Los Angeles Times

Honoring beloved dance professor

Donald Mckayle, longtime teacher at UC Irvine, is feted with words and steps.

- Laura Bleiberg calendar@latimes.com

Matthew Rushing and Renee Robinson, stars of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, joined local students and a cast of other celebrated dancers in a concert Thursday night to pay tribute to the art and life of Donald Mckayle.

Rushing and Robinson kicked off the UC Irvine-organized event at the Irvine Barclay Theatre with an excerpt from Mckayle’s “Rainbow ’Round My Shoulder,” a seminal modern dance work about the wasted lives and crushed dreams of men on a chain gang.

Mckayle, an active 81year-old, was a distinguis­hed professor in the UC Irvine dance department for two decades. He still directs the university’s dance company, Etude Ensemble, which performed the premiere of his latest piece, “The Americas: North and South,” for the show.

In welcoming remarks, director Debbie Allen called Mckayle “one of the great choreograp­hers and delightful human beings.” Mckayle was her teacher at the American Dance Festival, where he was, she said, “the tallest and most handsome man I’d ever met in a pair of tights. He wore us out … but he made us laugh.”

He later launched her career in “Raisin,” the Tonywinnin­g musical that he choreograp­hed and directed. Mckayle worked in musical theater, television and film, adding to his renown as a creator of significan­t modern dance pieces.

Lula Washington Dance Theatre and Cleo Parker Robinson Dance Ensemble contribute­d excerpts from two other lasting pieces: “Songs of the Disinherit­ed” and “Blood Memories.” Philadanco’s Tommy-waheed Evans and Lindsey Holmes performed an emotional duet by Lynne Taylor-corbett, while dancer Sheri “Sparkle” Williams, of Dayton Contempora­ry, received “bravos” for a Dwight Rhoden solo. Students from Debbie Allen Dance Academy and the Wooden Floor were also featured.

The event raised $100,000 for the UC Irvine dance department’s Donald Mckayle Fund for Modern Dance, to underwrite scholarshi­ps, choreograp­hy commission­s and master classes.

Mckayle reveled in the night’s “This Is Your Life” surprises. He introduced Eva Desca Garnet, 97, one of his teachers from the New Dance Group, with which he took lessons back in 1948. Post-concert, he was surrounded by generation­s of his students, posing for photograph­s with them.

“What a wonderful occasion,” he said. “As I look around the room there are so many people [from different times] of my life. It’s amazing and wonderful.”

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