Photo: Christopher Duggan
Photo: Christopher Duggan

One Brave Black Girl

Becca Weber

BRAVE.

The word, all caps, I wrote in my notes about The Dialogue, the closing “act” to Camille A. Brown & Dancers’ performance, featuring Black Girl: Linguistic Play (a work-in-progress), Mr. TOL E. RAncE, and New Second Line.

Why brave? Audience talk-backs are common–a necessary skill for today’s touring artists. But something in the structure–naming it as the fourth piece, perhaps; or the quickness with which she arrived, mic in hand; or maybe the directive to stay we were given at the start and close of the concert–asked more of Brown. It opened up her work and her goals, and made them more vulnerable than the usually polite Q&A format. The Dialogue began with reflections from audience members–feedback for Brown–and then grew into a back-and-forth between attendees, Brown, and her dancers about their experiences watching the performance.

The show, chock-a-block with dynamic dancing, layered physical textures and honest content surrounding the experiences of being black in the United States. It provided both high-art concert dance and political activism. Brown’s company, identified in the program as the “Entertainers,” demonstrated a wide range of technical prowess. For instance, Mr. TOL E. RAncE felt like a diasporic history lesson, with elements in the choreography pulled from African dance, tap, swing, double-dutch, step, soft shoe, hip hop, social dances like the “roger rabbit”–and vernaculars not always associated with the diaspora: ballet, Horton, and release technique. The piece, set to live compositions played by Scott Patterson on a grand piano stage right, opened with early footage of cake walks and minstrelsy. It jumped from close-quarters “juke joint” dance-offs to an energetic sing-along to the theme of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. It circled back to a solo that seemed to be inspired by a Ring shout, a dancer with feet shuffling and palms waving skyward. The work cavorted back and forth in time, showcasing lineage and raising audiences’ awareness of shared movement vocabulary in the diaspora through the ages. The dancing was energetic, feverish, and frenzied–contagious, too; I saw viewers continuing to groove in the aisles and enclaves during the following intermission.

Black Girl, an all-female piece accompanied by both the pianist and a bass guitarist, begins with a striking solo by Brown. In street wear, she steps onto a raised platform. Her sneakered heel taps; it reverberates through her body. Repeats. She taps and twists internally, right, left, right, left. Side to side, snap. Body roll. Tap, tap, then a gesture–she looks into an invisible hand-held mirror.  A quickening, a running–faster, faster, and faster. Then a fizzling out, a pause. Brown, hunched over, breathing hard: her solo, as rhythmic as Mr. TOL E. RAncE, but more subdued.

Her subtle energy invites closer inspection. I am in awe, in both works, of Brown’s impeccable timing, of how her use of those moments of stillness, silence, and pause give me the opportunity to reflect.

Later, in The Dialogue, she admitted to anger. She says the skullcap she wore in this solo evoked a sense of masculinity, which engaged her feelings surrounding the current events our nation is grappling with. Her anger in the running, and her fatigue thereafter were real. She declared, “Black women are pigeonholed into two tropes–the angry black woman and the strong black woman.” But in Black Girl, Brown exposed more facets: the full spectrum of the black female experience. In the dialogue, audience members echoed her sentiments. Said one, “For me, that was my life on stage…I was watching where I’ve been.” Another said, “That was also my life on stage…the FATIGUE of being a black woman in America.”  Brown’s dancers, too, spoke about examining their own experiences–whether fulfilling the stereotypes of black women to protect themselves from street harassment or, as dancer Fana Fraser stated, the “hybrid identities within myself.” Though she is Trinidadian, Fraser noted, “In America, I am black.”

This is why it was so brave. Not only was Brown opening up her work for anybody’s interpretation and critique, she was opening up her life–all the layers of identity therein–and all of the complications our society puts upon those lives. She was proving, to all in attendance, that #blacklivesmatter. 

Camille A. Brown & Dancers, Goodhart Hall, Bryn Mawr College, December 5.


Note: Several thINKing DANCE members attended this performance as part of a writing workshop led by Elizabeth Zimmer. You can read Nicole Bindler’s review here.

Share this article

Becca Weber

Becca Weber is always asking questions; usually, these investigate where the body meets the brain—where dance and Somatics intersect. As director of Somanaut Dance, her choreography has been presented at various venues in Philadelphia, New York, Georgia, Delaware, and the UK. She is a former staff writer and editorial board member with thINKingDANCE.

PARTNER CONTENT

Keep Reading

Long Live the Queen

Brendan McCall

It’s 1963 and 2025 and Richard Move IS Martha Graham

Lisa Kron, playing dance critic Walter Terry, has short brown hair, is dressed in a tan suit and wears thick-rimmed glasses, sits with their legs crossed and a notebook on top of their lap. Opposite, Richard Move as dance icon Martha Graham sits regally in a long dark dress, their hair up in a bun, and their eyes highlighted with dramatic eyeliner. Between them, is a small table with a vase of white flowers, and behind them are two women in a unison dance shape: bowed forward, with one leg extended high up behind them.
Photo: Andrea Mohin

thINKingDANCE End of Year Party

Please join thINKingDANCE on December 14 for an end of year party.