Debbie Allen - regina robertson
Transcription
Debbie Allen - regina robertson
CENTER STAGE BLIPP TO BRING TO LIFE SEE PAGE 9 TO LEARN HOW. H A I R , R A N DY S TO D G H I L L /O P U S B E AU T Y U S I N G AV E DA . M A K E U P, T R AC Y K E N N E DY. S T Y L I N G , GIOLLIOSA & NATALIE FULLER/SISTERSTYLING.COM. FOR CLOTHING DETAILS, SEE WHERE TO BUY. By Regina R. Rober tson Photography Kwaku Alston WITH LIMITLES S TALENT AND AN UNWAVER TO THE ARTS , ING DEDICATIO DEBBIE ALLEN N HAS FOUND A NURTURING TH NEW PASSION— E NEXT CROP OF PERFORME RS Some days I wake up and think, That damn Debbie Allen,” she says with a laugh, speaking of herself in the third person. “She always has an idea and I wish she’d just leave me alone sometimes!” Even as she jokes about the prospect of slowing her pace, she knows that’s not who she is, or ever was. It’s just before one o’clock on a Saturday, one of the busiest days at the Debbie Allen Dance Academy in Los Angeles. On this particular day, however, there is more activity than usual. Just as a meeting with parents of new students is adjourning out back, a group of preteen girls of every height and hue gathers inside to audition for The Hot Chocolate Nutcracker (BET will air last year’s production in December). This is the fourth year that the show, Allen’s twist on the classic ballet, will play at the University of California at Los Angeles’ Royce Hall, and news of the open call has spread like wildfire. But before any dancing commences, Ms. Allen—as her students and faculty call her—wants to see everybody in the room. Dressed down in a white button-up top, hot pink cargo pants and matching Nikes, she directs the girls to walk across the floor, row by row. Step, step, walk…step, step, walk…step, step, walk… Watching her in action is like going back in time to her days as Lydia Grant, from the 1980’s movie and TV series Fame. But really, that was more than three decades ago. Allen, now 64, has accomplished so much since then, and it’s likely her young charges know her for very different reasons. Perhaps they’ve seen her sit at the judges’ table on So You Think You Can Dance. They’ve probably read her children’s books, too, and attended her stage productions. Maybe they’ve even felt the buzz DECEMBER 2014 ESSENCE .COM 109 Sharing the gift of the arts is a whole new purpose in my life. It goes beyond me. surrounding the prime-time shows she currently stars in and directs. All in all, it speaks to the legacy she has been building for years. Debbie Allen is a dancer, singer, actor and choreographer, just as she’s a writer, producer, mentor and community leader. She’s also a wife and the mother of Vivian Nixon, 30, and Norm “Thump” Nixon, Jr., 27. She wears many hats, but she sticks to a simple method for managing it all. “When I’m here, auditioning children, I’m not thinking about directing Scandal or Grey’s Anatomy,” she explains. “But if I’m working on How to Get Away With Murder, I don’t want to hear about anything else, because I’m totally focused on getting that story on film. I do one thing at a time.” Big Dreams Dance is her core. It’s the well from which she derives her inspiration. But to understand the magic of Debbie Allen, to truly appreciate the force that she is and that she brings, it’s necessary to take a look back at the people and places that shaped her. The third child and second daughter of Pulitzer Prize– nominated poet Vivian Ayers and the late Dr. Arthur Andrew Allen, she was raised as a “child of the universe.” She was once asked what religion she practiced. Her response: “I am a free mind.” That independent spirit was her mother’s doing. Growing up in Houston during the sixties could have been a limiting existence, but while her father, a prominent dentist, was teaching his children about the power of community, her mom was exposing them to the world beyond their block through art. “We went to museums and concerts, but because of segregation, we couldn’t go downtown to the movies, so we’d see them later, on television,” says Allen, who was mesmerized by musicals. That’s where the dreaming began. “Listening to Lena Horne and Dorothy Dandridge sing and watching the Nicholas Brothers and Fred Astaire dance had a big impact on me. Then when I saw Shirley Temple, I said, ‘I can outdance her. I know I can!’ ” “Deborrah is a little lady, but she is a large spirit. In junior high school, she joined the string ensemble and, if you can imagine, she chose the bass violin. She had to sit on a stool so her hands could reach the fingerboard,” Phylicia Rashad says of her younger sister and frequent collaborator, whom she still calls by her given name. (Allen’s first manager suggested she shorten her name to Debbie—she agreed—and get plastic surgery on her lips, which she vehemently refused.) While many of Allen’s memories are peppered with laughter, like meeting her husband of 30 years, former NBA player Norm Nixon, while filming The Fish That Saved Pittsburgh (“Ooh child, that movie was a gift and a disaster!”), there’s one experience that brings her to tears. At 17, after years of training at the Houston School of Ballet, she auditioned for the North Carolina School of the Arts. “I was told that my body was not right for ballet,” says Allen, who, ironically, was asked to demonstrate ballet combinations during the audition. Sharing the news with her parents was difficult. “At first my father didn’t believe me, 110 ESSENCE .COM DECEMBER 2014 Clockwise from top: Wayne Mackins-Harris (Prince), Taína Lyons (Ballerina), Savoy Bailey (Bollywood), Ryan Phuong (Candy Cane), Amanda Harris (Angel) and Allen. but when I tried to explain to my mother what happened, she said, ‘You failed.’ ” The lesson was hard, but she got it, eventually. “Mama was trying to explain that I couldn’t lay blame on somebody whose idea it was that I was not right. It was up to me to do something to get where I wanted to go.” “That rejection hurt her so much that she stopped dancing for a year. She was crushed,” recalls Rashad, who graduated from Howard University before making her way to New York, with Allen close behind. “I used to copy everything Phylicia did,” Allen says, laughing. It was at Howard that she found her footing. “Girl, I was at a party and in the middle of whatever funky dance I was doing, I did a triple turn and a layout—bam!” Mike Malone, the late legendary choreographer and director, was impressed. “He said, ‘You know, you can really dance,’ and I was like, ‘Oh, hmmm, well…’ That was the turning point.” Stay Ready Whether she’s working onstage, on TV or in film or literature, she puts in the effort. She’s disciplined beyond measure and as a result, her list of credits runs long. In 1973, Broadway came knocking and Allen, a two-time Tony nominee, made her debut in Raisin (a musicalization of A Raisin in the Sun). The poster hangs in her office, just behind her chair. She then headed to Hollywood for a short-lived variety show, 3 Girls 3, which ran for exactly four episodes. Back in New York, there was more stage work and a bit more “gypsy money,” as she refers to her starving-artist earnings. Then came Fame, the series spin-off of the 1980 film, which ran for six seasons and not only made her a household name, but showcased her skills as a director, producer and choreographer as well. She also made television history, earning the distinction of being the first Black woman to direct a single-camera drama. “That show catapulted me into doing every special in Hollywood,” says Allen, who later served as choreographer for the Academy Awards for ten years. She earned a Golden Globe and three Emmy Awards for her endeavors and inspired a generation. “My sister Sandie and I were obsessed with Fame,” notes Shonda Rhimes, who has enlisted Allen to direct episodes of Grey’s Anatomy, Scandal and How to Get Away With Murder. “Even as a little girl, I knew that Debbie Allen was at the center of it all, and I can still recite her ‘You want fame’ speech verbatim.” Allen herself delivered the words that made her famous during the B-roll segment of her photo shoot. When she looked into the camera and said, “You want fame? Well, fame costs, and right here is where you start paying, in sweat,” everybody smiled. Everybody remembers. At the suggestion she’s a pioneer, she agrees with a nod, then a smile. “I guess so,” she says, “but I’m still doing it, you know? My career feels like a continuum. I’ve still got my hands on the plow.” Years before she made her historic mark on A Different World as showrunner, she was sharpening her directorial skills on prime-time favorites Family Ties, The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air and The Sinbad Show. The seeds she planted back then bloomed again when Rhimes called upon her to direct Grey’s Anatomy in 2010. “Chandra Wilson and I talked about having more women of color directors on the show,” says Rhimes. “Debbie seemed like an exciting choice, but I assumed she was too busy. I was so excited when she said yes.” Soon after she began helming the series, Allen was invited to join the cast as Dr. Catherine Avery, the overbearing mother of Dr. Jackson Avery, portrayed by Jesse Williams. Members of the cast of The Hot Chocolate Nutcracker DEBBIE ALLEN DANCE ACADEMY FACTS āŏ đŏIn January 2001, DADA was founded by Allen and her husband, Norm Nixon, in Los Angeles. Their daughter, Vivian, currently serves as associate artistic director and dean of the Early Birds (boys and girls ages 4 to 7). ĂŏđŏDADA offers instruction in tap, jazz, modern, hip-hop, ballet, salsa, flamenco and African dance. ăŏđŏDenzel Washington, Quincy Jones and Suzanne de Passe 112 ESSENCE .COM DECEMBER 2014 “Debbie has taught me that there are no throwaway lines or moments,” he says. “She can be unpredictable, even in the most predictable circumstances...and she’s funny as hell!” Keep Dancing During an interview with bet.com last summer, a reporter inquired about the difference between present-day fame and that of yesteryear. Allen responded, “Technology has made people famous that are not really gifted or talented. They are famous for what—eating a frog, for losing weight, for acting badly?” She continued, “I don’t know when it changed. It used to be about your being able to do something or bring something to the world.” But more than just talking about it, she has been doing her part to uplift the next generation. Since teaming up with her husband to launch the Debbie Allen Dance Academy (DADA) in January 2001, she’s made it her mission to expose as many young people as she can reach to the arts. “I know what it’s like to have a dream and feel that you can’t get to it because you don’t have the training,” she says of her motivation for starting the nonprofit organization. Her work is making a difference in the Crenshaw District, where DADA is housed, and other neighborhoods have taken notice. In fact, on the day of her ESSENCE interview, she’d just returned from Nickerson Gardens, a housing complex on the border of Watts, where she’s been asked to start a dance program. “Sharing the gift of the arts is a whole new purpose in my life. It goes beyond me.” Wayne Mackins-Harris, 17, is one of many to excel under her tutelage. He just so happens to be portraying the young Nutcracker, too. “Ms. Allen is my artistic mother,” he says of the role she’s played during his nine years of study at DADA. “Our instructors really push us to take that extra step. This is a tremendous experience, and I’m so grateful for the opportunity.” When Allen reminisces about her creative journey, there is pride in her eyes. There have been successes, but the disappointments have been a great teacher as well. “It’s important to know that it’s not always up to you,” she says of weathering the highs and lows of her chosen path. Her words ring true for life, too. “You’ll win some, you’ll lose some, but it’s up to you to come back and play tomorrow. You’ve got to stay in the game.” Regina R. Robertson (@reginarobertson) is ESSENCE’s West Coast editor. She’s currently at work on her first book. are among DADA’s esteemed board of directors. ąŏđŏFrom the start, Berry Gordy, Gil Cates and Wallis Annenberg have been major supporters. To honor their ongoing contributions, all have dance studios named after them. ĆŏđŏEstablished in 2010, DADA Ensemble is the performing arm of the academy and features the most gifted dancers from every level of training, each selected by Allen. ćŏđŏFor more information about enrollment and open classes, call 310-280-9145 or visit debbieallen danceacademy.com. —R.R.R.