• Urban Bush Women dancing Hair and Other Stories
  • Urban Bush Women dancing Hair and Other Stories
Program Books/Urban Bush Women

Urban Bush Women

presents

Hair & Other Stories

Friday and Saturday, December 1–2, 2023, 8pm
Sunday, December 3, 2023, 3pm
Zellerbach Playhouse

Run time for this performance is approximately 2 hours 30 minutes including one 15-minute intermission. 

From the Executive and Artistic Director

Jeremy Geffen

Happy Holidays from Cal Performances! Like you, we enjoy celebrating this special time with those nearest and dearest to us. So it’s particularly pleasing to welcome you to a December performance this year. As 2023 draws to a close, we’ll enjoy visits from the formidable Brooklyn-based performance ensemble Urban Bush Women (Dec 1–3), the boundlessly inventive jazz prodigy Matthew Whitaker (Dec 8), perennial Cal Performances favorites The Tallis Scholars in a special Christmas-themed concert (Dec 13), and the Bay Area’s beloved San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus closing out our fall season with its festive and celebratory Holiday Spectacular (Dec 17). Whatever event(s) you’ve chosen to attend, thank you for spending part of this busy time with us at UC Berkeley.

When we return next year, we’ll continue with a season packed with more than 80 carefully curated events designed to appeal to the eclectic interests and adventurous sensibilities of Bay Area audiences. In total, this year’s schedule features nearly 30 companies, ensembles, and solo artists new to our program, offering a wide range of opportunities to discover unfamiliar performers and artworks. There’s plenty to enjoy, including six world premieres, six Cal Performances co-commissions, nearly one dozen local and regional premieres, and the West Coast premieres of Taylor Mac & Matt Ray’s Bark of Millions and Nathalie Joachim’s Ki moun ou ye (Who are you?).

Cal Performances continues to invest in ongoing relationships with established and acclaimed artistic partners, with upcoming presentations including a landmark collaboration between Germany’s Pina Bausch Foundation, Senegal’s École des Sables, and the UK’s Sadler’s Wells theater in the first-ever Bay Area performances of Bausch’s pioneering The Rite of Spring (1975), as well as the renewal of a multi-season residency by The Joffrey Ballet, which this year will present its first full-length narrative ballet, Anna Karenina, at Zellerbach Hall. And I’m especially pleased that in March, the renowned pianist Mitsuko Uchida will join us as Artist in Residence for two special concerts as well as additional opportunities for the campus and wider Bay Area community to engage with her singular artistry.

A focus of the season will be our multi-dimensional Illuminations programming, which once again will connect the work of world-class artists to the intellectual life and scholarship at UC Berkeley via performances and public programs investigating a pressing theme—this season, “Individual & Community.” Concepts of “individual” and “community” have been at the forefront of public discourse in recent years, with new questions emerging as to how we can best nurture a sense of community and how the groups we associate with impact our own sense of self. Given our fast-evolving social landscape, how can we retain and celebrate the traits that make each of us unique, while still thriving in a world that demands cooperation and collaboration? With the performing arts serving as our guide and compass, our 2023–24 “Individual & Community” programming will explore the tensions that come into play when balancing the interests of the individual with those of the group.

Please make sure to check out our website for complete information. We’re thrilled to share all the details with you, and to welcome you once again to Cal Performances!

Again, Happy Holidays and Happy New Year!

Jeremy Geffen
Executive and Artistic Director, Cal Performances

Jeremy GeffenHappy Holidays from Cal Performances! Like you, we enjoy celebrating this special time with those nearest and dearest to us. So it’s particularly pleasing to welcome you to a December performance this year. As 2023 draws to a close, we’ll enjoy visits from the formidable Brooklyn-based performance ensemble Urban Bush Women (Dec 1–3), the boundlessly inventive jazz prodigy Matthew Whitaker (Dec 8), perennial Cal Performances favorites The Tallis Scholars in a special Christmas-themed concert (Dec 13), and the Bay Area’s beloved San Francisco Gay Men’s Chorus closing out our fall season with its festive and celebratory Holiday Spectacular (Dec 17). Whatever event(s) you’ve chosen to attend, thank you for spending part of this busy time with us at UC Berkeley.

When we return next year, we’ll continue with a season packed with more than 80 carefully curated events designed to appeal to the eclectic interests and adventurous sensibilities of Bay Area audiences. In total, this year’s schedule features nearly 30 companies, ensembles, and solo artists new to our program, offering a wide range of opportunities to discover unfamiliar performers and artworks. There’s plenty to enjoy, including six world premieres, six Cal Performances co-commissions, nearly one dozen local and regional premieres, and the West Coast premieres of Taylor Mac & Matt Ray’s Bark of Millions and Nathalie Joachim’s Ki moun ou ye (Who are you?).

