“The Swans of Harlem: 5 Black Ballerinas, Fifty Years of Sisterhood, and the Reclamation of a Groundbreaking Historical past” by Karen Valby
c.2024,
Pantheon
$29.00
304 pages
Not one motion is wasted.
Each flip of wrist, each finger curl, each softly curved step is loaded with which means. Although there are not any phrases to accompany this dance, the story it tells comes by loudly. You may’t take your eyes off the ballerina on the stage, or her class or, within the new e-book “The Swans of Harlem” by Karen Valby, her history-making presence.
Within the Nineteen Fifties, lengthy earlier than the Civil Rights Motion, little Black ladies may actually be present in ballet courses in America however their desires had been all the time squashed. They had been pointed towards jazz or fashionable dance in brief order, or had been bluntly instructed that they’d by no means be ballerinas.
Dancer Arthur Mitchell didn’t take heed to that. “His work ethic was his superpower,” says Valby, and when introduced with a chance with The Harlem Faculty of the Arts, he seized it. He would “construct an internationally famend faculty that may” present the world that ballet had nothing to do with pores and skin coloration. He began in search of dancers.
Lydia Abarca was nonetheless a youngster when she met Mitchell, and she or he in the end grew to become his go-to dancer on the Dance Theatre of Harlem (DTH). Llanchie Stevenson would dance for Mitchell till she transformed to Islam as an grownup. Gayle-McKinney-Griffith left Julliard to bounce for him. Twenty-seven-year-old Sheila Rohan was a lot older than most newbie ballerinas; she was additionally the mom of three children however with the assistance of an older sister, she joined the DTH. Marcia Sells moved to New York Metropolis from Ohio to bounce; Karlya Shelton got here from Denver.

Says Valby, it might’ve been really easy for any of them to go residence when issues bought exhausting, to return to their households, and re-start stay nameless lives. As an alternative, they stayed for the “subsequent curtain rising” and to blaze a path…
Not way back, many sources insisted that Misty Copeland was “the primary black ballerina.” It was, says writer Karen Valby, all “Misty Copeland, Misty Copeland, Misty Copeland…” Sure, it’s true that Copeland was “the primary African American lady to be promoted to principal dancer at American Ballet Theatre.” She wasn’t the primary Black ballerina, although. Not by a protracted shot, and “The Swans of Harlem” units the document straight.
Valby begins by reminding readers what was at stake when her 5 ballerina topics launched their careers, regardless of racism – however how they endured racial bias from past the curtains is simply half the story. Valby touches frivolously upon their non-public lives, and heavier on the difficulty that they had with their mercurial instructor who’s, not-so-surprisingly, celebrated. So are many beloved male “danseurs,” a few of whom died throughout the AIDS epidemic.
For the document, Copeland, too, is lauded right here.
And that’s fairly interesting, as a result of readers who anticipate rivalry, claws-out, and divahood in a story like it will fortunately discover lower than they could predict. As an alternative, you’ll discover a story that you simply’ll be glad you understand now, one you’ll be glad to’ve learn. So discover “The Swans of Harlem.” You need it, so don’t wast a minute.