Asadata Dafora

Asadata Dafora
Asadata Dafora
Birth name Austin Dafora Horton
Born August 4, 1890(1890-08-04)
Origin Freetown, Sierra Leone
Died March 4, 1965(1965-03-04) (aged 74)
Harlem, New York City, USA
Genres African drum music, dance music
Occupations Song writer, producer, social activist
Years active 1929–1960

Austin Dafora Horton (August 4, 1890 – March 4, 1965) widely known as Asadata Dafora was a Sierra Leonean multidisciplinary musician. He was one of the first Africans to introduce African drumming music to the United States, beginning in the early 1930s.[1] His artistic endeavors spanned multiple disciplines, but he is best remembered for his work in dance and music.

Dafora was a multifaceted artist, talented in opera and concert singing, dancing, choreographing and composing. In 1934, Dafora created Kykunkor (The Witch Woman), a successful musical/drama production utilizing authentic African music and dance and is considered one of the pioneers of black dance in America.

Contents

Early years

Austin Dafora Horton was born into the Creole ethnic group on August 4, 1890 in Freetown, Sierra Leone. The son of John 'Johnnie' Warner M. Horton, the Freetown city treasurer, and his wife, a successful concert pianist. Dafora grew up in a privileged household.[1] The surname Horton came from his great-grandfather, Moses Pindar Horton, a liberated African slave originally from Benin. His half sister was the Constance Cummings-John, a well known Creole Pan-Africanist.

Born into a prominent family, Dafora received a European education at the Wesleyan School in Freetown.[2] However, he always maintained a keen interest in the study of indigenous African culture, especially traditions and languages, and knew 17 distinct African dialects. As a young man, Dafora traveled to Europe and studied at several opera houses in Italy to advance his musical training. His crossover from choral music into the medium of dance happened purely by coincidence. He claimed that he went to a performance of West African songs in a German nightclub in 1910, and overwhelmed with homesickness, he broke out into traditional African dance.[3] His performance was so well received that the club owner contracted him to train a group of dancers to celebrate the opening of the Kiel Canal. While touring with his dance troupe, Dafora was struck by how ignorant most people were about Africa and dedicated the rest of his career to exposing people to African culture.[4]

Dafora arrives in New York

In 1929 Asadata Dafora journeyed to New York City to try and pursue his career as a musician. He was then 39 years old.[5]

Despite his talent, at the start of the Great Depression creative performing careers were difficult to maintain, particularly for foreign African performers.[6] However, his interactions with a group of African men at the National African Union soon led him back to his interests in African dance.[7] The company he formed was called Shogolo Oloba (later renamed the Federal Theater African Dance Troupe) and it strove to portray African culture in a complex and sophisticated light, not just an exotic array of mysterious spectacles. Because he strove for authenticity in his work, Dafora preferred to use native African dancers and trained them in African dialects as well as performance techniques. Dafora is credited with the development of the dance-drama, a type of production that fully integrates narrative and song into dance performance. Furthermore, Dafora was the first to successfully stage African ritual in a Western style stage production.[8] His first work, "Kykunkor" (Witch Woman), completed in 1931, was based on African folklore. It opened in 1934 and was such an overwhelming success that it had to move to a larger theater to accommodate the audiences.

His drumming also appeared in a 1936 stage success, Orson Welles's all-black Macbeth performed in Harlem, on Broadway and on tour. in Dafora's other works include "Ostrich Dance," "Zunguru" (1940), and "Batanga" (1941).[4] He also co-authored a radio play with Orson Welles entitled "Trangama-Fanga." [9] Around 1950, Dafora founded the Academy of Jazz. He has also been the subject of a film by Kinsley Mbadiwe called The Greater Tomorrow.

Kykunkor

Kykunkor, or The Witch Woman, was produced at the Little Theater on West 44th Street, New York City.[10] In 1934 a studio on East 23rd Street named the Unity Theatre allowed for the new opera to premier in early May.[11] Dafora's musical/drama is the story of a bridegroom who is cursed by a witch doctor named Kykunkor, and of this groom's attempts to remove the curse.[12]

The audience consisted of only sixty people, "but after John Martin's favorable review in the New York Times on 9 May, 425 people appeared that evening, 200 of whom had to be turned away because of an overflowing theatre." Because of Martin's influential review, the show moved to larger venues and continued to show for four months to packed audiences [13]

The cast consisted of eighteen men and women, a mix of African and African-American performers.[14] The show was colorful and exciting, with live music and continuous, stimulating drumming, and the audience was exposed to a "visual feast of 'semi-naked black men and women, posturing, writhing, crazily whirling, dancing insanely---vitally,'..."[13] White American audience members looked upon the performance with preconceptions about the African culture, which to them was primitive. The dancers’ motions were alluding to "nature, animals, and the basic functions of living--especially sex..."[15] At a time when American concert dance was dominated by austerity and an overwhelming emphasis on the struggle of the individual heroine, such as with Martha Graham and Humphrey-Weidman pieces, Dafora's bright, lively and exotic show was a lively and appealing alternative. The masculinity of the male dancers and the developing interest of the African culture among white modern artists and intellectuals in the U.S. and Europe also brought much attention to Kykunkor.[16]

But Kykunkor was more than just an exciting piece, it was an innovation. Kykunkor was "the first opera presented in the United States with authentic African dances and music, performed in an African tongue by a mainly African-born cast".[17] "Kykunkor proved that black dancers working with material from their own heritage could be successful on the American concert stage." [18] However, at the same time it reinforced that black dancers could only be accepted into the concert dance scene if they danced within the "primitive" genres of dance; the American and European high-art concert dance was a place for white and European artists. The critic John Martin, while praising the dance, also stated that "'Negroes cannot be expected to do dances designed for another race.'" [19] Asadata Dafora opened the field of concert dance to the black performers, but not until later in the century would Black American dancers begin to be recognized as serious and worthy performers in American concert dance.