Cal Performances continues to invest in ongoing relationships with established and acclaimed artistic partners, with upcoming presentations including a landmark collaboration between Germany’s Pina Bausch Foundation, Senegal’s École des Sables, and the UK’s Sadler’s Wells theater in the first-ever Bay Area performances of Bausch’s pioneering The Rite of Spring (1975), as well as the renewal of a multi-season residency by The Joffrey Ballet, which this year will present its first full-length narrative ballet, Anna Karenina, at Zellerbach Hall. And I’m especially pleased that in March, the renowned pianist Mitsuko Uchida will join us as Artist in Residence for two special concerts as well as additional opportunities for the campus and wider Bay Area community to engage with her singular artistry.

A focus of the season will be our multi-dimensional Illuminations programming, which once again will connect the work of world-class artists to the intellectual life and scholarship at UC Berkeley via performances and public programs investigating a pressing theme—this season, “Individual & Community.” Concepts of “individual” and “community” have been at the forefront of public discourse in recent years, with new questions emerging as to how we can best nurture a sense of community and how the groups we associate with impact our own sense of self. Given our fast-evolving social landscape, how can we retain and celebrate the traits that make each of us unique, while still thriving in a world that demands cooperation and collaboration? With the performing arts serving as our guide and compass, our 2023–24 “Individual & Community” programming will explore the tensions that come into play when balancing the interests of the individual with those of the group.

Please make sure to check out our website for complete information. We’re thrilled to share all the details with you, and to welcome you once again to Cal Performances!

Again, Happy Holidays and Happy New Year!

Jeremy Geffen
Executive and Artistic Director, Cal Performances

About the Performance

Crafted from personal narratives from our communities, kitchens, and living rooms, social media, and YouTube, Hair & Other Stories is a two-hour experience that blends dance-theater and conversations that challenge existing American values and celebrate our choices around “who we be” and “how we do!” Choreographed by Co-Artistic Directors Chanon Judson and Mame Diarra Speis in collaboration with the company, Hair & Other Stories explores disquieting perceptions of beauty, identity, and race, and what constitutes the freedom to rise to our Extra-ordinary Selves in extraordinary times.

This is the urgent dialogue of the 21st century.

Don’t come here for no show: we’re goin’ on a journey!

Choreographed by Chanon Judson and Mame Diarra Speis in collaboration with the company
Raelle Myrick-Hodges, Stage Direction
Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, Dramaturg
Courtney J. Cook, Ross Daniel, Kentoria Earle, Roobi Gaskins, Grace Galu Kalambay, Mame Diarra Speis, and Mikaila Ware, Performers
Xavier Pierce, Lighting Designer
DeeDee Gomes, Costume Designer
Nicholas Hussong, Projections Designer
Sound Design by Everett Asis Saunders
Music Composed by The Illustrious Blacks (Manchildblack and Monstah Black)

Additional Music
“Own That Sh*t” by Tendayi Kuumba and Greg Purnell;
“Break It Down” by Tendayi Kuumba; “I Am Not Yours” by Du’Bois A’Keen

“Liberation Psychology” by Dr. Thema Bryant, excerpted from a Society of Counseling Psychology webinar, September 2021. Used with permission.

“Move B*tch” by Michael L. Tyler, Craig Stephen Lawson, Jonathan H. Smith, Bobby Wardell Sandimanie Jr., Jeffrey Ray Grigsby, Lola Chantrelle Mitchell, Paul D. Beauregard, Ricky Dunigan, Sean Paul Joseph, Stephanie C. Martin, Jordan Michael Houston, and Jason Williams as sung by Ludacris is used with permission from Universal Music, Reservoir Media and Ultra Music.

Original Concept for HairStories (2001) by Jawole Willa Jo Zollar and Elizabeth Herron

Additional Acknowledgments

Aminata short film and publicity videography by Ramy Mam. Photography by Hayim Heron. Additional sound recording by Jared Hassan Foles at World Eater Recordings. Special Prop design by Kofi.

Hair & Other Stories is informed by our ongoing partnership and work with the People’s Institute for Survival and Beyond’s Understanding and Undoing Racism workshop.

Urban Bush Women Staff
Chanon Judson and Mame Diarra Speis, Co-Artistic Directors/BOLD Directors
Jawole Willa Jo Zollar, Founder
Tahnia Belle, Acting Executive Director
Jonathan D. Secor, Producer & Creative Executive Producer, 40th Anniversary
Courtney J. Cook, Associate Artistic Director
Michelle Coe, Director of Production, Booking, & Touring
Cheri Stokes, Associate Producer of Special Projects
Makeda Smith, Marketing Manager
Angelina Lopez, Marketing Assistant
Tracy Cochran, Human Resources/Operations Manager
Brooke Rucker, Development/Visioning Partner Associate
Veronica Jiao, Founder’s Assistant
Elsie Neilson, Executive Assistant to the Co-Artistic Directors
Zoe Walders, Operations Associate
Henry Liles, Finance Manager
Camille Lawrence, Archivist
Whitney Christopher, Archives Assistant
Lai-Lin Robinson, CCI Producing Program Project Producer
Jolie Saltiel, Tour and Company Manager
Luisa Fernanda Buitrago, Production Manager/Lighting Supervisor
John D. Alexander, Additional Production Manager/Lighting Supervisor
Pinar Goodstone, BOLD Logistics Coordinator
Jaimé Yawa Dzandu, BOLD Artistic Coordinator
Dani Criss, BOLD Facilitator
Bennalldra Williams, Movement Coach
Advance NYC, Development Consultants

Company
Bianca Medina
Chanon Judson
Courtney Cook
Kentoria Earle
Mame Diarra Speis
Mikaila Earle
Roobi Gaskins
Symara JohnsonUrban Bush Women company apprentices are supported by the New York Community Trust Van Lier Fellowships: Keola Jones, Kashia Kancey, J’nae Simmons, and Synead Cidney Nichols.

