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Amazing grace: its founder's fierce spirit has built Philadanco a thriving place at the heart of Philadelphia's dance scene.


"Once you come in that door, the arms embrace you. It's a rare jewel here--just a little piece of heaven. Aunt Joan doesn't know any other way to be. She's a nurturer, a fighter, a giver, a believer."--KIM BEARS-BAILEY

Walk into the Philadelphia Dance Company (Philadanco) School of Dance Arts building and, like Dorothy, you know you are no longer in Kansas. You are somewhere over the rainbow, in "the world according to Joan Myers Brown," who founded both organizations as a way to provide African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race.  dancers in Philadelphia with quality training and a professional performance outlet. Parents, teenage teaching assistants, children, and the ever-present faculty and staff populate the first and second floor lobbies and studios, combining work with chatter and convivial con·viv·i·al  
adj.
1. Fond of feasting, drinking, and good company; sociable. See Synonyms at social.

2. Merry; festive: a convivial atmosphere at the reunion.
 exchange. Former company member Karen Still-Pendergrass, the school administrator, serves up advice with the invoices while cradling a teacher's sleeping baby in her arms. The stairwells of this compact, three-story edifice are lined with vintage posters, autographed photos, and awards presented to loan Myers Brown over the years. In fact, the short West Philadelphia street dominated by this building was re-named Philadanco Way by the City of Philadelphia in 1995.

One's first and lasting impression is, "This institution is not institutionalized in·sti·tu·tion·al·ize  
tr.v. in·sti·tu·tion·al·ized, in·sti·tu·tion·al·iz·ing, in·sti·tu·tion·al·iz·es
1.
a. To make into, treat as, or give the character of an institution to.

b.
!"

But the homespun, mom-and-pop setting is deceptive. Philadanco is a world-class company known for its technical mastery and dramatic soul. It is hailed for its exquisite soloists, exceptional ensemble work, and expansive repertoire. Philadanco dancers combine sensational technique and luxuriant luxuriant /lux·u·ri·ant/ (lug-zhoor´e-ant) growing freely or excessively.  energy; they exude ex·ude
v.
To ooze or pass gradually out of a body structure or tissue.
 an affirmation and celebration of the human spirit, even in somber works. Their energy is infectious, and standing ovations are not unusual at Philadanco performances.

This season marks both the 45th year of Brown's two schools--The Philadelphia School of Dance Arts and its satellite in the West Oak Lane section of the city--and the 35th birthday for Philadanco (affectionately dubbed "Danco"), which has also spawned a junior company, snappily titled "D\2."

Last fall, three Danco women gathered in "heaven," the Danco/PSDA third-floor apartment and private offices, to talk about their work and their mentor. Kim Bears-Bailey is assistant artistic director, and Hollie Wright and Odara Jabali-Nash are lead dancers.

Bears-Bailey grew up in Washington, D.C., and attended the Duke Ellington School of the Arts This article or section is written like an .
Please help [ rewrite this article] from a neutral point of view.
Mark blatant advertising for , using .
. She was introduced to Danco as a student at Philadelphia's University of the Arts University of the Arts may refer to:
  • University of the Arts Bremen in Bremen, Germany
  • University of the Arts London in London, England
  • University of the Arts in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
, where she is now an assistant professor in dance. After dancing with Danco for 19 years, she took on her current position.

Wright grew up in Philadelphia. At 16 she was brought to PSDA PSDA Patient Self-Determination Act
PSDA Public Safety Diving Association
PSDA Paradise Street Development Area (UK)
PSDA Private Sector Development in Agriculture
PSDA Private Sector Development Association
 by Marion Cuyjet, legendary teacher and mentor to black Philadelphia's dance community. (Cuyjet was Wright's first pointe teacher and had taken Brown under her wing over four decades earlier.) Cuyjet also took her adolescent protegee pro·té·gée  
n.
A woman or girl whose welfare, training, or career is promoted by an influential person.



[French, feminine of protégé, protégé; see protégé.]

Noun 1.
 to other local institutions, including the Wissahickon Dance Academy, where Wright worked with the resident Donetsk Ballet Company Noun 1. ballet company - a company that produces ballets
troupe, company - organization of performers and associated personnel (especially theatrical); "the traveling company all stayed at the same hotel"
, a Ukrainian ensemble that relocated to Philadelphia in the 1990s. After five years as a PSDA student and member of "D\2" and the past seven as a company member, Wright is contemplating a move to New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
.