Return to Sierra Leone

In 1960, Asadata Dafora returned to Sierra Leone where he became the cultural director of the newly independent nation. His contributions to the dance world influenced many future artists, especially African American artists such as Pearl Primus and Katherine Dunham.

Death

Dafora died in hospital at Harlem, New York, on March 4, 1965.

References

  1. ^ Maureen Needham, "Kykunkor, Or The Witch Woman: An African Opera in America, 1934" in Thomas F. DeFrantz's Dancing Many Drums: Excavations in African American Dance. (England: The University of Wisconsin Press, 2002),233.
  2. ^ Folkes, L. Julia, Modern Bodies. (Chapel Hill and London: The University of North Carolina Press)59.
  3. ^ Maureen Needham, Kykunkor,234.
  4. ^ a b "The New York Public Library". http://www.nypl.org/research/manuscripts/scm/scmdafora.xml. Retrieved 2008-04-21. 
  5. ^ Haskins, James. Black Dance in America: A History Through Its People. New York: Harper Trophy, 1990, p.75.
  6. ^ Needham, Maureen. Kykunkor, 234.
  7. ^ Heard, Marcia. "Great Performances: Free to Dance". http://www.pbs.org/wnet/freetodance/biographies/dafora.html. Retrieved 2008-04-21. 
  8. ^ Perpener, John (2001). African-American Concert Dance. Urbana: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 0252026756. 
  9. ^ "The Dance Heritage Coalition: Publications". http://www.danceheritage.org/publications/treas_blurbs03.html. Retrieved 2008-04-21. 
  10. ^ Thorpe, Edward, Black Dance.
  11. ^ Maureen Needham, Kykunkor, 237.
  12. ^ Haskins, Black Dance in America, 76.
  13. ^ a b Julia L. Foulkes, Modern Bodies, 59.
  14. ^ Thorpe, Black Dance, 114.
  15. ^ Julia L. Foulkes, Modern Bodies, 60.
  16. ^ Julia L. Foulkes, Modern Bodies, 61.
  17. ^ Maureen Needham, Kykunkor, 233
  18. ^ Emery, Lynne Fauley. Black Dance in the United States from 1619 to 1970. (California: National Press Books, 1972), 248.
  19. ^ Thorpe, Edward, Black Dance. 115.

External links



Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать реферат

Look at other dictionaries:

  • 1965 in music — See also: Events*January 4 Fender Musical Instruments Corporation is sold to CBS for $13 million. *January 12 Hullabaloo premieres on NBC. The first show included performances by the New Christy Minstrels, comedian Woody Allen, actress Joey… …   Wikipedia

  • Fall for Dance Festival — Fall for Dance is an annual dance festival presented by New York City Center in New York City. Established in 2004 as a means to introduce new audiences to dance, and loosely based on the Delacorte Dance Festival model of the 1960s and 1970s,… …   Wikipedia

  • Clarice McLean — Clarice Dollie McLean is founding executive director of the Artists Collective, Inc. of Hartford, Connecticut. She was raised in New York City, where she studied dance under Katherine Dunham, Jon Leone Destine, Asadata Dafora, and Martha Graham.… …   Wikipedia

  • Temne people — ethnic group group=The Temne caption = Some notable Sierra Leoneans from the Temne ethnic group: Bai Bureh, Ernest Bai Koroma, Fatmata Turay, Ibrahim Kargbo, Mustapha Bangura, Mohamed Kamara, Umaru Bangura poptime=1,888,432 30% of Sierra Leone s… …   Wikipedia

  • Joe Jordan (musician) — Joe Jordan (11 February 1882, Cincinnati, Ohio 11 September 1971, Tacoma, Washington) was an African American musician and composer. Jordan was born in Cincinnati, Ohio, grew up in St. Louis, Missouri, and received musical training at the Lincoln …   Wikipedia

  • Edna Guy — (1907 1982) was an African American Modern Dance pioneer. Born in 1907 in Summit, New Jersey, Guy lived at a time when blacks and whites did not appear on stage together. [ cite journal|title=The Triple Heritage of Black Modern… …   Wikipedia

  • Kimati Dinizulu — Background information Birth name Nana Kimati Dinizulu Also known as Kimati Dinizulu …   Wikipedia

  • Esther Rolle — (* 8. November 1920 in Pompano Beach, Florida; † 17. November 1998 in Culver City, Kalifornien) war eine US amerikanische Schauspielerin. [1] Esther war das zehnte von 18 Kindern. Sie besuchte die Booker T. Washington Highschool in Miami, Florida …   Deutsch Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”