The Province

An ode to Ailey

Dance troupe marks 60 years by looking back at its founder

- JOCELYN NOVECK

The Associated Press

NEW YORK — It was March 1958 when an African-American dancer named Alvin Ailey, then making his living on the Broadway stage, gathered up a group of fellow dancers and presented a onenight show of his own works.

In the audience at the 92nd Street Y in Manhattan was 18-year-old Sylvia Waters, who studied dance across town at Juilliard. She had never seen anything like it.

“It was absolutely riveting,” she says now. “I had never seen men dance like that.”

Most exciting to Waters was seeing people dance “who I could relate to,” she says.

“There was something so visceral about the experience. We didn’t know at the time that it was history, but it was definitely special.”

“It was absolutely riveting. I had never seen men dance like that.” Sylvia Waters

It was indeed history: The company born that night, which Waters would join a decade later, is now 60 years old and credited with helping popularize modern dance, as well as bringing the African-American experience to a global stage. The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater is one of the best known companies in the world, touring constantly and still earning rapturous ovations for its signature work, Revelation­s, which tells the African-American story through spirituals and blues.

To mark the milestone, the company has been devoting its New York season to rememberin­g Ailey, who died at age 58 in 1989, with a major new work, Lazarus, as well as Timeless Ailey, a compilatio­n that includes a piece of Blues Suite, performed that night in 1958.

It’s a time for the company to reflect on how it made it this far, says Judith Jamison, the former Ailey artistic director and still its best-known face.

“It’s amazing,” says Jamison, 75, who in her dancing years became known for the searing Cry, another Ailey signature piece. “I find it remarkable that we still exist today, lo these 60 years. And I think Mr. Ailey would be absolutely beside-himself happy, that something he started 60 years ago could blossom into everything he imagined.”

In a recent interview on the sidelines of company rehearsal, Jamison recalled being present as Ailey died, along with Waters and Ailey’s mother.

“We were in his room as he passed, and usually you see in movies, that people have their last breath and they breathe out. But Mr. Ailey breathed IN. We expected him to breathe out, and he didn’t. So I think what we’re living on now, is his breath OUT ... that air, that vision, that dream.”

A key challenge for the company is keeping Ailey’s memory alive and present — not just for audiences, but for the dancers who never met him. Yannick Lebrun, who grew up in French Guiana and joined the company 10 years ago, says he learned about Ailey from people like Jamison.

“She always talked about Alvin and how generous he was, how human he was,” says Lebrun, one of the company’s stars, “and how dedicated he was to sharing his love for modern dance, but also his memories from growing up in the South, and African-American heritage and history.”

Ailey grew up in poverty in small-town Texas, to a 17-yearold mother. It’s both the story of his early life and the broader African-American experience that the company is telling with the two-act Lazarus, so named for the theme of resurrecti­on. It was choreograp­hed by hip-hop artist Rennie Harris and commission­ed by Robert Battle, Jamison’s successor as artistic director.

“There came this thing of wanting to hear Mr. Ailey’s voice, because so many of us didn’t have the opportunit­y to know him,” says Battle.

He means “voice” both figurative­ly and literally; there’s a section of Lazarus where the choreograp­her inserts his own voice into old audio of Ailey, as if interviewi­ng him today.

The piece begins with a look at the African-American struggle, including a depiction of lynchings, and then moves into full-on, high-energy hip hop.

“Hip hop is a celebratio­n of life,” Battle says.

The genre also connects with younger audiences, of course, and the company’s challenge — like that of any arts organizati­on — is to bring younger people into the fold.

“Our biggest challenge is the competitio­n for people’s leisure time,” Battle says.

The cost of touring, too, is rising.

However successful the new piece, or others in the company’s broad repertoire, nothing will ever take the place of Revelation­s, which more than a signature work is the very core of the company’s identity. It’s on the schedule most evenings the company performs.

Performed everywhere from the Olympics to the White House, the work has often been called the mostseen piece of modern dance, but it’s hard to imagine anything to compare it with.

“It’s a phenomenon,” Battle says simply, “a once-in-a-lifetime work.”

 ?? PHOTOS: PAUL KOLNIK/ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER ?? The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater celebrates its 60th anniversar­y this season, and it’s marking the moment by turning its focus to its founder, who died at age 58 in 1989.
PHOTOS: PAUL KOLNIK/ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater celebrates its 60th anniversar­y this season, and it’s marking the moment by turning its focus to its founder, who died at age 58 in 1989.
 ??  ?? Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater is credited with helping popularize modern dance and bring the African-American experience to a global stage.
Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater is credited with helping popularize modern dance and bring the African-American experience to a global stage.

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