Joan Myers Brown Receives Alan Cooper Leadership Award

General, News & Press

At a ceremony in February 2023, in Baltimore, MD, Joan Myers Brown received the Alan Cooper Leadership Award from the Mid-Atlantic Arts Foundation.

(https://www.midatlanticarts.org/grants-programs/alan-cooper-leadership-in-the-arts-award/#joan-myers-brown—2022-award-recipient)

Joan Myers Brown is the founder of The Philadelphia Dance Company (PHILADANCO) / The Philadelphia School of Dance Arts. She serves as honorary chairperson for the International Association of Blacks in Dance (IABD), an organization she established in 1991. She also founded the International Conference of Black Dance Companies in 1988. She is a Distinguished Visiting Professor at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, which bestowed upon her an honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts; is a member of the dance faculty at Howard University in Washington, DC; and has been awarded an honorary Doctorate in Humane Letters from Ursinus College in Collegeville, PA. Listed in Who’s Who in America  and described as an “innovator and communicator,” Ms. Brown has made significant contributions to the national and international arts communities. 

Regionally and nationally, Ms. Brown has served a broad range of organizations, including the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project; the United States Information Agency; Arts America; the National Endowment for the Arts; the state arts councils of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Michigan, Nevada, and Ohio; and the National Forum for Female Executives. Locally, she has been a part of the Greater Philadelphia Cultural Alliance; the Minority Arts Resource Council, Inc.; the Philadelphia Mayor’s Cultural Advisory Council; the Philadelphia Dance Alliance; the Women’s Heritage Society; and Dance/USA. Ms. Brown was appointed to the choreographer’s panel of the Rockefeller Foundation Arts & Humanities Program and served as vice president (and co-founder) of the Coalition of African American Cultural Organizations. 

In 1997, Ms. Brown was honored as one of the “Dance Women: Living Legends” during a four-day series sponsored by New York-area presenters, in tribute to five African-American pioneer women who founded distinguished modern dance companies with deep roots in black communities around the country. In 2005, the Kennedy Center honored her as a Master of African American Choreography. In 2009 she received the prestigious Philadelphia Award, and November 7, 2010 was declared Joan Myers Brown Living Legacy Day. Ms. Brown was chosen as one of the 2013 Dance/USA honorees “for her extraordinary artistic guidance, her nurturance of many dancers and choreographers, visionary leadership, and grace under fire in the dance field.” 

She has also received a host of other accolades throughout her lifetime, including awards from The Philadelphia Tribune and the African American Museum in Philadelphia, and membership to the Distinguished Daughters of Pennsylvania in 2012. She was designated as one of The Ten Best Philadelphians by Philadelphia magazine in 2012, in addition to recognition as an Outstanding Alumni of West Philadelphia High School, her alma mater. Her legacy has been documented in the 2011 publication of Joan Myers Brown & the Audacious Hope of the Black Ballerina: A Biohistory of American Performance (Palgrave), written by dance scholar and critic Brenda Dixon Gottschild, author of several books on dance. 

Joan Myers Brown’s undisputed status as a leader in the national and international arts communities was acknowledged when she was selected to receive the 2012 National Medal of the Arts, the nation’s highest civic honor for excellence in the arts. President Barack Obama presented the prestigious honor at a ceremony that took place in July 2013 at the White House. President Obama cited Ms. Brown for carving out “an artistic haven for African American dancers and choreographers to innovate, create, and share their unique visions with the national and global dance communities.” 

A Heartfelt Thank You from PHILADANCO!

General

In any given year, PHILADANCO!’s performances, workshops, classes, and presentations reach tens of thousands of people. We truly would not be able to do all that WE do without the MANY people who help us in all the ways that THEY do:

  • Audiences who purchase tickets for our concerts
  • Parents and grandparents who introduce their children to the beauty of dance through our performances
  • Fashion lovers who donate clothes for our flea markets and then the many who come and buy
  • Volunteers who sew costumes, staff ticket tables, hand out programs… just do whatever is needed!

