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Pragmatic Obots Unite

Pragmatic Obots Unite

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Saturday Open Thread: African-American Ballet Dancers

June 23, 2018 by pragobots 210 Comments

Albert Pierce Evans (December 29, 1968 – June 22, 2015) was an American ballet dancer. He began his ballet training at Terpsichore Expressions in his native Atlanta and was awarded a full scholarship to the School of American Ballet in 1986.

He joined New York City Ballet’s corps de ballet in 1988 and was immediately given leading roles in William Forsythe’s Behind The China Dogs, and Eliot Feld’s The Unanswered Question at City Ballet’s American Music Festival. Evans was promoted to soloist in 1991 and to principal in 1995.

Evans died following a short illness on June 22, 2015 at Mount Sinai Hospital in New York City.

 

Eric Underwood is an American British ballet dancer, a soloist with The Royal Ballet.

Underwood grew up in a poor Maryland suburb of Washington DC. It was not until he was 14 that he “accidentally ended up in a dance class”, and later won a scholarship for New York’s School of American Ballet.

He joined the Dance Theatre of Harlem in 2000, and then the American Ballet Theatre in 2003, before joining London’s Royal Ballet in 2006.

 

Fredrick Eric Davis (born 27 March 1986) is an American ballet dancer and former dancer with the Dance Theatre of Harlem.Fredrick Eric Davis was born in Brooklyn, New York to Diane and Frederick Jones. His mother later left his father and took Davis with her to raise him in eastern Chattanooga, Tennessee.

As a child he lived with his mother in poverty, switching from various apartments to government provided housing. He was periodically homeless, sometimes sleeping in cars and churches, and often ate at a community kitchen until, after social workers got involved, he was adopted by his maternal grandmother, Evie Luvina Dill. Dill encouraged Davis to pursue the arts and got Davis involved in her church, Pilgrim Congregational; a congregation affiliated with the United Church of Christ.

After Dill died from cancer, Davis was put under the care of Dr. John Mingus, Sr., the pastor at Pilgrim Congregational Church, and his wife Kim Hunt. Davis began dancing when he was eleven years old in 1998, when he auditioned for the Department of Chattanooga Parks and Recreation Dance Alive program offered in collaboration with Ballet Tennessee. He was awarded a Talent Identification Program Scholarship which funded his dance training at the school. While training in dance in the after school program, he was also enrolled in dance classes at the Chattanooga High School Center for Creative Arts, graduating in 2004. He was invited to study at the Joffrey Ballet School, where he trained from 2004 until 2007. While a ballet student at Joffrey, Davis enrolled in summer intensives with American Ballet Theatre, Boston Ballet, and North Carolina Dance Theatre.

Davis danced with the Roxey Ballet Company in New Jersey before he joined the company at Dance Theatre of Harlem in 2008. While at Dance Theatre of Harlem, Davis danced in many roles including the male lead in New Bach, the Pas de Deux from Act III of Swan Lake, in Robert Garland’s Return, in George Balanchine’s Agon and Alvin Ailey’s The Lark Ascending. He performed Agon and The Lark Ascending with Dance Theatre of Harlem at Jacob’s Pillow Dance.

After leaving Dance Theatre of Harlem in 2015, Davis participated in a Dance for America tour, was a featured artist with Dallas Black Dance Theatre, danced at the Kennedy Center Honors in Washington, D.C., danced in the Donald McKayle Tribute in Irvine, California, and danced for the Indiana Ballet Theatre. As a freelance artist he has also performed with various ballet companies including Roanoke Ballet Theatre, Greensboro Ballet, San Antonio Metropolitan Ballet, and Dissonance Dance Theater. He is a principal guest artist at Ballet Tennessee and at Ballet Tucson.

Davis’ life story was the topic of a documentary, From the Streets to the Stage: The Journey of Fredrick Davis, which was screened in a free premiere at the Tivoli Theatre. The documentary was created by Ann Cater of PBS and was filmed by the Emmy Award-winning crew from WTCI. Davis was presented with a joint City and County Proclamation by Mayor of Chattanooga Andy Berke and Hamilton County Mayor Jim Coppinger.

Filed Under: African Americans, Arts and Culture, Entertainment, Open Thread Tagged With: African American Ballet Dancers, Albert Pierce Evans, Eric Underwood, Fredrick Eric Davis, Saturday Open Thread

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