The Swans of Harlem : Five Black Ballerinas, Fifty Years of Sisterhood, and Their Reclamation of a Groundbreaking History
The Swans of Harlem : Five Black Ballerinas, Fifty Years of Sisterhood, and Their Reclamation of a Groundbreaking History
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Author(s): Valby, Karen
ISBN No.: 9780593862742
Edition: Large Type
Pages: 480
Year: 202404
Format: Trade Paper
Price: $ 38.75
Status: Out Of Print

1 Harlem kids lived in a world of their own making. Not on the busy avenues like Broadway or Amsterdam, but on the quieter side streets, where there was more freedom. They played double Dutch and jacks and stickball. They hit the local playground, the Battlegrounds, for the monkey bars and swings, and for hoops if they could hold their own. They played street games, like the tag game Ringolevio or Hot Peas and Butter, where the leader hid a belt behind a stoop or a trash can and then yelled out to the others, "Hot Peas and Butter, come and get your supper!" They were kids with parents who expected them back inside when the streetlights came on and neighbors who looked down from open windows with chins in hands, ready to pull them out of trouble by their ears. Kids who knew when someone''s older brother or cousin had started sniffing glue or trying heroin and would learn to avoid them when they got to acting like strangers. Kids who''d lived through six days of rioting in their neighborhoods in 1964, as people took to the streets to protest the murder of a fifteen-year-old Black boy who had been gunned down by a white police officer in front of his friends and a dozen witnesses. And kids who lived too through the awful spring of 1968, when Reverend Dr.


Martin Luther King, Jr., was murdered on the balcony of a second-floor Memphis motel room, just a few days before he was set to join a march on behalf of striking sanitation workers. When news of King''s death rained down upon Harlem, Lydia Abarca was seventeen. She remembers her mother, Josephine, crying at their kitchen table. "What are we going to do now?" her mother said. "They killed this one hope." Folks in Harlem were used to being abandoned to deal with their grief and struggle. They certainly didn''t look to government leaders to take seriously their housing crisis or the breakdown of their public schools or the trash that collected in heaps on their street corners.


Now a man who''d been fighting on their behalf was gone. So they''d go on getting by on grit and stubbornness, if not hope. But two months after Dr. King''s murder, one of Abarca''s five sisters came home from her violin classes with ground-shifting news: "Lydia, they''ve got a Black man up there. He''s going to be teaching ballet." Sandra, seven years Lydia''s junior, had seen a flyer at the Harlem School of the Arts, which was run out of the basement of the St. James Presbyterian Church on 141st Street and St. Nicholas.


Somebody named Arthur Mitchell was starting a ballet program for kids in the neighborhood, and he wanted grown dancers too. Lydia Abarca had let ballet go when she was fifteen, tired of giving her whole self over to something that never seemed to love her back. When she heard about Arthur Mitchell''s new school, she''d just graduated high school and was headed on a partial scholarship to Fordham University in the fall. She was going to be the first Abarca to go to college--Josephine liked to think her baby could be a doctor--and in the meantime, she needed to make a little money working a summer job as a secretary in the lobby at a bank down the street from their projects. Monday through Friday, she''d rotate through her same three outfits--twelve years in a Catholic school uniform doesn''t build an impressive wardrobe--for a paycheck doing work she hated and wasn''t especially good at. The trash can by her desk at the bank was filled with balled-up evidence of her struggle, the Wite-Out on her typos like a crime scene covered in glue. When her sister told her about this Black man looking for dancers, she couldn''t get the thought out of her head. "I''d never had a Black ballet teacher before," she says.


"Maybe he would put a little soul in the steps to make them come alive." - The Harlem School of the Arts was the creation of Dorothy Maynor, the international concert soprano and the first Black American to perform at a presidential inauguration (for President Truman in 1945, and then President Eisenhower in 1953). Maynor believed that all children, no matter their zip code, deserved world-class training in the arts. In 1963 she launched her arts education program out of St. James Church, where her husband was the pastor, beginning with piano classes for a dozen students. As her ideals took root, so did her courting of Arthur Mitchell. She wanted him to lend his pedigree to the start of a dance program. It would take the assassination of Reverend Dr.