Urban Bush Women Board of Directors
Tammy Bormann, Chair
Marc Bleyer
Debra Brookes
Ashly Nikkole Davis, Secretary
Michelle Dorant
Karen Garrett
Tamara Greenfield
Kenya Lee
Kyishia Lewis
Yvahn Martin, Vice Chair
Ngozi Ogbonna
Jennifer Smith, Treasurer
Elizabeth Williams-Riley
Jawole Willa Jo Zollar

UBW National Advisory Board
Regina Bain
Theodore S. Berger
Mary Jamis
Alice Sheppard

Special thanks to Talvin Wilks for early dramaturgical support for Hair & Other Stories; to Stephanie McKee and Laurie Uprichard for their continued support during the development of Hair & Other Stories; to Jonathan D. Secor, Lai-Lin Robinson, Susan Hamburger, and Thamar Fedestin for shepherding Hair & Other Stories during their tenure at Urban Bush Women.

MAJOR FUNDING FOR URBAN
BUSH WOMEN IS PROVIDED BY:
Urban Bush Women 40th-anniversary leadership funding provided by Bloomberg Philanthropies. Additional Funding Provided by the Howard Gilman Foundation.

Anonymous; Acton Family Giving; Bloomberg Philanthropies; David Rockefeller Fund; Doris Duke Foundation; Ford Foundation; Howard Gilman Foundation; the Institute of Museum and Library Services; International Association of Blacks in Dance; Lily Auchincloss Foundation, Mellon Foundation; National Endowment for the Arts (NEA); National Performance Network (NPN) Creation & Development Fund; New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project; the New York Community Trust Van Lier Fellowship Program; New York State Council on the Arts; New York City Department of Cultural Affairs; the Shubert Foundation; Solidaire Black Liberation Pooled Fund; William Talbott Hillman Foundation; Barnard College Center for Research on Women, Barnard College Office of Community Engagement & Inclusion; the O’Donnell-Green Music and Dance Foundation; the Harkness Foundation for Dance

Hair & Other Stories was commissioned by the Virginia Arts Festival and had its proscenium stage premiere as part of the 2017 Festival at the Attucks Theatre, Norfolk, VA, on April 22, 2017.

Hair & Other Stories (audience-engaged version) is a National Performance Network (NPN) Creation Fund Project co-commissioned by Junebug Productions in partnership with Contemporary Arts Center New Orleans, Dance Place and NPN. For more information: www.npnweb.org.

Hair & Other Stories is made possible by: Engaging Dance Audiences, which is administered by Dance/USA and made possible with generous funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation; the Lincoln Center Cultural Innovation Fund, which is generously supported by the Rockefeller Foundation and administered by Lincoln Center; the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project, with lead funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation; the MAP Fund, which is supported by the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation; and Acton Family Giving and the Silicon Valley Community Foundation. It is also supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council.

Hair & Other Stories was made possible by residencies at Baruch College and City College Center for the Arts through the City University of New York (CUNY) Dance Initiative, which receives major support from the Mertz Gilmore Foundation, the Howard Gilman Foundation, and the Stavros Niarchos Foundation. Additional support was provided by the Jerome Robbins Foundation and the Harkness Foundation for Dance. CDI is spearheaded and administered by the Kupferberg Center for the Arts at Queens College. UBW is supported through the Comprehensive Organizational Health Initiative (COHI), a program of the International Association of Blacks in Dance (IABD) in partnership with the Nonprofit Finance Fund with support from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation.

Hair & Other Stories was also further developed at BRIC (Brooklyn, NY) while Urban Bush Women was their 2018–19 Artist-in-Residence.

UBW, Inc., dba Urban Bush Women, is a not-for-profit organization.

Urban Bush Women
138 S. Oxford Street, Suite #4B
Brooklyn, NY 11217
(718) 398-4537

Booking Inquiries
Michelle Coe
mcoe@urbanbushwomen.org

Connect with UBW
www.urbanbushwomen.org
Facebook: @urbanbushwomen
Twitter: @ubwdance
Instagram: @ubwdance

About Cal Performances

Live Audio Description

For blind and visually impaired audience members, live audio descriptions are available for the Dec 1 performance of Urban Bush Women, Hair & Other Stories. For more information or to reserve a headset for this performance, please contact the Ticket Office.

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