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Dance Major

On the rear wall of New York Live Arts’ black box theater, two grids of a dozen headlamps each resemble the glaring light towers of a sports arena. Ogemdi Ude’s “Major” is inspired by majorette teams of historically Black colleges and universities, and the rousing half-time dance routines backed by drum corps and marching bands that raise the pulse of the crowd at football games. By bringing this dance style onto the concert stage, Ude calls attention to something deeper than team spirit. “Major” is about the power of the Black femme body.

Performance

“Major” by Ogemdi Ude

Place

New York Live Arts, New York, NY, January 10, 2026

Words

Karen Hildebrand

“Major” by Ogemdi Ude. Photograph by Maria Baranova

The 55-minute show opens with an aspiring dancer doing warm-up stretches on a bench. We catch bits of self-talk—“I can”—and I imagine her dreamy ambitions of making the team. Her longing conjures up the arrival of a team of actual majorettes, who enter the stage via the spotlighted aisle next to my seat. In spangled blue warm-up jackets and pants with one leg cut off at the knee, I can feel the game energy they bring, their self-assurance as they each grab a mic stand onstage and begin a rehearsal. The team captain calls out directions and demonstrates the routine: “Take hands and place on right hip. Pop elbows. Pop hip.” The sound score offers rapping with a hypnotic hip hop beat. One grinning dancer down front is doing everything except the demonstrated moves. She’s found her own groove, undulating and improvising. Soon all are conducting their own versions of the drill. 

The dancers clear the stage and re-enter in full performance regalia: form-fitting black lycra, glossy lips, glowing flesh. Rehearsal is over. The horn section of a marching band replaces the hip-hop music. A whistle blows and the team of six is running in place, then marching in pattern. They form a kick line down the center. The precision moves are conducted in unison, with thrusting pelvis and swiveling hips. They kick, turn, take a deep plie in second and slap the floor. The mood is playful, teasing, flirty. One of them gives the audience a wink. At the end of the number, they take seats on pedestals with arched backs, their arms crossed, hands perched in a stylized tilt on their knees. Even at rest, they are working a pose.

“Major” by Ogemdi Ude. Photograph by Maria Baranova

“Major” by Ogemdi Ude. Photograph by Maria Baranova

When performer song aziza tucker scoots a chair into the space for a solo, the vibe shifts from football field to late night dance club. She begins to twerk, and the entire team joins in. They shake their booties in all kinds of positions—lining up backside to backside, twerking while balancing on one shoulder. Somehow, they manage to jiggle even as they sink into the splits. They shake and quake and tremble. We are in the church of twerk. And it’s glorious. 

The spotlight frames tucker, whose body is now twitching all over as if shot through with electricity. When she sinks into a crouch, still quivering, I get a hit of “ The Dying Swan.” The music slows with a dramatic instrumental number. tucker takes a long moment to recover, then launches into a fierce spoken word solo: “I’m here to find the pose and hold it. I’m here to watch. I’m not being watched. I’m making you watch. This is rupture . . . This is a game. I didn’t call the count. I’m commanding the count.” She repeats the poem, raising goosebumps on my arm. I begin to understand the statement Ude is making beneath the seductive posturing. These women dance for the sole purpose to celebrate and enjoy their bodies—not to perform for the male gaze. They are reclaiming a power that has been misappropriated in our culture. “I’m not being watched. I’m making you watch.”

“Major” by Ogemdi Ude. Photograph by Maria Baranova

“Major” by Ogemdi Ude. Photograph by Maria Baranova

“Major” ends with a return to the original dreamer, Junyla Silma, who is now joined by Kayla Farrish in a duet. They seem to be practicing and teaching themselves steps and stunts of the dance team they just witnessed. They vocalize the counts: dee-dah, dee-dah, dah-dah-dah. Yes!

A real-life drum corps from Brooklyn United, an inner-city music and arts program, makes a cameo appearance for a grand finale, with snare, symbols, bass drum, and a rousing dance team drill by the Brooklyn United Majorettes. Ude has effectively guided us back to the football field on an invigorating Saturday afternoon. The drill is uplifting, the energy euphoric, the dancers, heart-poundingly wholesome. Yet they give just enough hip swagger and chin thrust to remind us we can’t look away.

 

Karen Hildebrand


Karen Hildebrand is former editorial director for Dance Magazine and served as editor in chief for Dance Teacher for a decade. An advocate for dance education, she was honored with the Dance Teacher Award in 2020. She follows in the tradition of dance writers who are also poets (Edwin Denby, Jack Anderson), with poetry published in many literary journals and in her book, Crossing Pleasure Avenue (Indolent Books). She holds an MFA from the Program for Writers at Warren Wilson College. Originally from Colorado, she lives in Brooklyn.

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