Dance Theatre of Harlem On Demand
Dance Theatre of Harlem joins the growing number of performers putting their work on line with a seven-week On Demand Virtual Ballet Series
The first black ballet company, Dance Theatre of Harlem is now a multi-ethnic troupe and was in the process of marking its 50th anniversary with an extensive tour when Covid-19 struck.
The decision to place some of its most significant work online for this seven-week On Demand Virtual Ballet Series is, therefore, to be welcomed – more so, given the current international prominence of the Black Lives Matter movement.
Dance Theatre of Harlem was founded by Arthur Mitchell, a truly beautiful performer, who was the first African-American principal dancer with a major ballet company, Balanchine’s New York City Ballet. Spurred on by the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King, Mitchell decided to found a classical ballet school for the children of Harlem, the poor and predominantly black quarter of New York where he himself was raised.
Arthur Mitchell receiving the Sir Laurence Olivier Award for Creole Giselle, London 1984. Photo: Dance Theatre of Harlem Archives
With the help and support of Karel Shook, a former ballet master at Dutch National Ballet, the Dance Theatre of Harlem (DTH) had its humble beginnings in 1969 in a church hall.
A couple of years later, DTH set up its performing company, which debuted at the Guggenheim Centre with three chamber pieces choreographed by Mitchell. As a mark of his support for the project, Balanchine gave DTH access to all his ballets.
The company’s fast development was extraordinary, but persistent money troubles led to a break from 2004 to 2012. Still, its ethos of ‘there’s nothing we can’t do’ persists, crystallised in the sheer breadth of its repertoire, and most prominently in its most famous work, Creole Giselle, which sets the famous European Romantic ballet in a bayou of 1840s Louisiana to stunning effect
Creole Giselle opened DTH’s On Demand Virtual Ballet Series and may still be accessible to view despite originally programmed to be available for only a couple of days.
The coming programmes are first streamed on Saturdays at 8pm EST (1am BST Sunday) and are available afterwards on DHT Facebook and YouTube channels
Saturday 13 June – Vessels, choreographed by Darrell Grand Moultrie. Here’s a taster:
If you want a primer, Darell Grand Moultrie discusses his work in conversation with DTH artistic director Virginia Johnson on Friday 12 June.
Saturday 20 June: Return, by DHT resident choreographer Robert Garland, his homage to the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin
Saturday 27 June: Balamouk, choreographed by Annabelle Lopez Ochoa. This is a colourful and vibrant piece of dancing, infused with the spirit of magic realism, and set to kletzmer music, a traditional genre of the Ashkenazi Jews of Eastern Europe
Saturday 11 July: Fifty Years of Dance Theatre of Harlem at the Guggenheim. This is a celebratory mixed bill, including works by Arthur Mitchell and Robert Garland
Saturday 18 July: Coming Together, by the Spanish choreographer Nacho Duato, an intense work set to a driving score by Frederic Rzewski, overlaid with phrases from a letter by a man killed during the Attica prison riot.
Saturday 25 July: Dougla, choreographed by Geoffrey Holder. Here’s a taster:
There is much to admire in the work of Dance Theatre of Harlem. Once regular visitors to these shores, they haven't performed in London for a long time, so this season provides a welcome opportunity to reacquaint ourselves with the work of American dancers of colour.
The decision to place some of its most significant work online for this seven-week On Demand Virtual Ballet Series is, therefore, to be welcomed – more so, given the current international prominence of the Black Lives Matter movement.
Dance Theatre of Harlem was founded by Arthur Mitchell, a truly beautiful performer, who was the first African-American principal dancer with a major ballet company, Balanchine’s New York City Ballet. Spurred on by the 1968 assassination of Martin Luther King, Mitchell decided to found a classical ballet school for the children of Harlem, the poor and predominantly black quarter of New York where he himself was raised.
Arthur Mitchell receiving the Sir Laurence Olivier Award for Creole Giselle, London 1984. Photo: Dance Theatre of Harlem Archives
With the help and support of Karel Shook, a former ballet master at Dutch National Ballet, the Dance Theatre of Harlem (DTH) had its humble beginnings in 1969 in a church hall.
A couple of years later, DTH set up its performing company, which debuted at the Guggenheim Centre with three chamber pieces choreographed by Mitchell. As a mark of his support for the project, Balanchine gave DTH access to all his ballets.
The company’s fast development was extraordinary, but persistent money troubles led to a break from 2004 to 2012. Still, its ethos of ‘there’s nothing we can’t do’ persists, crystallised in the sheer breadth of its repertoire, and most prominently in its most famous work, Creole Giselle, which sets the famous European Romantic ballet in a bayou of 1840s Louisiana to stunning effect
Creole Giselle opened DTH’s On Demand Virtual Ballet Series and may still be accessible to view despite originally programmed to be available for only a couple of days.
The coming programmes are first streamed on Saturdays at 8pm EST (1am BST Sunday) and are available afterwards on DHT Facebook and YouTube channels
Saturday 13 June – Vessels, choreographed by Darrell Grand Moultrie. Here’s a taster:
If you want a primer, Darell Grand Moultrie discusses his work in conversation with DTH artistic director Virginia Johnson on Friday 12 June.
Saturday 20 June: Return, by DHT resident choreographer Robert Garland, his homage to the Queen of Soul, Aretha Franklin
Saturday 27 June: Balamouk, choreographed by Annabelle Lopez Ochoa. This is a colourful and vibrant piece of dancing, infused with the spirit of magic realism, and set to kletzmer music, a traditional genre of the Ashkenazi Jews of Eastern Europe
Saturday 11 July: Fifty Years of Dance Theatre of Harlem at the Guggenheim. This is a celebratory mixed bill, including works by Arthur Mitchell and Robert Garland
Saturday 18 July: Coming Together, by the Spanish choreographer Nacho Duato, an intense work set to a driving score by Frederic Rzewski, overlaid with phrases from a letter by a man killed during the Attica prison riot.
Saturday 25 July: Dougla, choreographed by Geoffrey Holder. Here’s a taster:
There is much to admire in the work of Dance Theatre of Harlem. Once regular visitors to these shores, they haven't performed in London for a long time, so this season provides a welcome opportunity to reacquaint ourselves with the work of American dancers of colour.
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What | Dance Theatre of Harlem On Demand |
Where | Online | MAP |
When |
04 Jun 20 – 31 Jul 20, Available from 1 am BST onwards. Dur. varies according to programme |
Price | £N/A |
Website | https://www.dancetheatreofharlem.org/dthondemandvirtualballetseries/ |