3/4/26 O&A NYC DANCE BY WALTER RUTLEDGE: Remembering – Jamel Gaines Creative Outlet

By Walter Rutledge

Black History Month 2026, a month of reflection, remembrance and rejoicing the accomplishments of Americans of African descent, has come to an end. It was a month spent celebrating and remembering not only the sacrifices of the renowned such as Langston Hughes, Martin Luther King Jr. and Harriet Tubman, but of forgotten like Private Sandy Wills. Jamel Gaines Creative Outlet’s multi-media production of Remembering presented at the BAM Fisher Fishman Space on Friday, February 13 honored both the memorialized and the marginalized in an example of how art and education can dance arm in arm.   

The Friday evening production was the culmination of a week of daytime young audience performances offered to schools throughout the five boroughs. Gaines repurposes the production every year to bring awareness to more Black history facts. This Black historical enlightenment is often unexplored by mainstream academia. In so many instances it has been left up to the descendants of the forgotten to keep their memories alive. Gaines’ Remembering expands our understanding of the Diasporic role in the building of America.

An image appeared on the cyclorama piercing the darkness and immediately transported us to an African rainforest. Percussionist Abou Camara appeared from stage right with a drumming interlude that welcomed us into the space. He was soon joined by drummers Aliseni Bangoura, Jahi Smith, Jaziah Kefentse, Forest Holmes-Dodge.

The percussive overture quickly evolved into a drumming call and response with the audience. Drummers would create a series of rhythms that the audience would clap the passages back. During the school performances the audience responded enthusiastically. And to the drummers’ credit they were also able to bring out that engaged inner child during the Friday evening performance. 

Speaking of children, the next sections showcased the young performers from the Creative Outlet school. Dancers Summer, Makena, Ava P., Elleyana, Sabi, Callista, Harley, Makhotso, Nylah, Alyssa-Ivy, Zenai, Jamina, Julee, Yazarrah, Amia, Mela, Leila, Avery, Ava S., Sage, Asha, Jaccori, and Nina, Ja-nae under the tutelage of instructors Ryan Greenidge (African) and Jada Williams (Ballet) gave us an inspiring performance highlighting future possibilities.

Orator Gha’ il Rhodes Benjamin joined by fellow narrator Talu Green and drummer Camara in a rendition of Langston Hughes’ iconic 1926 Harlem Renaissance poem I, Too. Hughes wrote I, Too in direct response to Walt Whitman’s 1860 poem I Hear America Singing.

Hughes felt Whitman excluded the Black experience from the American narrative. The poem is also known as I, Too, Sing America, the poem serves as a powerful declaration of African American identity, resilience, and the inevitable end of segregation. Usually performed by a man, Benjamin’s interpretation became an unshakable matriarchal statement.

The backdrop now projected a field of cotton with a procession of dancers making an arduous crossing in single file.  A solo dancer, Michael Dickey, stops moving as the backdrop changes to a barren (leafless) tree. His impassioned solo brought the horrors of lynching centerstage. Dickey delivered both an emotional and technically strong performance; but it was the more nuanced and theatrical subtleties that deeply registered Gaines’ powerful message with the audience.

The effect of war on our mothers was the theme of Mothers of War. Keven Crawford and April Watson opened the large ensemble section with a lovingly paternal duet. Set to the music of Hans Zimmer with spoken word by Shirley Black Brown Coward Gaines cleverly constructed a dance theater scenario that projected protective maternal instinct with a strong mother, brother, sister energy. The section was a reflection on war seen through the lenses of angst, loss, and the inner strength of women. The dance concluded with Watson draping her skirt to hide Crawford as if shielding him from the world of war.

Mothers of War provided a fitting segway into Cherly Wills poignant yet triumphant multimedia story of Private Sandy Wills, her great, great, great grandfather. A civil war soldier forgotten by time and buried in an unmarked grave. Through persistence, exhausting research and family support she was able to locate his remains and give him a proper military burial.

Wills found time to eloquently present her family’s heartfelt legacy with young people during the daytime performances. The audiences were so moved by Wills journey that each performance ended with spontaneous applause. The truest barometer of how effective arts in education can be to imbue the next generation.  

Guest artist Thera Ward’s Friday evening performance was nothing short of mesmerizing. Ward embodied the narrative making it her own. Her interpretation exuded a presence and command that pulled the audience into Wills’ uplifting page of American history.

We The People was a sober and contemplative statement on unity. Choreographed as an ensemble movement the unison created a sense of camaraderie. Always a showman, Gaines took us out with an up-tempo bang. The finale displayed one of Gaines strong suits; his ability to bring together interdisciplinary dancers of varying levels of proficiency.  Every performer brought their A-game to a house music crescendo.

