Wednesday, November 13, 2024

R.I.P. Judith Jamison


Dancer Judith Jamison has died age 81...

From Playbill
Dancer, choreographer, and beloved longtime artistic director of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater Judith Jamison passed away November 9 "after a brief illness," The New York Times reports. She was 81.
Ms. Jamison was born May 10, 1943 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to Tessie Brown Jamison and John Jamison, Sr. She began taking ballet lessons at the Judimar School of Dance at age six. After graduating from Germantown High School, Ms. Jamison enrolled at Fisk University. She eventually left Fisk to study dance and kinesiology at the Philadelphia Dance Academy.
Alvin Ailey invited Ms. Jamison to join the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater in 1965. She performed as an Ailey dancer for 15 years, with celebrated performances in works including Cry, Blues Suite, Revelations, and more. Ailey wrote Cry specifically for Ms. Jamison. She also appeared as a guest performer with the San Francisco Ballet, the Swedish Royal Ballet, the Cullberg Ballet, and the Vienna State Ballet.
In 1979, Ms. Jamison made her Broadway debut as "Le Spectre de la Rose" Dancer in BĂ©jart: Ballet of the Twentieth Century. In 1981, she appeared in the Duke Ellington musical revue Sophisticated Ladies, which also starred Gregory Hines.
Ms. Jamison began working as a choreographer in 1980. Her first ballet, Divining, premiered in 1984 with the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, with numerous other works to follow, including Forgotten Time, Rift, and more. In 1988, wanting to oversee her own group of dancers, Ms. Jamison founded The Jamison Project Dance Company. The company's performances included Ms. Jamison's last solo of her performing career. Then, in 1989, Ms. Jamison took over as artistic director of the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater upon Ailey's death. In 1993, she choreographed Hymn, a tribute to Ailey.
According to the Times, Ms. Jamison has no immediate surviving family members.

6 comments:

Anonymous said...

REST PEACEFULLY, MS. JUDITH JAMISON.

Anonymous said...

She will definitely be missed.

No Chiraq said...

Rest well, queen

Anonymous said...

Revelations. Cry. Her power on stage was breathtaking. Alvin has been waiting for her to come home. Reunited.

Anonymous said...

Rest easy and in the comforting arms of your ancestors Ms Jamison

LOLOL said...

Revelations, that's my favorite peace. It's been water ed down with other minority's that don't show the pain and suffering the dance represents. These ppl move across the floor like a moose in heat.
She was a powerhouse and Icon.

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