Winner of the The Marfield Prize / National Award for Arts Writing (2011)
Dancer Janet Collins, born in New Orleans in 1917 and raised in Los Angeles, soared high over the color line as the first African-American prima ballerina at the Metropolitan Opera. Night’s Dancer chronicles the life of this extraordinary and elusive woman, who became a unique concert dance soloist as well as a black trailblazer in the white world of classical ballet. During her career, Collins endured an era in which racial bias prevailed, and subsequently prevented her from appearing in the South. Nonetheless, her brilliant performances transformed the way black dancers were viewed in ballet. The book begins with an unfinished memoir written by Collins in which she gives a captivating account of her childhood and young adult years, including her rejection by the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo. Dance scholar Yaël Tamar Lewin then picks up the thread of Collins’s story. Drawing on extensive research and interviews with Collins and her family, friends, and colleagues to explore Collins’s development as a dancer, choreographer, and painter, Lewin gives us a profoundly moving portrait of an artist of indomitable spirit.
表中的内容
List of Illustrations
Prologue – Yaël Tamar Lewin
Foreword – Janet Collins
ACT ONE by Janet Collins
In the Beginning
About Art
Intermission
ACT TWO
Modern à la Mode
Creation
Exodus East
Out of This World
Enter Egypt
The Trouble I’ve Seen
Eye of the Storm
Epilogue
Acknowledgments
Chronology
Appendixes
Genesis ‘Argument’ by Janet Collins
Black Dancers in Ballet
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
Color plates follow pages 172 and 268
关于作者
Yaël Tamar Lewin is a dance historian, writer, and dancer living in New York City. She has a B.A. from Barnard College, Columbia University and a M.A. from Columbia University. She has worked as a copy editor for Nickelodeon Magazine, Metropolitan Home, and other publishers.