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  • 3/25/2025
He revolutionized the world of dance by honoring the African American experience, but his journey was not without its struggles.

This is the story of Alvin Ailey.
Transcript
00:00Choreographers start with an empty space, a body, a tomb, he's like carve this space.
00:24I love creating something where there was nothing before.
00:31I was born in the depression in 1931, rural country, tough times.
00:35The first 12 years of his life, it was him and his mother, you know, traveling through various small towns of Texas, just the two of them.
00:45There was no father figure in his life. He is in the fields with his mother, picking cotton.
00:50So there is this sense of an incredible economic vulnerability.
01:01When I was 14, I discovered Leviticus.
01:03And it touched something in me, but there was no Mardi Gras.
01:11The aha moment really comes with his completely serendipitous encounter with the legendary Katherine Dunham.
01:18He sees this poster and he's like, wait a minute, I have had yet to see black people on the stages of, you know, the halls of downtown LA.
01:26And he just, you know, enters the theater and recognized himself in so many ways.
01:48The time with Mr. Horton was really formative because Lester Horton,
01:52is himself, you know, a queer man, a choreographer who is running at that time,
01:58one of the first multiracial dance companies in the country.
02:02And so I think realizing a sense of possibility through Mr. Horton's own, you know,
02:07sort of space where everybody did a little bit of everything.
02:22He really finds his way into the kind of lead choreographer position a little bit by happenstance.
02:44And that is, of course, how he would frame it, being a rather humble person.
02:48But I think he was also ready for it.
02:50I think he had something to say.
03:01I wanted to do the kind of dance that could be done for the man on the streets, the people,
03:05that it was part of their culture and that it was universal.
03:21For Mr. Ailey at this time, you know, it's the 50s.
03:24There's a sense of possibility and progress, I think, in the ways that the civil rights movement is challenging
03:30so many things in kind of a legal setting.
03:32There's a real sense that, you know, there is space for us.
03:36Let's start creating our own things and let's start staging works that are meaningful to us.
03:50This is what he took up as his crusade.
04:04Alvin's protest was on stage.
04:06I want to feel all the anger and the sense of cursing at the outside world.
04:21This is sort of part of a Cold War strategy, really, to export some of these, you know,
04:27arts organizations overseas as a battle of kind of persuasion, let's say.
04:32And so the Ailey Company is used in this way to say, like, oh, look at the beautiful work
04:36that these individuals create and look at how we support them.
04:39And we would like to share these gifts with you.
04:50Alvin entertained my dreams that a black boy could actually dance.
05:17Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater is one of the most important contemporary dance companies
05:22in the world.
05:24People were just, oh, my God, they'd never seen anything like it.
05:42People say, why is he doing that now?
06:02If you're a black anything in this country, people want to put you into a bag.
06:13His struggle, particularly with mental health and with some drug addiction.
06:18And I think all of that feeds into this kind of intense loneliness that he no doubt, you
06:25know, experienced.
06:28I think there was tremendous shame for him.
06:31Do you feel as though you had to sacrifice anything to stay in dance?
06:39Absolutely.
06:49Alvin Ailey has a passion for movement that reveals the meaning of things.
06:54His is a choreography of the heart.
07:17Alvin said that dance came from the people and that it should always be delivered back
07:23to the people.
07:34I had my own ideas, not just to do a step, but to feel something.