Vol. XXIII No. 4
December 2007

Annual Martin Luther King Jr. Celebration Comes of Age

“Give us courage to face the uncertainties of the future…give our tired feet new strength…”
—Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., Nobel Prize acceptance speech (December 10, 1964)

Alumnus and choreographer Robert Battle performing Edward Lawrence's Oh, Freedom in the 1993 M.L.K. event.

In January 1989, Juilliard’s M.L.K. Celebration was initiated by one student, Stacey Robinson, who was enrolled as a voice major. When he asked President Joseph W. Polisi and then-director of student affairs Laurie Carter why Juilliard closed for some holidays and not others, says Stacey, “they encouraged me to do more than just have a day off … [but to] help the community honor Dr. King’s memory.” Stacey was able to inspire 37 members of the Juilliard community, including staff and faculty, to celebrate Dr. King’s legacy through the arts. The first performance coincided with the first year that Dr. King’s birthday was nationally celebrated as a federal holiday.

A student attending Juilliard in the 1988-89 academic year had few performance opportunities that combined the three divisions of dance, drama, and music. The current interdisciplinary and community-based performance opportunities that encourage and support student collaboration—like the Composers and Choreographers workshop, ARTreach, and the Gluck Community Service Fellowship—had not yet evolved. As Barrington Coleman (D.M.A. ’93, voice) wrote in the October 2007 Juilliard Journal, it was “the common thread of excellence through acceptance and respect of our similarities and differences” that provided “the fabric for the tapestry which took place.” That first M.L.K. Celebration was the pioneering moment of student-initiated performances combining artistry and activism.

This year’s performance on January 21 is centered around topics addressed in the writings of Dr. King—poverty, respect, racism, and war—with commissioned works relating to each theme. Current D.M.A. student in composition Wayne Oquin has composed a set of six art songs for baritone and piano, using text from Dr. King’s speeches. Drama alumna LisaGay Hamilton (Group 18) will perform dramatic readings of “A Dream Deferred” by Langston Hughes and “Our Grandmothers” by Maya Angelou. Alumnus Maxwell de Paula’s (B.F.A. ’07, Group 36) dramatic piece will focus on poverty, while alumnus François Battiste (Diploma ’06, Group 35) has created a work on the topic of respect. Robert Battle (B.F.A. ’94, dance) will choreograph a piece on the theme of racism, with live music. Students from the Drama Division are creating a work covering the topic of war. Additional contributions come from Juilliard Jazz, including a performance by trombonist and faculty member Wycliffe Gordon; choral works will also support the commissions and themes. Each of the commissions integrates a personal connection to the Juilliard M.L.K. celebration with Dr. King’s legacy of peace and hope.

Oquin describes his own connection to the work of Dr. King: “While researching for my D.M.A. document at the Paul Sacher Foundation in Basel, Switzerland, I came across a 1968 private letter that Igor Stravinsky wrote to Balanchine, who was then choreographing the Requiem Canticles in memory of the recently assassinated Dr. King. Stravinsky wrote, ‘I am honored that my music is to be played in memory of a man of God, a man of the poor, a man of peace.’ I, too, feel that to have Dr. King’s words perpetuated through dance, drama, and music, year after year in Juilliard’s M.L.K. Celebration, is ultimately a testament to his message.”

Page #

Event Information
M.L.K. Celebration

Paul Recital Hall
Monday, Jan. 21, 7 p.m.

Free, no tickets required.

Event Calendar