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Dudley Williams and the Beauty of Discipline

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Lee A. Daniels

By Lee A. Daniels
NNPA Columnist    

 
Offhandedly, I can’t tell you the titles of most of the dances I saw Dudley Williams, the incomparable artist who danced with the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater company for more than 40 years, perform. And I’ve no knowledge of the lexicon of dance criticism; so I can’t explain in critical terms what this or that particular movement he performed means.

But I’ve long known why I’ve always been awed by the work of Williams, who died last week at 76. It was the commitment to discipline his work conveyed.

Of course, Williams was one of the great artists – in any field – of our time. The riveting expressiveness in his every movement on stage enabled us to explore the beauty of movement—and of its opposite: a stillness that nonetheless channeled piercing emotion. To me, his surpassing gifts were the product not only of an extraordinary artistic sensibility and training and contemplation. They were also the product of an elemental commitment to physical and mental rigor.

I admit I’ve long been attracted to discipline, in part because even as a child I felt I lacked it. No focus – that was me, mentally meandering this way and that until I became involved in two quite different activities in my early adolescence.

One was joining a church-based “freedom choir” in my Northern city that had direct links with civil rights activists in the South. That helped me to understand the tremendous, soul-fortifying discipline nonviolently confronting the evil of Jim Crow required. The second was my joining a summer track and field club coached by a strict disciplinarian. He had developed some of the nation’s fastest schoolboy sprinters and hurdlers of those years. The workouts – that were just short of grueling – he routinely put us through, and the sense of competence I felt in completing them produced a momentous change in me: I grew to love working hard.

In other words, the combined effect of those two activities led me to realize that a positive allegiance to working to the best of one’s ability is actually the determination to meet the challenges of the present and future.

That, in turn, led me to see that quality in the actions of people all around me: In the neighborhood activists, who were dedicating their lives to improving our community. In my sophomore –year high school Latin teacher, who helped me understand that a disciplined approach to the language was the key to understanding its beauty. In my parents, and those of many of my friends, whose clairvoyance in seeing the coming expansion of opportunity across the Color Line fueled their preparing their children to take advantage of it.

Words once spoken by the Olympic track champion Michael Johnson describe my point succinctly. Explaining the technique involved in one of his specialties, the 200-meter sprint, he said, “With each step, a thought.”

That attitude is a framework – not a straitjacket – for accomplishing one’s goals, or at least honestly pursuing them. It rests on not just talent but, most important, on steeling one’s emotions to endure the hard work the pursuit of perfection requires. It’s what I think Dudley Williams meant when he said in a 2005 interview in theNew Yorker magazine, “Dancing is about acting, about being a liar, basically, because often you don’t feel like dancing, but it’s your job. So you get out there and you do the movement, and it’s not happening. So you work harder, you work harder, you go deep inside what you’re about.”

He made the same point on another occasion with different words, according to the June 4 New York Timesobituary of him, in saying that a dancer needed a reason for every movement. “You can’t just put your hand out. You have to know what happens when you put your hand out and your body goes with it. And I dance to the music, no matter what it is … You must listen to the music and love it, and then you can do the dance differently every time.”

So, I agree wholeheartedly with the well-deserved praise of Dudley Williams, the artist. It’s just that I would also add two words: “and disciplinarian.”

      

Lee A. Daniels is a longtime journalist based in New York City. His essay, “Martin Luther King, Jr.: The Great Provocateur,” appears in Africa’s Peacemakers: Nobel Peace Laureates of African Descent (2014), published by Zed Books. His new collection of columns, Race Forward: Facing America’s Racial Divide in 2014, is available at www.amazon.com.

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Activism

Oakland Post Endorses Barbara Lee

Barbara Lee will be able to unify the city around Oakland’s critical budget and financial issues, since she will walk into the mayor’s office with the support of a super majority of seven city council members — enabling her to achieve much-needed consensus on moving Oakland into a successful future.

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Congresswoman Barbara Lee. Courtesy photo, Office of Rep. Barbara Lee.
Former Congresswoman Barbara Lee. Courtesy photo.

As we end the celebration of Women’s History Month in Oakland, we endorse Barbara Lee, a woman of demonstrated historical significance. In our opinion, she has the best chance of uniting the city and achieving our needs for affordable housing, public safety, and fiscal accountability.

As a former small business owner, Barbara Lee understands how to apply tools needed to revitalize Oakland’s downtown, uptown, and neighborhood businesses.

Barbara Lee will be able to unify the city around Oakland’s critical budget and financial issues, since she will walk into the mayor’s office with the support of a super majority of seven city council members — enabling her to achieve much-needed consensus on moving Oakland into a successful future.

It is notable that many of those who fought politically on both sides of the recent recall election battles have now laid down their weapons and become brothers and sisters in support of Barbara Lee. The Oakland Post is pleased to join them.