And, of course, we could not survive without financial support.  We are grateful to each, and every person and organization listed below, but we also are sustained and energized by everyone who supports our Danco Dollar Days or gives us the proceeds of their bake sale, lemonade stand, or donates a few stamps to the office.  If your name is not included below from this past year, our apologies for the oversight, but please know that you are part of the community that keeps us going… day in and day out… for over 52 years now. 

We thank you from the bottom of our hearts!

PHILADANCO! Funders and Donors 2021-2022

$500,000 and above
Mellon Foundation
Philadelphia Cultural Treasures, the regional component of the Ford Foundation’s American Cultural Treasures initiative, made possible through a collaborative effort of The Barra Foundation, Neubauer Family Foundation, The PEW Center for Arts and Heritage, William Penn Foundation, and Wyncote Foundation
William Penn Foundation

$100,000 – $499,999
(IABD) International Association of Blacks in Dance – COHI|MOVE program supported by the Ford Foundation
National Endowment for the Arts, American Rescue Plan
US Small Business Association – Paycheck Protection Program, Shuttered Venue Operators Grant
Wallace Foundation

$25,000 – $99,999
Anonymous
National Endowment for the Arts
Pennsylvania Council on the Arts
The Philadelphia Foundation

$10,000 – $24,999
Jeanne Fisher/Ayco Foundation
Davis Dauray Family Fund
The Sylvia W. and Randle M. Kauders Foundation
Lincoln Financial Foundation
PECO
Philadelphia Cultural Fund
PNC Arts Alive
Suzanne Roberts Cultural Development Fund

$5,000 – $9,999
Always Best Care Senior Services/Bryant Greene
Fulton Bank
Dolores Browne
Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation (support provided by the American Rescue Plan through the National Endowment for the Arts)
Linda Richardson Foundation
Randy R. Robinson
Rosenlund Family Foundation
Stockton Rush Bartol Foundation


$1,000 – $4,999

Ivory Allison
Alston-Beech Foundation
The Director’s Grant Program of The Barra Foundation
Robert W. and Marie K. Bogle Foundation
Ronald Caplan
Robert Cerceo
Dolfinger-McMahon Foundation
Dube Charitable Fund
GlaxoSmithKline
Gregory Gosfield
Mary Hurtig
Judy Jordan
Jean A. McCray
Kelly Mobley
Adam Rom
Brenecia Watson
Henrietta Tower Wurts Memorial
Spencer Werthheimer
Benjamin Zuckerman
United Bank

$500 – $999
Cynthia Bullock
Angela Brown
James Edward Cambron
Barbara Katz Chobert
Jerilyn Keit Dressler
Colette deChalus Lee
Zandra L. Maffett
Valerie Hamilton
Beverly Harper
Linda J. Jacobsen
Robert Newton
Debra Piasecki
Ezra Porter
J. P. Scott
Susan Stromquist
Ellen S. Varenhorst

$200 – $499
C. Gloria Akers
Edvige Barrie
Samantha Butts
Nathinee Chen
Leslie Coney
John DeCarlos
Thomas Di Nardo
Elise Drake
Kate Durnan
Carol Henderson
Iris Henry
LeeAne Huggins
Gloria Jeffers
Legacy Realty Corporation
Ann Lesch
The Links, Philadelphia Chapter
Suzanne McFadden
Harold New
Patricia Panichas
Heather Peeler
Debra Piasecki
Ronald Picciotti
Delisa Purnell
Dan & Barbara Rottenberg
Janice Scott
D Screws
Ellen Varenhorst
Sheila A. Ward
Robert Wendelgass
L. Williams
Boris Willis

$100 – 199
Stanton Bizzell
Chandra A. Butler
Countryside Consulting, Inc.
Jocelyn D. DuPont
Margaret W. Harris
The Malmud-Kravitz Foundation
Lynne Malone
Jennifer Mauser
Robert Ranalli
Reho Satchell

