Geneviève Fabre,
"Katherine Dunham on the French Stage (No Repeat of La Revue Nègre)"
(page 5 of 7)
Among Dunham's choreographies, Southland deserves special
attention. Like Baker, Dunham had always been concerned with any form of
discrimination, in particular with the pervasive violent racism against
American blacks.[17]
Dunham knew intimately the poem "Strange Fruit" by
Lewis Allan, a pseudonym of Abel Meeropol, and also Lillian Smith's
novel of the same name (Kaiso, 361) and since 1949 she had been working
on a "lynching ballet," an original piece that would turn out to be her
most controversial show. She was convinced that dance should not be mere
entertainment, that dance could be art and yet express the rage and
terror of a lynching. Given the political climate in the U.S. in the
early 1950s, with McCarthyism in full swing, only a few writers,
intellectuals, and artists were courageous enough to take a public
stand, even against egregious injustices, and only a few dared confront
political issues in their work. It is significant, then, that Dunham
conceived of the work while she was on her South American and European
tours. She certainly may have had in mind the experiences of Richard
Wright and Paul Robeson when she chose to premiere Southland
abroad.
The show was commissioned by the Symphony Theater of Chile, el
teatro municipal. In Santiago, censure came fast and was no
surprise.[18]
The ballet was accused of being an act of defiance and
disloyalty, and was almost immediately canceled. The company was forced
to leave, and reviewers were silenced by the U.S. Embassy. Performances
planned for Buenos Aires for the 1951-1952 season were canceled. In
spite of all these difficulties, financial problems, and warnings from
her company, Dunham would not be deterred, as though staging her ballet
against all odds had become a moral obligation.[19]
She had completed
and choreographed Southland during her stay in Buenos Aires in
the last months of 1949. Rehearsals were resumed in Genoa, Italy, in
preparation for the Paris season. Roberto Rossellini saw one rehearsal
and was enthusiastic. Dunham informed the American Embassy in Paris of
her intention to present Southland there, and the cultural
attaché's evasive answer was, "We trust your good taste." Dunham
thought that if he would not commit himself to prohibit the show, she
would go ahead and do it.
Southland opened at the Palais de Chaillot on January 9, 1953.
The variety of the steps, the musical score, the songs—sorrow and
mourning and healing songs—and the elaborate sets and costumes created
an ensemble of impressive sophistication and beauty. Two contradictory
aspects of the South, its obvious magnificence and its singular
violence, were symbolized by a magnolia tree with blood on its bark.
Skillfully weaving graphic description together with dramatic movement
and gesture, Dunham was careful to include many of her successful
choreographies as a long prelude, gradually picking up the thread of
violence. Ultimately, the piece arrived at the famous "Habanera,"
performed by a white woman, and the dance of death, which concluded with
a lynched black body hanging from the tree, accompanied by the song
"Strange Fruit."
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