Anthea Kraut, "Everybody's Fire Dance: Zora Neale Hurston and American Dance History" (page 2 of
5)
Between January 1932 and September 1936, the list of artists who
pursued Hurston's Fire Dance in some capacity includes the white jazz
dancer Mura Dehn, the white Neighborhood Playhouse director Irene
Lewisohn, the African American choral director Hall Johnson, white
ballroom-dance icon Irene Castle, and celebrated white modern-dance
artists Doris Humphrey, Ruth St. Denis, and Helen Tamiris. Their
pursuits resulted in a succession of stage reproductions of the Fire
Dance in a range of venues during that period, from Broadway to the
concert hall to the nightclub. To be sure, these subsequent theatrical
enactments of the Fire Dance were for the most part bilateral
undertakings based on willful cooperation and not the kind of outright
theft that Mason so dreaded. Still, the fact that a dance form
originally staged by Hurston circulated so widely in the 1930s, combined
with the fact that to date, Hurston's contributions to the field of
American dance remain almost entirely unacknowledged and unexplored
despite her canonization in the field of literary studies, begs the
question of exploitation with respect to the transmission of the Fire
Dance. Differently stated, given the number of white artists who made
use of this black diasporic folk dance, Hurston's erasure from the dance
record seems a classic case of "invisibilization," the term coined by
scholar Brenda Dixon Gottschild to describe the systematic denial and
miscrediting of the African influences on Euro-American performance
practices.[3] It is a case that therefore demands attention to the
hierarchical relations and power imbalances that governed the diffusion
of the Fire Dance. While on the one hand, then, this essay will gesture
at the significance of Hurston's staging of black diasporic folk dance
to American dance and performance history, on the other hand, I hope to
illuminate how the racial politics of categorization and artistic credit
enabled the elision of Hurston's name from extant chronicles of American
dance.
Before tackling the issues of cultural theft and invisibilization, it
is worth briefly sketching the details of Hurston's relationship to the
Fire Dance. Perhaps the most salient question here is to what extent
Hurston can be considered a choreographer with regard to this folk
idiom. Hurston first came across the dynamic Fire Dance in southern
Florida, where it was performed by West Indian migrant workers; she
subsequently traveled to the Bahamas to find out more about it. Actually
a cycle of three dances—the Jumping Dance, Ring Play, and the Crow
Dance—the Fire Dance involved a circle of players who took turns
in the center performing various steps according to the rhythms of an
accompanying drum, as well as a solo imitation of a buzzard. During her
visit to Nassau, Hurston not only "took pains" to learn the movements
herself, as she reports in her autobiography, but she also took three
reels of film footage of the dancing, which she sent back to New York to
play for Charlotte Mason—footage that has, unfortunately, since
been lost.[4]
Obviously, Hurston did not invent the dance; nor did she refashion
the individual folk forms by fusing them with other stylistic idioms, as
did her contemporary Katherine Dunham. Yet by no means did the Fire
Dance automatically issue forth from the group of sixteen dancers she
assembled for her concert, some but not all of whom were native
Bahamians, for Hurston trained this troupe, using her film
footage to refresh her memory as she rehearsed them. While it is clear,
then, that Hurston did not function as a choreographer in the
conventional sense of originating dance moves or enacting significant
revisions to pre-existing forms—and it should be noted that the
designation "choreographer" was only just emerging in the field of white
modern dance in the 1930s—it is equally clear that Hurston alone
initiated and oversaw the transformation of the Fire Dance from its West
Indian vernacular incarnation to its theatrical rendering on the New
York stage.
In addition, as I explain elsewhere, Hurston's unique treatment of
the Fire Dance—the way she incorporated the idiom into her
concert—substantially influenced the meanings that accompanied the
movement. In particular, I argue, Hurston's staging of a West Indian
folk dance cycle within a program of southern-US black folkways
constituted an important turning point in the history of stage
representations of black vernacular dance idioms, helping to re-orient
those idioms away from the racist legacy of blackface minstrelsy and
toward an understanding of how African-derived expressive forms arrive
on American shores.[5] Attention to her careful framing of the Bahamian
Fire Dance thus compels us to problematize the tendency in Hurston
scholarship to figure her as the symbol of an "authentic" folk past, for
such reification obscures the complexity of the process by which Hurston
mediated and orchestrated vernacular practices for exposition in the
theatrical marketplace.
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