Up to $99
Lawrence Allen
Anisha Ali
Amazon Smile
Kim Bears Bailey
Zane Booker
Ingrid Broadnax
Karen Brown
Stephanie Brown
Kimberly Carter
Letitia Coleman
Carmen Cooper
Catch 3 Consulting
Michael DiSandro
Kirk Dorn
Harry Downey
Diedre Farmbry
Vivian Gandy
William Goldberg
Wilma Harris
CarlaAnn Henry
Joseph Henson
Angela Bonita Hollis
Shakeema Hudwell
Meghan Ignatosky
Kim Johnson
Kenneth Kay
Pamela Kane
Denise Lewis
Joseph Lewis
Teri Lewis
Nancy Massey
Elouise Moore
Hillary Murray
Deanna Murphy
Dawn Olivaria
Nadine Patterson
Beverly Prendergast
Donna Robinson
Carol Rudisell
Angela Scott
Karen Scott
Jill Staufer
Gillian Stickney Swann
Rosemary Thomas
Stephanie Thomas
Barbara Thompson
Elizabeth Thornton
Shakia White
George Williams
Heather Williams
Iris Williams
Charlene Wiltshire

In Kind Donations
Kimmel Cultural Campus
Jerilyn Keit Dressler
Dr. Robert Pullen
Jacqueline M. Roberts
Spencer Werthheimer

Matching Gift Companies
GlaxoSmithKlein
Johnson & Johnson
PECO, an Excelon Company
PEW Charitable Trusts
Thomas Reuters
United Bank

COMMITMENT TO CULTURAL DIVERSITY

General, News & Press

As a predominantly African American Organization operating in a community of mixed races, income levels, and cultures, we are inherently involved in programs and operations of diversity. Our programs have and will always be open to persons of all ancestries, cultures, and backgrounds.

PHILADANCO! was found to have the most culturally diverse audiences of any other dance organization in the city.  This information was documented in a survey conducted by Portfolio Associates, Inc., and The Ziff Marketing Study, funded by the Pew Charitable Trusts.

The students attending classes at PHILADANCO! include African-American, Asian, Hispanic, Latino, and White.  This diversity also is reflected on the Board of Directors whose members are African-American, White, and Latino.  Instructors for the Instruction and Training Programs are similarly diverse.

Happy Martin Luther King Jr. Day

General

In honor of MLK Day, Philadanco wanted to share a short video of a piece by Gene Hill Sagan called “Conversations.” Philadanco is currently remounting this work and Martin Luther King Jr. mission and legacy live on!

“We must accept finite disappointment, but never lose infinite hope.”

Joan Myers Brown has chosen longtime colleague Kim Bears-Bailey as her successor at Philadanco

General, News & Press

by Ellen Dunkel, Posted: November 8, 2020

For 50 years, Joan Myers Brown led Philadanco, the company she founded to give Black ballet dancers performing opportunities that she had not been afforded, despite her talent. But she has long said she would take her final bow when the company hit the half-century mark, in 2020. So Philadanco developed a succession plan — several succession plans over the years, which never quite worked out.

https://www.inquirer.com/arts/philadanco-joan-myers-brown-kim-bears-bailey-dance-20201108.html

PHILADANCO! presents duets and solos with Joe González and Janine Beckles

General, News & Press

What Dance Lovers Have Missing By Camille Bacon-Smith November 2, 2020 in Dance

During this year of darkened theaters, some dance companies have embraced technology, taking the work outdoors and creating for film on the landscape or dancing with the tech itself. I enjoy these, but like most fans of live performance, I’ve missed sitting in a theater, engaging with the artists across the footlights. Streaming from the Annenberg’s empty Harold Prince Theater, PHILADANCO!’s October 29 performance brought that experience back.

https://www.broadstreetreview.com/dance/philadanco-presents-duets-and-solos-with-joe-gonzalez-and-janine-beckles#