Gaines’ commitment to share the history and contributions of Americans of African descent extends beyond February. His aim is to share this vital part of American history with the world 365 days a year.  It is the goal of the Jamel Gaines Creative Outlet that we never forget – that we always keep Remembering.

3/2/26 O&A NYC HOLLYWOOD MONDAY: Stormy Weather- Lena Horne, Bill “Bojangles” Robinson, Cab Calloway, Nicholas Brothers, Katherine Dunham and dancers

Stormy Weather is a 1943 film musical produced and released by 20th Century Fox. The movie is considered one of the best Hollywood musicals with an all African-American cast and serve to  showcase of some of the top African-American performers of the time. Continue reading

2/9/26 O&A NYC DANCE BY WALTER RUTLEDGE: Meet Deven Crawford – Unity Through Community

Meet Deven Crawford a 19-year-old Las Vegas Nevada native who is living his dream.  The former dance major at the Las Vegas Academy of the Arts happened to meet Jamel Gaines at the 2024 IABD (International Association of Black in Dance) conference. Today Crawford is a sophomore studying dance at Marymount College in Manhattan and one of the newest members of the Jamel Gaines Creative Outlet Dance Company (JGCO). Continue reading

1/22/26 O&A NYC HAIL TO THE KING: Martin – A Ballet by Gordon Parks – Act III Letter From The Birmingham Jail

Martin Act III Letter

Martin Act III: Letter From The Birmingham Jail – Dr. King (John Jones) is arrested and while in jail he writes the now historic letter from the Birmingham Jail. With the help of Rosa Parks (Sheila Rohan) King is able to disseminate his message to the masses. Continue reading

1/16/26 O&A NYC DANCE BY WALTER RUTLEDGE: THE HOLY BLUES INTERVIEW – Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, Samantha Figgins and Chalvar Monteiro

“My roots are also in the Gospel church, the Gospel churches of the south where I grew up…holy blues—paeans to joy, anthems to the human spirit.” These words written by Alvin Ailey were the impetus for The Holy Blues, a collaborative choreographic endeavor by choreographer Jawole Willa Jo Zollar and emerging dancemakers Samantha Figgins and Chalvar Monteiro. Continue reading

12/26/25 O&A NYC DANCE BY WALTER RUTLEDGE: Cry – Deborah Manning

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In 1971, Alvin Ailey created Cry, one of his signature dance works, as a birthday present for his mother Lula Elizabeth Ailey. Ailey dedicated the ballet to “all black women everywhere — especially our mothers.” The three-part ballet, set to contemporary music by Alice Coltrane, Laura Nyro and Chuck Griffin, depicts a woman’s journey through toil to an ecstatic state of grace. Cry premiered at New York City Center on May 4, 1971. Continue reading

12/14/25 O&A NYC THE WORD: Revelations – Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater

Revelations was the tenth ballet by 29 year old emerging choreographer Alvin Ailey. The  work premiered in New York City on January 31, 1960, at the 92nd Street YM-YWHA. Revelations immediately captivated audiences with its powerful universal message of faith and resilience.  

Continue reading

7/18/25 O&A NYC SHALL WE DANCE FRIDAY: Harold Nicholas – Mister BeeBe from Carolina Blues (1944)

An amazing song and tap routine from Carolina Blues (1944) – with a huge cast of dancers and singers, and headed up by the wonderful Harold Nicholas. Continue reading

10/6/23 O&A NYC SHALL WE DANCE FRIDAY: Alvin Ailey’s “Mary Lou’s Mass” and “Hidden Rites” Excerpts

Mary Lou’s Mass (1971) with John Parks, Dudley Williams and Clive Thompson and Hidden Rites (1973) with John Parks and Judith Jamison Continue reading

8/29/23 O&A NYC DANCE: Sneek Peek at THPAC Documentary- To The Souls of Our Feet

By Walter Rutledge

On August 18 and 19 the Thelma Hill Performing Arts Center (THPAC) began two days of interviews with dancers, choreographers and directors about their experiences with Thelma Hill and THPAC for the upcoming documentary To The Souls of Our Feet. The two days of filming captured the experiences of six artists, (George Faison, Alfred Gallman, Dyane Harvey Salaam, Abdel Salaam, Edisa Weeks, Jill Williams and Lakai Worrell), who lives and careers were directly impacted by Ms. Hill and/or THPAC.

THPAC Documentary Preview

Here is an excerpted from the upcoming documentary with the one and only dance and theater legend George Faison. The final filming will take place in the fall and we will keep you inform as our documentary “To The Souls of Our Feet” get one step closer to coming to a theater near you. For more information about the Thelma Hill Performing Arts Center and/or to make a donation to the “To The Souls of Our Feet” documentary project visit https://www.thelmahill.org/. An additional filming date will take place later in the fall.