
ON FIRE: Jamison during her days as a dancer with the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater
Alvin Ailey’s pioneering dance troupe, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, celebrates its 50th anniversary this year. Artistic director Judith Jamison has worked off and on (mostly on) with the company since 1965, when she joined as a dancer. She was hand-picked by Ailey and appointed as the company’s artistic director shortly after Ailey’s death in 1989. Jamison gushed about the troupe’s upcoming performance at the Fox Feb. 19-22 during a phone interview last week, barley letting us get a word in. Her excitement about the anniversary tour is understandable. Heck, even the Obamas found time to make it out to a Feb. 6 performance at the Kennedy Center in D.C.
Jamison on company founder Alvin Ailey’s vision:
“Fifty years ago [Ailey] just decided that there was no place for black dancers to be seen. … The first work that he actually did was Blues Suite. And because there was this vacant spot for not celebrating our own culture — that of African and American — of course celebrating the modern tradition of our country, he decided to combine that in many ways. Abstractly, directly, story telling, placing us in situations that we reflect on our culture as Americans and as African Americans.
“So the pieces that we’re doing for you, especially for the students, (I love the standing student performances that are coming up), those are sometimes my favorite ’cause the kids, they are active! They make noise! … Because Alvin always believed that we’re born to spread out. He happened to say that if the dance came from people it needed to be delivered back to the people, so there should not be a line between what’s going on on the stage and what you’re feeling when you’re watching.
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