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Activism

Actor, Philanthropist Blair Underwood Visits Bay Area, Kicks Off Literacy Program in ‘New Oakland’ Initiative

These community activations were coordinated with the San Francisco-based non-profit program “Room to Read.” Ray said he is also donating his time to read and take pictures with students to encourage their engagement and to inspire them to read more. The inspirational book “Clifford Ray Saves the Day” highlights Clifford Ray’s true story of saving a dolphin.

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Blair Underwood (left) and Barbara Lee (right). Courtesy photo.
Blair Underwood (left) and Barbara Lee (right). Courtesy photo.

By Paul Cobb
New Oakland Series
Opinion Part 3

The Post mentioned three weeks ago that a number of our local luminaries were coming together to support the “New Oakland” movement. As this current national administration continues to eliminate our “legacy” institutional policies and programs left and right, most communities find themselves beyond “frozen” in fear.

Well, esteemed actor, long-time Bay Area supporter, and philanthropist Blair Underwood returned to Oakland this week to speak with city leaders, community trust agents, students, the Oakland Post, and local celebrities alike to continue his “New Oakland” initiative.

This week, he kicked off his “Guess Who’s Coming to Read” literacy program in some of Oakland’s middle schools. Clifford Ray, who played the center position of the 1975 World Champion Golden State Warriors, donated close to 1,000 books. Ray’s fellow teammate Charles “The Hopper” Dudley also gave Converse sneakers to students.

These community activations were coordinated with the San Francisco-based non-profit program “Room to Read.” Ray said he is also donating his time to read and take pictures with students to encourage their engagement and to inspire them to read more. The inspirational book “Clifford Ray Saves the Day” highlights Clifford Ray’s true story of saving a dolphin.

Underwood also spent quality time with the Oakland Ballers ownership group and visited the amazing Raimondi Park West Oakland community revitalization site. In the 1996 TV film Soul of the Game, Underwood played the role of the legendary first Black Major League Baseball player Jackie Robinson and commended the Ballers owners.

“This group of sports enthusiasts/ philanthropists needs to be applauded for their human capital investment and their financial capital investment,” Underwood said. “Truly putting their money and passion to work,” Underwood said.

Underwood was also inspired by mayoral candidate Barbara Lee’s open-minded invitation to bring public-private partnership opportunities to Oakland.

Underwood said he wants to “reinforce the importance of ‘collaborative activism’ among those most marginalized by non-empathic leadership. We must ‘act out’ our discomfort with passionate intentions to create healthy change.”

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Activism

Councilmembers Ramachandran, Kaplan, Unger Identify Funds to Save Oakland Fire Stations

Our budget crisis – one of the worst in Oakland’s history – is compounded by the fact that people do not feel safe coming to Oakland due to our public safety crisis. By investing in our fundamental public safety resources today, we can send a signal to the world that Oakland is open for business. We have such a rich and vibrant culture, arts, and food scene that is worth celebrating – but we can only showcase this if we are able to keep our neighborhoods safe. Having fully functioning fire stations are absolutely essential to these efforts.

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Councilmember Janani Ramachandran. Courtesy photo.
Councilmember Janani Ramachandran. Courtesy photo.

By Janani Ramachandran

There is no greater concern to the people of Oakland today than public safety. Fire stations are the bread and butter of essential city services – and every day that we have stations shuttered, we imperil the lives of our community members. In response to widespread outcry over the current and planned closure of stations, myself, along with Councilmembers Kaplan and Unger, have painstakingly worked to identify millions of dollars of new funding to save our stations. The legislation we introduced on Thursday, February 13th, will amend our budget to prevent the closure of four fire stations that are currently on the chopping block due to our budget crisis and will re-open two closed stations that have already been closed – Station 25 and 28 – in the near future. The resolution that will provide the funding to keep our stations open will go before the full City Council for a vote at our meeting on Tuesday, March 4th at 3:30 PM – and we invite you to join us at City Hall to share your perspective on the topic.

Our budget crisis – one of the worst in Oakland’s history – is compounded by the fact that people do not feel safe coming to Oakland due to our public safety crisis. By investing in our fundamental public safety resources today, we can send a signal to the world that Oakland is open for business. We have such a rich and vibrant culture, arts, and food scene that is worth celebrating – but we can only showcase this if we are able to keep our neighborhoods safe. Having fully functioning fire stations are absolutely essential to these efforts.

With the devastating Los Angeles fire at the top of people’s minds, terrible memories of Oakland’s own wildfires are re-surfacing from the 1991 Oakland Hills Firestorm to the Keller fire just a few months ago – and how essential fire stations are to mitigating these catastrophes. But in Oakland, our fire stations don’t just fight wildfires – they also provide emergency medical services to our most vulnerable constituents, put out structural fires and encampment fires, and much more.

We recognize that there are a number of competing interests and important initiatives fighting for sparse City resources. But from my perspective, core safety services are the most pivotal functions that a City must spend its resources on – especially given the outcry we have heard around fire stations.

The fight to save our stations is not over. The resolution we introduced is a critical first step, and there are hurdles to overcome. If you support keeping our fire stations open, we invite you to be a part of the solution by making your voice heard at the March 4th City Council meeting at 3:30 pm.

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