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Black Ballerina

Pictured: Amanda Smith at Charlotte Ballet. "Black Ballerina" is a story of passion, opportunity, heartbreak and triumph of the human spirit. Set in the overwhelmingly white world of classical dance, it tells the stories of several black women from different generations who fell in love with ballet.
Courtesy of Shirley Road Productions
Pictured: Amanda Smith at Charlotte Ballet. "Black Ballerina" is a story of passion, opportunity, heartbreak and triumph of the human spirit. Set in the overwhelmingly white world of classical dance, it tells the stories of several black women from different generations who fell in love with ballet.

Encore Saturday, Jan. 15, 2022 at 4 p.m. on KPBS 2

“Black Ballerina” is a story of passion, opportunity, heartbreak and triumph of the human spirit. Set in the overwhelmingly white world of classical dance, it tells the stories of several black women from different generations who fell in love with ballet. Sixty years ago, while pursuing their dreams of careers in classical dance, Joan Myers Brown, Delores Browne and Raven Wilkinson (the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo's first black ballerina) confronted racism, exclusion and unequal opportunity in segregated mid-century America. In 2015, three young black women also pursue careers as ballerinas, and find that many of the same obstacles their predecessors faced are still evident in the ballet world today.

Pictured: Ashley Murphy at Dance Theatre of Harlem. "Black Ballerina" is a story of passion, opportunity, heartbreak and triumph of the human spirit. Set in the overwhelmingly white world of classical dance, it tells the stories of several black women from different generations who fell in love with ballet. Pictured: Ashley Murphy at Dance Theatre of Harlem.
Courtesy of Shirley Road Productions
Pictured: Ashley Murphy at Dance Theatre of Harlem. "Black Ballerina" is a story of passion, opportunity, heartbreak and triumph of the human spirit. Set in the overwhelmingly white world of classical dance, it tells the stories of several black women from different generations who fell in love with ballet. Pictured: Ashley Murphy at Dance Theatre of Harlem.

Through interviews with current and former ballet dancers along with engaging archival photos and film, the one-hour documentary uses the ethereal world of ballet to engage viewers on a subject that reaches far outside the art world and compels viewers to think about larger issues of exclusion, equal opportunity and change.

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Black Ballerina: Trailer

Produced by Shirley Road Productions and distributed by American Public Television. Producer/Director Frances McElroy