Martin Luther King, Jr., for him to answer her call. The night of the assassination, as grief hung over Harlem like a shroud, Mitchell summoned two of his dearest friends, the celebrated actors Cicely Tyson and Brock Peters, from their beds at one-thirty in the morning, inviting them to his West 78th Street apartment. He was expected in Rio de Janeiro that week, to continue with his launch of the National Company of Brazil. But this was not a time, he realized, for leaving. The three sat on the floor of Mitchell''s apartment helping him hash out his response to this national moment of helplessness and heartbreak. By sunrise, he had a plan. Mitchell would bring ballet home to the neighborhood that had raised him or, rather, that had witnessed his raising of himself.


When he was twelve years old, Mitchell''s alcoholic father went to jail after confessing to the murder of a numbers racketeer. "I called the family together and said, ''I will take care of everybody, don''t you worry,'' " Mitchell said in a 2016 recording with The HistoryMakers, a digital archive of filmed oral histories from prominent African Americans. He assumed responsibility for his mother, who worked coat check at the "21" Club, and his four younger siblings. He took on his father''s superintendent duties in their apartment building, got a paper route, worked for a butcher, and ran errands for the hookers who lived across the street in a bordello. After a year of studying tap and modern at the School of the Performing Arts, Mitchell''s teachers told him he would never be a dancer, not with his bad feet and tight muscles. Determined to prove them wrong, he threw himself so headlong into his training that he promptly ripped his stomach muscles apart. His work ethic was his superpower. He''d expect everyone else to match his zealousness of character for the rest of his life.


And so Mitchell accepted Maynor''s offer to lead the dance division of her arts center. He vowed to build an internationally renowned school that would once and for all prove that a person''s skin color was irrelevant to their right or relationship to classical dance. His guiding ethos was as simple as it was revolutionary: Ballet belongs to everyone. Ballet benefits everyone. The discipline it demands, and the beauty it gives back, can transform lives. As he put it more bluntly, "You''re not going to stick a needle in your arm when your instrument is your body." He turned to his friend and financial adviser Charles De Rose for help. A street kid like Mitchell, De Rose was an Italian boy who grew up thirty blocks north in Washington Heights before climbing the ranks to become a partner in a Wall Street investing firm.


At the height of Mitchell''s City Ballet career, he had asked De Rose to put some of his money away so he wouldn''t blow it. "Now he''s calling me saying ''I need my savings. I want to build a school. I need to buy the kids toe shoes and build a special floor,'' " says De Rose. "I said, ''Arthur, you''re coming to the end of your earned income life as a dancer. You can''t lift the girls anymore because your back is killing you.'' " But Mitchell felt divinely called to his mission and wasn''t going to let any practical concerns cloud his vision. "We were offered to be a part of Lincoln Center," De Rose recalls, "to come under their umbrella, where they would do the fundraising for us.


Arthur said ''Why do people of color always have to go downtown? Why can''t people start coming uptown?'' He told me, ''Charles, what I want is for the Dance Theatre of Harlem to be like a little diamond on the beach. When people are walking by, they''ll see something sparkling, and we''ll make them come over and see what it is.'' This was the burn-the-boats mentality he had. How do you not fight alongside somebody like that?" That summer Mitchell juggled his early-morning swims at the Y, daily classes at City Ballet, and rehearsals for the Broadway musical revue Noël Coward''s Sweet Potato, in which he acted, sang, and danced, all while getting his Harlem operation off the ground. In his first month at the school, a reporter captured him instructing sixteen little Black girls at the barre. "Now I don''t want to see spaghetti," he warned the children, who loved their boisterous new teacher but also complained to their mothers that he was mean. "I want to see straight knees. Keep that knee straight, Fatso!" When Lydia Abarca first stepped into Mitchell''s studio, that windowless basement of St.


James, she saw a couple of lamps casting a dirty yellow glow on the floor of the gym where the church''s AAU team practiced. The only source of light in the room was Mitchell himself, a man with movie star good looks, wearing flared trousers and a tight jersey shirt that appeared painted onto his lithe muscles. His style of speech was fast and clipped, every elongated vowel and sharp consonant potent with urgency. "Kick off your shoes, let me see your feet!" Mitchell barked at Abarca by way of greeting. She slid out of her street shoes and angled her stockinged feet for him, extending and arching them into the shape of perfect cashews. A dance critic would later praise "those feet, so curved and strong one can imagine her picking up the stage with them." Mitchell took in her willowy fi.


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