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Notes of Black Joy

I can’t remember seeing the Joyce Theater as full of energy. With the hour long “I Am,” Camille A. Brown & Dancers opens the tent of Black joy for all to enter, raising goosebumps and heat on a cold February night. The high impact exhilaration of this show is a much needed respite from the anti-joy of our current political moment, and the Joyce audience is down for it—from the school bus of high school dancers that pulled up outside, to long time subscribers whose hair and skin color skew heavily to white.

Performance

Camille A. Brown & Dancers: “I Am”

Place

The Joyce Theater, New York, NY, February 5, 2025

Words

Karen Hildebrand

Brianna Dawkins and Courtney Ross in “I Am” by Camille A. Brown. Photograph by Steven Pisano

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“I Am” is structured like a music revue. I might have been seated at a crowded cocktail table at the Blue Note, the rhythms and syncopation of the dancers as finely tuned as the instruments of musicians stationed at the base of the stage: music director Deah Love Harriott on piano, Juliette Jones on violin, and Martine Mauro-Wade and Jaylen Petinaud on drums. The dancers move in a lightning round of wide-flung arms, fleet feet, shimmying shoulders, and hip thrusting, with the kind of muscular buoyancy that allows the feet to keep one tempo while the torso goes wild. In the program, writer Theresa Ruth Howard describes this stylistic mix as “… the diasporic languages of West African dance, Modern, Jazz, Tap, Social, Street, and Hip-Hop styles.” 

The curtain rises on the fierce duo of Destini Hendricks and Onyxx Noel in tennis shoes and halter tops. We eventually meet the entire cast, introduced in ones and twos, all in white workout wear, to rousing drums, the audience enthusiastically cheering each entrance. Brianna Dawkins and Courtney Ross raise their fists in a display of girl power. Travon Williams slinks onstage for a vogueing spotlight. 

Section two, “Existing,” quiets down for a solo of self-discovery by Dorse Brown, bank of fog swirling behind him. He makes an impressive display of spinning on his knees. “Elevation” introduces a flirtatious Alain 'Hurrikane' Lauture, who kisses his hands and slides from a jazzy walk into a series of somersaults. He’s a one-man rock concert when he lays into a one-armed back walkover that looks like he has no bones under his skin. The trio of Miki Michelle, Mikhail Calliste, and SeQuoiia, contrasts the petite Michelle with two men the size of linebackers behind her. She moves like a flow of calligraphy, spinning and hopping with loquacious arms.

Camille A. Brown and Dancers in “I Am” by Camille A. Brown. Photograph by Steven Pisano

A favorite section features all six men, with Curtis Thomas taking the lead. They form a good natured group loitering on the street corner, Thomas showing off an elegant wise guy persona. “Do you believe?” one of them asks. “I believe you.” Thomas becomes a kind of cartoon animation as he gathers force in his body by isolating motion in his legs, torso, and arms sequentially until he nearly bursts. Then he immediately backs away with hands up, as if to say, just kidding.

Dawkins and Ross return for a section of piano music: Dawkins’ solo is West African dance on steroids; Ross seems to speed to at least four times the tempo of every musical strain. Together the two hunch forward and their booties shake like an earthquake tremor. In a R&B section, the lighting goes ultraviolet and the dancers hands and shirts glow white to parody black face vaudeville minstrels. 

Camille A. Brown in “I Am” by Brown. Photograph by Steven Pisano

We don’t get Brown herself until nearly the end. The choreographer, who began her professional career with Ronald K. Brown/Evidence and has been making her own work since 2002, now has a growing presence on Broadway. She made history directing the 2022 Broadway revival of “for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf.” (Katherine Dunham was the last Black woman to direct and choreograph on Broadway in 1952.) The stage goes dark for a section called, “Musicians Jam,” and Brown’s solo follows. We hear a murmuring of voices as if they’re talking inside Brown’s head. She runs in place and shadow boxes before finding her feet in this taut and emotional centerpiece. When she enters an ecstatic state of head banging, her whiplashing braids become a shimmering starburst. 

The finale brings the ensemble together for a freestyle circle crescendo, ending with the dancers all looking up, pointing to the sky. There is no conflict in this dance. The road to Camille A. Brown’s Black joy is paved with pure respect and honor. The energy is infectious.

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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