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An Evening with Virginia Johnson & Akua Dixon, A Fundraiser

  • The Africa Center 1280 5th Avenue New York, NY, 10029 United States (map)

An evening of music and conversation in honor of Virginia Johnson and Akua Dixon.

Join us for music, food, and an informal conversation with the Founding Artistic Director of Dance Theatre of Harlem Virginia Johnson and National Endowment for the Arts multi-laureate composer Akua Dixon.

This evening will include performances by members of The Harlem Chamber Players with hors d'oeuvre, wines, and dessert.

FEATURING
Virginia Johnson, guest of honor
Akua Dixon, guest of honor
Claire Chan, violin
Ashley Horne, violin
William Frampton, viola
Wayne Smith, cello

PROGRAM
TBA

RSVP no later than May 7th. 

ACCESSIBILITY
Ramp access is available at The Africa Center’s main entrance at 1280 Fifth Avenue. The Center’s installation space, Teranga, and restroom facilities are wheelchair accessible.

TICKETS
Tickets start at $150 and will be available soon.

More details to come.


ABOUT VIRGINIA JOHNSON
A founding member of Dance Theatre of Harlem, Virginia Johnson was one of its principal ballerinas over a career that spanned nearly 30 years. After retiring in 1997, Ms. Johnson went on to found Pointe Magazine and was editor-in chief for 10 years. A native of Washington, D.C., Ms. Johnson began her training with Therrell Smith. She studied with Mary Day at the Washington School of Ballet and graduated from the Academy of the Washington School of Ballet. She went on to be a University Scholar in the School of the Arts at New York University before joining Dance Theatre of Harlem. Virginia Johnson is universally recognized as one of the great ballerinas of her generation and is perhaps best known for her performances in the ballets Giselle, A Streetcar Named Desire, and Fall River Legend. She has received such honors as a Young Achiever Award from the National Council of Women, Outstanding Young Woman of America Award, the Dance Magazine Award, a Pen and Brush Achievement Award, the Washington Performing Arts Society’s 2008-2009 Pola Nirenska Lifetime Achievement Award and the 2009 Martha Hill Fund Mid-Career Award.

ABOUT AKUA DIXON
Cellist-Composer-Conductor Akua Dixon has been touring the world with her original music and jazz arrangements for string quartet. A native New Yorker, Akua has won two awards from the National Endowment for the Arts, for composition (1979) and performance (1981). She is the 1998 recipient of the African American Classical Music Award given by Spelman College. Her jazz release, Akua’s Dance, was voted one of the top 25 albums of 2018 and received a four-star review in DownBeat. Akua is the first cellist to win the DownBeat Critics Poll, putting the cello on the jazz map!

Akua is the creator of Quartette Indigo, “jazz’s leading string quartet.” They’ve recorded with Woody Shaw and Dizzy Gillespie. A versatile composer, her string arrangements and quartet can be heard on the Grammy award-winning CD, The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, and the Grammy-nominated CD, A Rose Is Still A Rose by Aretha Franklin. Akua notated and conducted the ballet Riverside by Judith Jamison, with music by Kimati Dinizulu for Alvin Ailey’s American Dance Theatre at City Center (1995).

She has performed with Duke Ellington, Dizzy, Coleridge Taylor Perkinson, Hale Smith, Max Roach, Betty Carter, Israel “Cachao” Lopez, and Rahsaan Roland Kirk. Akua has performed at The Kennedy Center, Carnegie Hall, Lincoln Center, Tanglewood, the Blue Note, Dizzy’s Coca-Cola and at major concert halls, jazz festivals and clubs throughout the US, Europe, Spain, Scandinavia, Greece, Russia and the Caribbean. Akua has lectured and given educational concerts and workshops for Carnegie Hall and Jazz at Lincoln Center.

Akua was the Assistant Principal Cellist in the Dance Theater of Harlem and Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater Orchestras. She was founding cellist in the Uptown String Quartet and Max Roach Double Quartet. She was a member of the Apollo Theatre Orchestra and worked on Broadway as solo cellist, on stage, for Doonesbury and in orchestra pits for Dreamgirls, Black Broadway, Barnum and The Mystery of Edwin Drood.

She is a graduate of New York City’s prestigious High School of Performing Arts.


ACCESSIBILITY
Ramp access is available at the Center’s main entrance at 1280 Fifth Avenue. The Center’s installation space, Teranga, and restroom facilities are wheelchair accessible.

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May 3

3rd Annual Uptown Downbeat Youth Showcase