Anthea Kraut, "Everybody's Fire Dance: Zora Neale Hurston and American Dance History" (page 4 of
5)
Hall Johnson's annexation of the Bahamian dancers thus resulted in a
sort of double misrepresentation of Hurston's stage material:[12] First,
the dances that she had researched, learned, filmed, and taught to an
assembled troupe of performers were severed from the diasporic narrative
context in which she placed them and made instead to signify a
fictitious pagan practice; and second, credit for those dances now went
to Doris Humphrey, whose growing prominence in the dance world and whose
racial distance from the represented folk legitimized the attribution.
I do not want to suggest, however, that the transmission of the
Bahamian Fire Dance amounted to a zero sum game in which Hurston
invariably lost out, for, even as the West Indian folk dance continued
to be disseminated without her sanction or control, she continued to
strive to make a name for herself with it. In fact, just four days after
Run, Little Chillun! opened on Broadway, Hurston was busy
pursuing a collaboration with Ruth St. Denis, another eminent white
artist and pioneer of early modern dance in this country, best known for
her danced interpretations of "Oriental" subjects. "Zora Hurston Dances
for Ruth St. Denis," ran the headline in the weekly paper of Florida's
Rollins College.[13] The "special half hour performance of folk songs and
dances" was the result largely of coincidence: It was merely by chance
that these two women's paths crossed in Winter Park in early March of
1933. Apparently, several Rollins College officials, having just backed
a production of Hurston's concert, decided that her folk material would
be of interest to St. Denis, who was in town to deliver a lecture-dance
recital on "The Philosophy and Dance of the Orient," and accordingly
arranged for the private performance. Their supposition proved correct,
for St. Denis was reportedly "enthusiastic about the Bahama dances."
St. Denis was so enthusiastic, in fact, that she was not content
merely to be a spectator to the dances but decided that she should
perform alongside them. As Hurston revealed in a letter to Alain Locke
dated March 20, 1933, "Ruth St. Denis was here and saw us, and wishes to
appear with us as a soloist-dancer."[14] Evidently, then, following the
brief performance, an exchange took place between Hurston and St. Denis
in which St. Denis presumably praised Hurston for her dance work and
suggested that the two might collaborate on a future presentation. What
exactly St. Denis had in mind—how a solo performance by a white
modern dancer could possibly have been integrated into Hurston's program
of Floridian and Bahamian folkways—can only be a matter of
speculation. Perhaps realizing the implausibility of St. Denis's
proposition, Hurston nonetheless responded with undaunted pragmatism,
telling Locke, "I know its [sic] novelty-publicity seeking but it will
help us never-the-less."
With this comment, Hurston provides valuable insight into how she
construed outside interest in her material, in what serves as an
important counterpoint to the perspective of Charlotte Mason. Most
notably, her statement demonstrates a savvy awareness of the politics of
interracial collaboration and of the cultural capital that her
"primitive" dance idioms afforded her. Assuring Locke that she is not
naïve enough to think that anything other than self-interest lay
behind St. Denis's proposal, Hurston intimates that the real appeal of
her material for white artists was the novelty of associating with black
dancing bodies, rather than the prospect of exploring the contours and
nuances of black folk culture. Yet, instead of bemoaning St. Denis's
opportunistic motives, Hurston sees the white woman's attention as a
chance to advance her own publicity-seeking cause. For had St. Denis's
proposed stage alliance actually come to pass—and the archive
provides no indication of why it did not—Hurston's standing as a
dance authority would certainly have been bolstered, perhaps enough to
prevent her erasure from the dance record. At any rate, both St. Denis,
who by her own account was "suffering a complete eclipse" in the field
of dance, and Hurston, experiencing an upsurge in her career, were
poised to profit from a collaborative venture.[15] Of course the power
imbalance between the two women cannot be disregarded; the fact that St.
Denis was entitled to a free-of-charge showing of Hurston's folk
material testifies to the asymmetry of their relative positions. Still,
Hurston's determination to capitalize on St. Denis's solicitation
refutes any notion that white trafficking in black vernacular dance was
exploitative in any unidirectional sense or to the benefit of any single
party.
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