Apollo Theater Launches Initiative Dedicated to the Creation of a Diverse 21st Century Performing Arts Canon with Support from the Ford Foundation and Andrew W. Mellon Foundation
February 27, 2020 – The Apollo Theater announced today its first multi-work commissioning initiative dedicated to the creation of a diverse, 21st century American performing arts canon, Apollo New Works. Made possible with the support of a $2 million grant from the Ford Foundation for the creation of new work by artists of color, the initiative is also funded by a $1 million grant from The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation for the Apollo’s Master Artist in Residency, a central component of the program. Apollo New Works extends the non-profit Apollo Theater’s commitment to the articulation and projection of the African American and African diasporic narrative. Many of the works will premiere at the Apollo’s new theaters at the Victoria, scheduled to open in fall 2020. Apollo New Works will provide audience access to some of the commissions while in process and allow artists to respond to and be inspired by Harlem, the Apollo Theater, and its communities.
“Thanks to the generous support of the Ford Foundation and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, Apollo New Works expands our commitment to collaboration with established and emerging artists of color whose work is essential to the Apollo, Harlem, and the world,” said Kamilah Forbes, Apollo Theater Executive Producer. “Artists reflect the celebrations and challenges of society, and our goal for this initiative is to champion a group of voices and promote a new generation of storytellers in an effort to develop a more diverse American canon.”
“I am truly grateful to the extraordinary team at the Apollo Theater for working to cultivate and nurture another generation of brilliant artists,” said Darren Walker, President of the Ford Foundation. “Apollo New Works arrives at a necessary moment to inspire all of us to action, to help us make sense of these challenging times and, by providing these unique perspectives, rewrite what is possible and allow us all to see the world in a different way.”
“For more than eight decades, the Apollo Theater has been a center of innovation and a creative catalyst, not just for Harlem and the city of New York, but throughout the world,” said Mellon Foundation President Elizabeth Alexander. “We are excited by the potential of these artist-led projects to help shape a new American canon.”
Apollo New Works inaugural series of commissions, which will be workshopped and presented in various stages of development, will feature world premiere performances, festivals, and programs from:
- Ballet Hispánico, America’s leading Latino dance organization, has partnered with the Apollo to create a new work. Choreographed by artistic director Eduardo Vilaro, the work will celebrate Latin music from the past 50 years.
- Haitian-American composer and violinist Daniel Bernard Roumain and the site-specific vertical performance pioneers BANDALOOP will produce a one-of-a-kind event in recognition of the launch of the Apollo’s new theaters at the Victoria. Known for his unique fusion of hip-hop and classical music, Roumain will create the score for BANDALOOP’s celebratory performance high above the Victoria marquee.
- Bessie Award-winning and Tony Award nominated choreographer Camille A. Brown will venture into the “wild corners” of her imagination to create and perform a new dance-theater work entitled Queens—a satirical, “historic phantasmal fairytale” about the five boroughs of NYC. This work is co-commissioned by the Apollo Theater and The Joyce Theater.
- Movement artists and choreographers Lil Buck and Jon Boogz, together known as Movement Art Is, will celebrate the Harlem Renaissance and explore historical dances that had an impact on the Harlem scene in the 1920s and ’30s through a brand new work that pays homage to pioneers and tells a contemporary story. Talvin Wilks will serve as dramaturg.
- Artist and scholar Ebony Noelle Golden will create a site-specific, multidisciplinary performance triptych involving dance, music, and visual art that seeks to answer the question: “How does a liberated black feminist world operate, work, exist, and sustain when systems of oppression fall away?” This project will be developed in collaboration with Dr. Alexis Pauline Gumbs, and is a part of Park Avenue Armory’s 100 Years | 100 Women initiative, which features new works in response to and in celebration of the centennial of the ratification of the 19th Amendment.
- Black Gotham Experience, led by artist and historian Kamau Ware, will design a site-specific, immersive walking tour that centers on and celebrates the Harlem Renaissance and the Apollo’s rich history. They aim to take a historical view that grounds African-American history in Harlem with the African Diaspora.
- Keith Josef Adkins of The New Black Fest will curate and produce 20 ten-minute plays by 20 distinct playwrights that will premiere at the Apollo Theater’s two new theaters at the Victoria. The playwrights will be responding to an urgent prompt similar to past New Black Festival themes, such as “Hands Up” or “Facing our Truth.”
- Utilizing hip-hop and some of the most poignant and profound voices of the Harlem Renaissance, such as Langston Hughes and Zora Neale Hurston, New York-based multimedia group Soul Science Lab will chronicle the artistic explosion known as “The New Negro Movement” and its continued relevance in an immersive musical theater experience..
- Five-time Grammy Award nominated renowned vibraphonist, educator, and thought leader Stefon Harris, has developed an app that gives software the ability to improvise unpredictable harmony in tandem with artist-created melody and rhythm, resulting in a unique collaboration between the software and human. Harris will build an evening-length work exploring the collaboration between live performance and technology.
- In recognition of the 100th anniversary of the Harlem Renaissance, Talvin Wilks, a New York Citybased scholar, playwright, and director, will explore the impact of the Harlem Renaissance, its artists and politics. His work, which will be published and available for free, will shed a vivid light on Harlem in the 1920s and ’30s and examine how organizations such as the Apollo give important cultural context to the trajectory of Black art in America.
“The Apollo reminds me that I am a free black woman and that freedom is our birthright. This moment is historic in the trajectory of my artmaking,” said Ebony Noelle Golden. “I am honored and grateful to create with an institution that has liberated the hearts and minds of so many by amplifying the boundless power of black creative expression.”
“It’s such a blast to my artistic ego to be in collaboration with the iconic Apollo Theater,” said Keith Josef Adkins of The New Black Fest. “I’m looking forward to curating into the future with the Apollo’s artistic leadership...