In her first posthumous work, the revered poet crafts a personal history of Black dance and captures the careers of legendary dancers along with her own rhythmic beginnings
Outlive: Dance and the Eternal Life of Ntozake Shange
Foreword by Alexis Pauline Gumbs
Introduction
Dance in My Life
Fred Benjamin
Raymond Sawyer
Dianne McIntyre
Mickey Davidson
Halifu Osumare
Ed Mock
An Interview with Dyane Harvey
Eleo Pomare
Otis Sallid
An Interview with Camille A. Brown
An Interview with Davalois Fearon
Afterword by Renee L. Charlow
Biographies of Dancers and Choreographers
by Mickey Davidson
Glossary
by Mickey Davidson, Dianne McIntyre, and Halifu Osumare
A Note from the Ntozake Shange Revocable Trust
Photo Credits
Notes
Ntozake Shange (1948-2018) was a renowned poet, novelist, playwright, and performer, best known for her Broadway-produced and Obie Award-winning choreopoem, for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf. She wrote numerous works of fiction, poetry, and non-fiction, including If I Can Cook/You Know God Can, Wild Beauty, Sassafras, Cypress and Indigo, Betsey Brown, and Liliane. Alexis Pauline Gumbs is the author of M Archive- After the End of the World and Spill- Scenes of Black Feminist Fugitivity and the co-editor of Revolutionary Mothering- Love on the Front Lines. She is the founder of Brilliance Remastered, an organization that supports under-represented scholars, artists, and organizers. Alexis has received numerous awards and recognitions such as the Advocate Magazine's 40 under 40 and Colorlines 10 LGBTQ Leaders Transforming the South. Renee L. Charlow is a director, performer, and writer. She is a professor of Theatre at Shepherd University and a professor of Literature at Southern New Hampshire University. She served as an associate producer and assistant director for the production of Shange's Lost in Language and Sound at the Karamu House in Cleveland, OH.
"Of interest to those familiar with Shange's written work, and
generally to dancers and dance historians."
-Library Journal
"An elegant and eloquent work by an artist who left us too soon
that recognizes and celebrates the unique contributions of Black
dancers and choreographers."
-Booklist
"Through Ntozake Shange's personal memories of dance-what it has
meant to her, how she came to know, understand, and feel it-we are
taken on a journey that chronicles some of the greatest dancers and
choreographers of the latter part of the twentieth century."
-Phylicia Rashad
"A gorgeous last offering from one of our most gifted and
multifaceted artists. Her passion for dance, just like her passion
for words, is among the many reasons she will be missed, though
these insightful interviews, ruminations, and reflections will
continue to be a balm, across generations, from her to
us.rdquo;
-Edwidge Danticat, author of Everything Inside
"A workaholic to her last breath, Ntozake Shange has left us with a
book that expands our knowledge of Black dance. Not only is it a
textbook but it was composed by someone who created a new form. A
true innovator."
-Ishmael Reed, author of Malcolm and Me
"Ntozake Shange presents a language of movement that only she
knew-relearned with clarity and courage, and unveiled to the world
as a black American groove of words in commemorative motion."
-Rebecca Carroll, author of Sugar in the Raw: Voices of Young
Black Girls in America and host of the podcast Come Through
with Rebecca Carroll
"Ntozake Shange delivered her gifts to us embossed with directions,
and permission, to create our own magic and miracle and movement.
Dance We Do is her final gift to us, but it is, like she
was, a gift that will nourish and replenish us for generations to
come."
-Bassey Ikpi, author of I'm Telling the Truth, but I'm
Lying
"In Dance We Do, Ntozake Shange offers the living history of
Black dance our current movements need. In these conversations'
exquisite choreography, we witness the artist's incomparable poetic
stretch, her dazzling theoretical reach, and her unparalleled
ability to name the deep political necessity of Black bodily
knowledge. Here, we see Shange as teacher and theorist, charting
the spiral histories of Black dance with the eloquence of a lyrical
rond de jambe. Her keen and tender reflections on dance
greats such as Dianne McIntyre and Dyane Harvey set the beat for
interviews with newer voices like Camille A. Brown and Davalois
Fearon, alongside whom we learn from Shange's great vision and
pedagogy. To read Dance We Do is to move with a master. It
is to learn not only what Black dance means, why Black bodies
matter, but how. Dance We Do makes its meanings elegantly,
fearlessly, with the endless precision of Blackness itself: a full
vocabulary of bodies and lives, writing rhythms that out-move
time."
-Mecca Jamilah Sullivan, PhD, author of Blue Talk and
Love
"Blessed are we to have a new work by the inimitable Ntozake
Shange, whose writing is a balm for the soul. Sharing with readers
her earliest body memories, Shange takes us into the most intimate
spaces of her own fleshy form and, by extension, those of the oft
overlooked Black dancers she spotlights. She makes us feel the
connections between body and brain, the ache of overworked muscles,
the discipline required to make jetes and fouettes appear
effortless, as we linger on every word of this taut work of Black
brilliance, wanting our eyes to forever dance on its pages."
-Tanisha C. Ford, author of Dressed in Dreams: A Black Girl's
Love Letter to the Power of Fashion
"Dance We Do holds an eternal flame for the embodied work
and life of Ntozake Shange. This new work is our spiritual releve.
It helps us rise to our toes and once again honor Black bodies as
beautiful, magical, and elegant. Each chapter is a radical
intervention that brings us closer to the Black Radical Tradition
of exploring our rhythms. Shange has always known that Black lives
matter, and this text is a reminder of her commitment to the nuance
of Blackness. While reading I had to stand up, move around, walk,
and signify with the text. Thank you, Shange, once again for
bringing us home."
-Jamara Wakefield, writer
"A dancer first, the irrepressible Ntozake Shange writes of her art
with passion and humor."
-Jennifer Dunning, author of Alvin Ailey: A Life in
Dance
'A celebration of poetry, mentorship, music, and the Black body in
movement and art."
-Aku Kadogo, chair, Department of Theater and Performance, Spelman
College
"Remarkable-provoking-insightful. Ntozake Shange's Dance We
Do is a valuable document for those interested in the
foundational elements that make dance what it is today, especially
Black dance. A real look-see into a world many people knew about
but that has never been explored. A must-read for those interested
in identifying and understanding where much of American dance
concepts today are derived."
-Otis Sallid, producer, director, and choreographer
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