Conversely, Jabali-Nash was invited into the company after a stint in New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
. Also from Washington, D.C., she began dance training as a teenager after dabbling in gymnastics. She too attended Duke Ellington School of the Arts, then went to Virginia Commonwealth University Formed by a merger between the Richmond Professional Institute and the Medical College of Virginia in 1968, VCU has a medical school that is home to the nation's oldest organ transplant program.  as a pre-veterinarian major. She found that once she "was no longer in the dance realm, something was missing. I went to a performance at the VCU VCU Virginia Commonwealth University
VCU Voiding Cystourethrogram
VCU Video Control Unit
VCU Vice City Unleashed (video game)
VCU Value Compare Unit (Cisco)
VCU Versatile Computer Unit
 spring concert and I realized, 'this is what I want to do.'" She became a dance major and later went to New York for The Ailey School's certificate program and spent two years in Ailey II. This is her fifth season with Danco.

Bears-Bailey calls Brown "Mom," while she is "Aunt Joan" to Wright, and "JB" for Jabali-Nash. The names may represent different levels of intimacy, yet, all three women carry forth Brown's legacy and represent overlapping eras of Danco's development. Bears-Bailey is one of many in the Danco family who, after retiring from the stage, returned "to give something back." (Others include Debora Chase Hicks and Deborah Manning St. Charles. See sidebar.) "What this experience does for the spirit and soul, it's just amazing," she says. "And the skills it teaches for discipline and dedication, it's the essence of what makes people stay, what makes women who grew up here want to bring their kids here."

Wright says, "I came here and I was smitten! First, I wanted to be a ballet dancer, but studying with the Donetsk, I distinctly remember becoming disheartened dis·heart·en  
tr.v. dis·heart·ened, dis·heart·en·ing, dis·heart·ens
To shake or destroy the courage or resolution of; dispirit. See Synonyms at discourage.
 because they kept punching at my butt [attempting to have her "tuck in"]. And then I came here and saw Kim and Hope [Boykin, currently dancing with the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater is a modern dance company based in New York, New York. It was founded in 1958 by choreographer and dancer Alvin Ailey. It is made up of 30 dancers as well as artistic director Judith Jamison and associate artistic director Masazumi Chaya. ] and the men, and I didn't feel like such an outcast. And the repertory here: I get to do everything! I can move fast and jump with the men and still do turns with the women. And I get to work with choreographers like Alonzo King, Ron Brown, Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, Elisa Monte."

Like Bears-Bailey before her, Wright's presence onstage feels like marrow in the bones of the company. Whether she is leading in solo work or a driving force from within the ensemble, she dances with elegance and dramatic power. In dances like Gene Hill Sagan's La Valse La Valse is an orchestral work written by Maurice Ravel from February 1919 until 1920, and premiered in Paris on 12 December 1920. The complete title is La valse, un poème choréographique (a choreographic poem). , she shines forth a near-tragic dignity. "I like to dig deep and think about roles that I play," she says. "I like to touch people."

Similarly, Bears-Bailey asserts that her task onstage was "to be a canvas, an open vessel, a sponge, so that choreographers can have their voice expressed through [me]. I felt I had to go that deep." As a dancer she could "turn on a dime," and her quiet but forceful presence illuminated dances as different as Ronald K. Brown's Gate Keepers Gate Keepers (ゲートキーパーズ   and Talley Beatty's Southern Landscape.

Jabali-Nash is small, compact, and has the power and flexibility of her gymnastic background. In the trio from Alonzo King's ballet, Steal Away Verb 1. steal away - leave furtively and stealthily; "The lecture was boring and many students slipped out when the instructor turned towards the blackboard"
slip away, sneak away, sneak off, sneak out
, she travels a gamut of emotions, showing a maturity unusual in so young a dancer. "Honesty is what I depend on," she says. "What you are as a human being is what you are as a dancer."

Beyond their fabulous technical abilities, these artists are describing the special strength and vitality that Danco dancers possess in spades, thanks to Joan Myers Brown's relentless artistic directing.

The Danco repertory is enough to make any dancer's mouth water. It includes the Africanist-based choreography of Ronald K. Brown, the jazz-ballet vocabulary of Talley Beatty, and the neo-modern idiom of choreographers Gene Hill Sagan and Milton Myers. This month, May 5-8, Danco's anniversary season presents world premieres by Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, Ronald K. Brown, Geoffrey Holder, and Lynne Taylor-Corbett at Philadelphia's new Kimmel Center for the Arts, where Danco is the resident modem dance company.

It is the Danco dancer who makes tire choreography shine. The 18-member company is blessed with charismatic dancers who move easily from solo to ensemble work, sometimes performing major and minor roles in four ballets in one evening. Asked about this, Jabali-Nash said, "Your body is a machine, it kicks in, and after you build up to it stamina-wise, it's a good feeling to be able to switch from one ballet to the next." Wright adds, "After my first year I was in four pieces almost every time we performed. Fresh out of school, I had that hunger--wanting to dance. I felt like that Gene Kelly character, 'Gotta Dance!' How did I do it? From watching Kim and Hope--and determination!"

