She then notes that the success of this revue spawned a sequel where Hepburn was more featured, which then in short order led to a title role on Broadway and then Roman Holiday.
But what is truly astonishing is that discovering, teaching, and boosting Hepburn is really the least eventful anecdote in a volume full of stories like these. Bradley, who was previously unknown to me before reading this book, catapulted so many of his students into stardom, while also bringing vernacular dance and his own signature style to theater and films and choreographers we are more familiar with, like Frederick Ashton and George Balanchine. In Feel the Floor: Restoring the Life and Legacy of Jazz Choreographer Buddy Bradley, published by Beacon Press and in bookstores now, Footer charts Bradley’s life and career, claiming his rightful place in dance history.
“Even in the highest levels of dance, the history had just disappeared,” Footer, who has also written books about Christian Dior and George Stacey, told me. The book, fueled by Footer’s investigative feat, draws the portrait of a talented but reserved artist who was not necessarily seeking the limelight but certainly earned it. Tracing his path from the Deep South to Harlem and then London, this history also unpacks the racism and sociopolitical conditions that left his immense contributions to dance and musical theater largely uncredited in New York.
Footer and I connected via Zoom in early May for a wide-ranging conversation about the rigorous research process that unearthed a fuller portrait of this nearly forgotten tap and jazz icon. On May 21, Footer will also be in conversation with Margo Jefferson at the 92Y, in person and streaming.
This interview has been edited and condensed for clarity.
In the introduction you talk about overcoming your doubts as to whether this was a history appropriate for you to write. Let’s be sure to circle back to that. But when you overcame your doubts, where did you start research?
I started in the natural places, the Jerome Robbins Dance Division of the New York Public Library, the Library of Congress, and the V & A [Victoria and Albert Museum], all of which have outstanding archives of dance. But there was very little—literally not a folder at the New York Public Library. There were a couple of sketches for costume designs, a couple of programs, but not much at the V & A. What did exist at the Library of Congress was a write up by a graduate student about Buddy Bradley that had quite a bit of erroneous information. It was the best she could obtain at the time, but it made me realize how elusive this man was.
So having struck out with those three first stops, I went to genealogical records. I knew his name, which was not his given name at birth. He dropped the name of his family's enslaver, but he also had to change it because there was somebody else with the same name working in the entertainment world in Broadway in the 1920s. Whether I was looking at ship manifests or marriage records, I had to go through all these different iterations of the name.
Then the next stop was going into newspapers. There wasn't much when you googled Buddy Bradley in the New York entertainment press, because the problem was that he was uncredited here. Well, partly that he was uncredited, but partly—people forget this— is that nobody considered what he was doing, jazz dance and theatrical dance, high art. While he was starting his dance studio on Broadway in 1926, Martha Graham was starting a company. But Graham, because it was concert dance, and because Martha was so imposing as a personality, got so much attention. What Bradley was doing—that just wasn't where the critics’ gaze was at. So that was a little bit of a challenge.
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