90.9 WBUR - Boston's NPR news station
Top Stories:
PLEDGE NOW
Tuesday, December 11, 2012

Renee Robinson Retires: Beloved Alvin Ailey Star Takes Her Last Bow

If you’ve seen the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater perform “Revelations,” about the black church of Ailey’s childhood, you no doubt have seen Renee Robinson. The ending always brings audiences to their feet: Robinson plays the lead gossip among the church ladies, she fans herself furiously in her yellow dress and dances her heart out.

This past weekend, Renee Robinson–the last dancer in the company chosen by the late Ailey who was called “the quintessential Ailey woman” by another company dancer–retired from the stage, after 31 years with the company.

Here & Now’s Lynn Menegon spoke with Robinson in 2007, when the Ailey Company, led at the time by Judith Jamison, was on tour in Boston. Robinson shares how the secret of success, both her’s and the company’s, starts with food.

Robinson has long been the company’s unofficial nutritionist, while E.J. Corrigan, backstage technical director, jokes he’s the “head of morale” in the Ailey company. He says he brings along an upright smoker, two grills and two deep-fat turkey fryers on every company tour, because “we do a lot of cookin’, a lot of grillin’, a lot of smokin’” to keep the dancers primed for performance.

This program was originally broadcast on April 27th, 2007. 

We welcome comments from all of our listeners. Post below. Please stay on topic and be civil. Comments may be moderated by us, but you are solely responsible for the content of your comments.

  • Lagloriaarts

    Wow!

With Sponsorship from:
Accelerating the pace of engineering and science
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Dr. John S. Wilson, Jr. is president of Morehouse College in Atlanta. (Morehouse College)

President Obama delivers the commencement address this weekend at Morehouse College, the all-male historically black college. The school’s president discusses recent controversies and challenges.

1 Comment | more »
Thursday, May 16, 2013
Mark with Houston at Houston's high school graduation in 2009. (Courtesy of Mac McClelland)

Failures in mental health care mean that often the only way to get help for a loved one is to call the police. We speak with a journalist about the tragic consequences for her family.

19 Comments | more »
Thursday, May 16, 2013
"I Drive Your Truck" screenshot.

In 2011, a Nashville songwriter heard Alex Ashlock’s interview with Paul Monti, who lost his son in Afghanistan. It inspired her to write “I Drive Your Truck.”

Comment | more »
From Twitter