3/25/26 O&A NYC DANCE BY WALTER RUTLEDGE: Ailey II

By Walter Rutledge

Ailey II presented their fifty second New York City season March 17 through March 22 at the Joyce Theater. The sold out six-day eight performance season offered two programs New Works and Legacy/Future. The season featured Alvin Ailey’s masterwork Streams and four New York City premieres by Renee I. McDonald, Rena Butler, My’Kal Stromile, and Chalvar Monteiro. Continue reading

3/16/26 O&A NYC DANCE BY WALTER RUTLEDGE: The Conversation Continues With Francesca Harper and Adanna Smalls -Ailey II

 

Our conversation with Ailey II Artistic Director Francesca Harper and company members Adanna Smalls about the upcoming New York City season March 17 through 22 at the Joyce Theater continues. Harper shares with Out and About NYC Magazine Editor-in-Chief Walter Rutledge about season highlights at the beginning of her sixth year shaping the direction of Ailey II. While dancer Adanna Smalls talks about preparing for her debut season with the company. Continue reading

3/10/26 O&A NYC DANCE BY WALTER RUTLEDGE: Ronald K. Brown/Evidence

By Walter Rutledge

Ronald K. Brown/Evidence presented their New York City season at the Joyce Theater February 24 through March 1, 2026. The company offered two programs, a total of eight works spanning the years 2006 through 2017. The production experienced some snow drama with the cancellation of the February 24 performance and the addition of an evening show on Sunday March 1st. The six-day, seven performance season paid tribute to Ibiwunmi Omotayo Olaiya and Toni Pierce-Sands.  Continue reading

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.

2/13/26 O&A NYC DANCE BY WALTER RUTLEDGE: TV Personality Cheryl Wills Joins Remembering Cast.

By Walter Rutledge

Journalist and author Cheryl Wills joins the cast as both actor and playwright for the Jamel Gaines Creative Outlet Dance Company in tonight’s production of Remembering at the BAM Fisher Fishman Space, 321 Ashland Place, in downtown Brooklyn. Wills shared the story of her great, great, great grandfather Private Sandy Wills with young audiences on Wednesday and Thursday. On Friday evening’s performance playwright Wills will be performed by Thera Ward. 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

2/6/26 O&A NYC DANCE BY WALTER RUTLEDGE: Remembering – Unity Through Community

By Walter Rutledge

For over 31 years Jamel Gaines, and his Brooklyn based company, Jamel Gaines Creative Outlet Dance Company, has understood the power of education through the arts. His much-anticipated annual arts in education production Remembering, reflects Gaines continued commitment to educate and enlighten the next generation through the dance theatre genre. Gaines and his company will offer six young audience daytime performances on February 11,12 and 13 at 10am and 12 noon in the BAM Fisher (Fishman Space) 321 Ashland Pl, Downtown Brooklyn,. There will also be one evening performance open to the public on February 13th at 7:30pm. His staunch commitment to protected, preserving and perpetuate the legacy of Americans of African descent has earned Gaines the moniker of the “Godfather of Black History Month”.

Remembering is a multimedia history lesson with dance as the primary medium. The work is an effective amalgam of contemporary western and traditional West African dance styles, spoken word, music, West African drumming and stunning video and photographic imagery. This diasporic sojourn chronicles the journey from the blissful land nourished by the Pishon, Gihon, Tigris and Euphrates Rivers to the struggles and triumphs on this other side of the Atlantic.

Gaines credits his commitment to the philosophy of empowerment and self-determination offered by Bishop Reverend Dr. Johnny Ray Youngblood, the spiritual leader of Mt. Pisgah Baptist Church. Gaines’ recent participation in the church’s Black History Month declaration, The MAAFA Suite is an example the power of storytelling as communication and education. In other words: Unity through community.

What better way to share the richness of American history than through the visual and kinetic power of the arts. It will spark conversations and open curiosities important for this new 21st century visual learning environment. This sensory historical experience explores the struggles, triumphs and continued fight for a place at America’s banquet table.

For more information about Jamel Gaines Creative Outlet school and company visit https://www.creativeoutlet.org for tickets for Remembering at BAM Fisher performances of February 13 visit https://www.bam.org/dance/2026/remembering

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1/30/26 O&A NYC DANCE BY WALTER RUTLEDGE: Unity Through Community – Jamel Gaines and MAAFA: The Capture

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

12/27/25 O&A NYC BY WALTER RUTLEDGE: In My Father’s Footsteps

Walter and Barry in SnowEvery time we have a snowstorm it brings back one the most lasting and endearing early memories I have of my father. I was six years old; we lived in a quiet residential Northeast Bronx neighborhood. (Yes there are quiet neighborhoods in New York City.) Back then we didn’t have a formal sidewalk the grassy front lawn meandered into a roughly paved street that seemed to be more dirt than asphalt. 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