One-Woman Revolution Katherine Dunham

Dance Magazine, August, 2000 by Wendy Perron

The Dunham company was an incubator for many well-known performers, including Eartha Kitt, Talley Beatty, Janet Collins and Vanoye Aikens. In the 1940s and '50s, its heaviest touring years, the company visited an astounding fifty-seven countries. Audience response was heady. Dr. Glory Van Scott, who danced with the company in 1959 and 1960, says, "Everywhere we went, audiences went crazy. In Paris, we'd do our show, and then we'd go dancing half the night at the Samba Club. The audience loved us so much, they would follow us there. It was unreal."

But the company encountered racism at home, and Dunham responded with defiance. In 1944, while touring in segregated Lexington, Kentucky, she found a "For Blacks Only" sign on a bus and pinned it to her dress onstage. Afterwards, she declared to the audience that she wouldn't come back to a place that forbade blacks to sit next to whites.

In Dunham's Southland (1951), an impassioned response to the lynchings of Southern blacks, Julie Belafonte played a white woman whose false accusation of rape leads to a black man's murder. "It was very, very difficult for me," Belafonte recalls. "I had to transpose my hatred of the character ... it was an acting problem. I had to overcome it in myself." Audience reaction was strong. Says Belafonte, "Everyone in the audience cried when we did it."

The company premiered Southland in Santiago, Chile, despite warnings from the State Department, which wanted U.S. cultural exports to project only positive images. Possibly as a result, Dunham did not win support from the department, which funded tours by Martha Graham, Jose Limon and Paul Taylor. (In the days before the National Endowment for the Arts, this was the only program that sponsored international dance touring.) But another possible reason is that the State Department's dance panel called her work "torrid."

Dunham has lived her credo that "all artists are humanists." Her home in Haiti, Habitation Leclerc, served as a medical clinic--as well as a tourist attraction, with its nightly drumming and dancing--for many years. Having given injections of vitamin B and penicillin to ailing dancers, she administered first aid for parasites and joint diseases. Once a week, local doctors helped her to diagnose and treat patients in exchange for the medications that she could get them from New York.

Dunham moved to East St. Louis, Illinois, during the racial troubles of the 1960s. Despite death threats and bomb scares, she helped a gang of black youths by giving them classes in martial arts, drumming and dance. During that period, the police were picking up young black men as a matter of course. On one occasion, Dunham railed against this racial profiling, getting herself thrown in jail.

While in her 80s, she made national headlines by going on a hunger strike to protest the U.S. government's policy of returning Haitian refugees to face starvation and repression in their native land. She was supported in this effort by comedian Dick Gregory, filmmaker Jonathan Demme and the Rev. Jesse Jackson, along with hundreds of other Americans. It was only at the coaxing of Jean-Bertrand Aristide, the deposed and later reinstated president of Haiti, that she ended her fast after forty-seven days.


 

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