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photo
by Roger Mastroianni |
Dancer,
choreographer, theater artist and cultural pioneer Dianne McIntyre
has performed nearly around the world, from Hollywood to Broadway
to Europe and back, on big stages, dance floors, film sets, and
concert halls. Name it, and she has been there: Lincoln Center,
Brooklyn Academy of Music, Walker Arts Center, the Joyce Theater,
Jacobs Pillow and many more. She has choreographed works for Alvin
Ailey American Dance Theater, Cleo Parker Robinson Dance Ensemble,
Dayton Contemporary Dance Company and many college dance troupes.
Her list of musical collaborators is a study in vanguard jazz innovators,
including Olu Dara, Butch Morris, Lester Bowie, Max Roach, Hannibal,
Don Pullen, Cecil Taylor, Hamiet Bluiett, Ahmed Abdullah and countless
others. And both she and her choreography can be seen in the film
Beloved.
Born
in Cleveland in 1946, where she now resides after living in New York for 30 years, McIntyre graduated
from John Adams High School in 1964, and attended Ohio State University.
After receiving her BFA in dance, she taught at the University of
Wisconsin-Milwaukee before moving to New York City in 1970. Infusing
jazz and poetry into her work, she founded the dance/music ensemble
Sounds in Motion in 1972.
In
a review by the New York Times in 1983, McIntyre is described
as having a "long tensile body with long, strong back and limbs."
Avidly interested in history and culture, much of her work has riffed
on, referred to, or honored the black experience in America. One
signature concert work, Take Off from a Forced Landing, is
based on the life and work of her mother, Dorothy Layne, a pioneering
African American aviator. Other important dance works include Lost
Son (1973), Deep South Suite (1976), and Journey to
Forever (1977). She dissolved her company in 1988 to pursue
other creative outlets, and since then has been busy choreographing,
teaching, and directing.
In
2005 she directed the world premiere of Daughter of a Buffalo
Soldier at Karamu House, a dance-theatre piece honoring 96-year-old
Cleveland choreographer Marjorie Witt Johnson, founder of the
Karamu Dancers. McIntyre has also reached into her own history,
creating I Could Stop on a Dime/And Get Ten Cents Change,
featuring dances and narratives from her father's life in Cleveland.
Her
versatility is seen in her work for the stage, her three New York Dance and Performance Awards, her Emmy nomination,
and awards from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Pew
Charitable Trust.
Amy
Sparks
Summer
2006
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