Showing posts with label African Dance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label African Dance. Show all posts

Friday, March 6, 2020

Let's Celebrate Dance and Diversity!


Happy book birthday -- on March 3, 2020, to be exact -- to the new picture book Let's Dance! by author Valerie Bolling and illustrator Maine DiazI've been in contact with Valerie and am excited to both tell you and show you more about her lively new book and how it came to be!

Author Valerie Bolling

In only about 60 words of rhyming text, Let's Dance! manages to introduce readers to 10 types of dance and spread the messages that dance is fun and dance is for everyone. Valerie says she knew from the very beginning that she wanted this book to celebrate diversity and wanted her words "to promote a world in which marginalized and/or underrepresented children can see themselves and feel valued and heard." 

Luckily Valerie's editor Jes Negron agreed and expanded on her vision by making the theme more global. "Where I saw Tappity-Tap/Fingers Snap as tap dance, she imagined flamenco from Spain," says Valerie. "I envisioned the electric slide for Glide and Slide/Side to Side, but Jes suggested long-sleeve dancing from China. I was thrilled with her ideas!"



As you can see from the two images above, Maine Diaz really delivered on Valerie's vision of diversity and the global theme. Her 20 amazingly vibrant illustrations, including images of a boy in a wheelchair and a child in a tutu whose gender is not discernible, really pop off the page.

Maine also weaves different shapes into her illustrations -- like large and small circles and curls in the two images above and triangles, stars, and more in many others. When the smaller shapes scattered throughout the book are combined, they add a celebratory feel, acting like confetti!

Let's Dance! is Valerie's debut picture book, and she's busy writing more. You can keep up with her on Twitter and Instagram, and of course you can celebrate dance and diversity by reading her book!

Saturday, July 16, 2011

The History and Power of African Dance

I can hardly believe it's been more than two weeks since I've blogged. I think that's a record for me...but one I won't be trying to break any time soon. Because Picture Books & Pirouettes has been so quiet lately, I thought I'd start this post off with a bang. Or maybe I should say a boom--the boom of an African drum!


In 1990, Angola dancer and choreographer Julio T. Leitao founded Batoto Yetu--the children's African dance troupe featured in the above video. The troupe is based in New York City, but the 4- to 17-year-olds who make up the company travel throughout the world sharing the incredible energy and rhythm of their art form.  

With the publication of Drumbeat in Our Feet by mulicultural publisher Lee & Low a few years back, dancer and choreographer Leitao also became a children's author. Leitao and author/illustrator Patricia A. Keeler teamed up to create this beautifully poetic picture book that captures the rich history and traditions of African dance.


Thinking about the ancestors once young like us--
Dancing in African soil
Dancing under African clouds
Dancing in African rain
Breathing in African air

Drumbeat in Our Feet contains plenty of nonfiction material, including information on the origins of African dance, the different types of African dances, the role of spirits and ancestors, costumes, and of course African drums.

Just as African dance styles vary between regions of the continent, so do drum styles. For instance, the drums in central Africa are conical shaped, held between the knees of the drummer. In western Africa, some drums are shaped like hourglasses with cords attached to each end. The drummer can then squeeze the cord and change the pitch of the drumbeat by tightening the goat skin that covers the top of the drum. Drumbeats carry the rhythm of the entire dance, but a special patterns of beats called a "break" also helps the dancers know when to start dancing, stop dancing, or change to a new dance step. 

Listen up! The drums are talking!
Listen for the drum break.
Hear the beat: Doom, doom, da!
Tet da-da-dum, Tet da-da dum, Doom, doom, da!
Hear the drum break? Dance, dance, dance!

What I really like about this book is that the left-hand side of each full-page spread includes the nonfiction information, while the right-hand side contains a more lyrical interpretation of the material. I also love Keeler's illustrations, which are full of both rich earthy colors and more vibrant colors, especially on the costumes of the dancers, who are all children. 

It turns out that Batoto Yetu founder Leitao and his family fled Angola during the civil war in the 1970s, and Leitao had a tough childhood living as a refugee after that. According to the back matter of the book, music and dance are part of what kept him going during those difficult years. 

I recently had the great fortune of being able to spend a week in Rwanda--another African country that has been deeply changed by civil war. Despite its history of war and genocide, Rwanda has made astounding progress over the years and seems to have such a wonderfully peaceful aura. In some small way, I like to think that dance has played a part in this.

In 2009, Ballet Rwanda was formed to encourage creativity among young children and help develop the arts in Rwanda through dance. And years earlier, the nonprofit Association Mwana Ukundwa was created to help Rwandan orphans navigate their journey to adulthood. The following video shows children from the association performing an African song and dance. I found it so beautiful and mesmerizing, so was compelled to share it with you....


We are the children of the ancestors, singing the songs, dancing the steps to a story that never ends. African rhythm in our steps. African drumbeat in our feet!
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