Hey
There everyone - I just want to take the time to give thanks to ONE OF MY FAVORATE WRITTER.. Wendy Perron !!!!
She took a minute with me to learn about Deaf culture.. As many of you know English is not my 1st language and an Editor job is to correct us LOL!!!!
There everyone - I just want to take the time to give thanks to ONE OF MY FAVORATE WRITTER.. Wendy Perron !!!!
She took a minute with me to learn about Deaf culture.. As many of you know English is not my 1st language and an Editor job is to correct us LOL!!!!
One day I wrote: "I am an African-American Deaf dance artist" She said, change Deaf to deaf...
Now I know my English is bad but I knew my culture, scary as it sound I almost couldn't reply back because who am I kidding it WENDY PARRON!! Who am I to correct her lol !!
Yet!!
I knew as President of Bay Area Black Deaf Adocate and CAD's Director at Large for Northern, CA.
California Association of the Deaf
I had to be brave and explain our culture.
She was so beautiful and sweet and very direct. She say She learned something new in the forms of writing.
She change deaf into Deaf and I want to say THANK YOU MS WENDY PARRON!!!!!! FOR LISTENING TO MY STORY AND SEEING US AS DEAF AND NOT deaf..
Peace and Love
-Antoine Hunter
This written work is in Dance Magzine
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Why I Dance: Antoine Hunter
By Antoine Hunter
An award-winning dancer/choreographer and beloved figure in the Bay Area, Antoine Hunter has danced with Savage Jazz Dance Company, Nuba Dance Theatre, and Robert Moses’ Kin dance company. He founded Urban Jazz Dance Company and is co-director/founder of Iron Tri-Angel Urban Ballet. He teaches at the East Bay Center for the Performing Arts, Dance-A- Vision Entertainment, and Ross Dance Company, where he also serves as rehearsal director. Hunter has performed and taught in Rome, London, Cuba, and Africa.
Photo by Matt Haber, Courtesy Hunter.
I am an African-American Deaf dance artist. My desire for dance began at the age of 4. I can remember seeing everyone break dancing and I wanted to try. I got on the cardboard and did a spin and a kick—but then there was a bam!—I wound up in the hospital with an injured knee.
That knee injury was painful, but not as much as the idea of not ever being able to dance again. My passion for dance was put on hold until I was 5 and my mother took me to see Oakland Ballet. I was so in awe of the dancers’ poise, grace, and their ability to use their bodies to tell a story. They touched the hearts and souls of the audience—of me.
But my mother couldn’t afford to take me to any kind of dance class. We were very poor. At the same time, I found it harder and harder to fit in with the other kids—to be understood, to be heard.
I would want to play outside with the other kids, and their parents wouldn’t let them play with me. Maybe it was because I was black. I wanted to hang out with the other kids of color, but they didn’t want to play with me either. Maybe it was because I was Deaf. I tried to socialize with deaf people, and they didn’t want to hang out with me either.
I began to feel very alone and, at one point, suicidal. But soon, there was a beacon of hope. Dance. It wasn’t until I enrolled in Skyline High School in 1995 that my passion for dance was reignited. At first, the classes were very hard and I felt intimidated. And just like during my childhood years, no one wanted to dance with me. But then my dance teacher, Ms. Dawn James, approached me and told me to create a solo. I decided to dance to Whitney Houston’s “I Will Always Love You.”
When I finished dancing, everyone had so many different expressions on their faces—even before they clapped. Many people told me that they could understand me and feel me.
From that day forward, I went on to learn other “languages of dance”—like African, ballet, and so much more. Soon I began to teach these languages to others. Dance is so powerful. Not only does it have the ability to bring people together, but it also has the power to heal.
Copyright © 2014 DanceMedia, LLC. All Rights Reserved - See more at: http://dancemagazine.com/issues/September-2013/Why-i-dance-antoine-hunter#sthash.27owLDuv.dpuf
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Dance is so powerful. Not only does it have the ability to bring people together, but it also has the power to heal. - Antoine Hunter
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Thank you Ms Wendy Perron
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