informal show that Howard calls “a sharing.” Students of various levels showcased the sequences or choreographies they worked on that week.

Three choreography students directed other students in excerpts of their works-in-progress. One of these choreographies was by Adams, who is choreographing a solo to a rendition of saxophonist Paul Desmond’s “Take Five.”

At this showing, Austin made an inspiring appearance and announced the performance of her mentee, Smith, who learned a rigorous excerpt from “Giselle.”

The event was sewn with laughter and tears as the performance became a town hall meeting where the public could ask questions or share a testimony. Many parents expressed how significant it was for them to see their children granted opportunities that were never an option for them.

Howard’s advice to up-and-coming Black dancers?

“Know how to use your voice and when to use your voice,” she said. “And look for the evidence that this form is yours.”

 

About Carma Henry 24481 Articles
Carma Lynn Henry Westside Gazette Newspaper 545 N.W. 7th Terrace, Fort Lauderdale, Florida 33311 Office: (954) 525-1489 Fax: (954) 525-1861

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