Brown treats her dancers like family, often cooking company breakfast on Sunday mornings in the second-floor kitchen before rehearsals (the Danco work week runs from Wednesday through Sunday). According to Bears-Bailey, "A lot of dancers in the company come from all over, so this becomes your second family. 'Mom' takes on that role of caregiver, boss, aunt, granny--everything." But "Aunt Joan" is no pushover push·o·ver  
n.
1. One that is easily defeated or taken advantage of.

2. Something that is easily done or attained. See Synonyms at breeze1.
; she's a hard taskmaster task·mas·ter  
n.
1. One who imposes tasks, especially burdensome or laborious ones.

2. A source of burden or responsibility: The profession of medicine is a stern taskmaster.
. "She used to say, 'I'm here to look for the wrong, so I can correct it,'" says Bears-Bailey. Wright adds, "Sometimes I want to get angry at Aunt Joan, but I can't. That's just 'Aunt Joan,' and I understand."

Danco dancers understand the daily hardships that Brown still has to face, after over five decades in the dance field as performer, educator, and artistic director. As a single parent, Brown raised two daughters; as an African American woman, she is subject to the subtle and overt levels of discrimination still faced by her ethnicity and her gender. Jabali-Nash says, "She created this institution from a dream in her head. She's here (at the school) all the time. The dedication needed to make that dream a reality--not everybody can do it." Wright adds, "On tour she's giving notes, wetting paper towels so we can wipe our faces, making sure the venue is clean, washing costumes in between numbers. So when she seems like the bad cop, I understand."

Bears-Bailey, now second in command, is closest to Brown's past and present in forging this resilient organization. "This is my 25th year here," she says, "and every day there's something new to learn. What never changes is how committed and dedicated Joan is to her vision. When you have that...."

When you have that, you have Philadanco. Happy Anniversary, JB!

COMPANY FACTS The 18-member company is salaried 52 weeks a year. According to Bears-Bailey, "Aunt Joan said if plumbers are paid year round, she believes her dancers deserve the same treatment." Danco maintains six units of dancers' housing and a (guest) choreographer's apartment. Physicians are on company call and will also see/treat uninsured dancers, as needed as needed prn. See prn order. . For more information, visit www.philadanco.org.

SCHOOL FACTS Six hundred students are enrolled at the school's two locations, which offer over 45 classes a week in hip hop, modern, jazz, ballet, pointe, acrobatics acrobatics

Art of jumping, tumbling, and balancing. The art is of ancient origin; acrobats performed leaps, somersaults, and vaults at Egyptian and Greek events. Acrobatic feats were featured in the commedia dell'arte theatre in Europe and in jingxi (“Peking
, and tap. Students come from Pennsylvania and surrounds, including New Jersey, Delaware, and Maryland. Current enrollment begins at 4 years old, to "a grandmother with 14 grandchildren," says Brown. Faculty includes Karen Pendergrass, Dannielle Brown, Shawn Lamere Williams, and Marlisa Brown. For more information, visit www.philadanco.org/PSDA.

THE DANCO-AILEY PIPELINE Philadanco dancers who moved on to the Alvin Alley American Dance Theater include Debora Chase Hicks (currently Danco's rehearsal director/coach), Deborah Manning St. Charles (a PSDA instructor and company coach), David St. Charles (guest artist and teacher), Danielle Gee, Uri Sands (dancer and choreographer with North Carolina North Carolina, state in the SE United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), South Carolina and Georgia (S), Tennessee (W), and Virginia (N). Facts and Figures


Area, 52,586 sq mi (136,198 sq km). Pop.
 Dance Theatre), Bernard Gaddis, and the late Gary DeLoatch. Current Alley dancers who hail from Danco or Danco 2 are Hope Boykin, Abdur-Rahim Jackson, Roxanne Lyst, and Dion Wilson. Other Danco graduates have gone on to companies like Dance Theatre of Harlem Dance Theatre of Harlem, the first black classical ballet company. The group was founded in Harlem, New York City, by Arthur Mitchell, then of the New York City Ballet, the first black principal dancer of a classical company of international standing.  and Elisa Monte Dance.

Brenda Dixon Gottschild is a senior advising editor of DM. Her most recent book is The Black Dancing Body (Palgrave, 2003).
COPYRIGHT 2005 Dance Magazine, Inc.
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
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Author:Gottschild, Brenda Dixon
Publication:Dance Magazine
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:May 1, 2005
Words:1832
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