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2007 - Leon Collins (February 7, 1922- April 16, 1985), tap virtuoso who inspired a new
blend of jazz and classical music, placing an innovative focus on melody rather
than rhythm alone, and who believed that “Dancing is the poetry of the body as
music is the poetry of the soul,” was born Leandre Kollins in Chicago, Illinois
(2 February 1922), his father of West Indian descent. He learned to tap dance on the street corners and in pool halls, where
young dancers gathered to copy and challenge each other, wanted to be a
prizefighter, and played guitar with The Three Dukes, but in short time became a
popular dancer in clubs around town. By the age of seventeen he left Chicago for
Detroit, where he married up-and-coming blues singer Tina Dixon. The pair moved
to New York City where Dixon, who was signed to perform with the Jimmie
Lunceford Orchestra, opened the door for Collins’ big break when she recommended
her husband perform with the orchestra after the opening act called in sick one
night. Billed as “Gangs of Dancing,” Collins was offered a five-year contract
with the Lunceford band and in the late 1930s also worked with the Count Basie
orchestra in Chicago and New York, and with the bands of Erskine Hawkins, Earl
“Father” Hines, Glen Gray and Tito Puente.
Collins’ dancing in these early years included the usual steps
that all hoofers had to know, such as wings, nerve taps, over-the-tops, and
shuffle-flaps, as well as the requisite acrobatic splits and flips. But his
style also embodied a clean, clear tapping with an emphasis on melodic line,
which set him apart from other dancers. Where most hoofers would dance
successive eight-bar rhythmic patterns broken up by moments of virtuosic
flourishes or breaks, Collins did away with repetitive eight-bar/break patterns.
His tapping instead flowed along with the melody, behaving more like a trumpet
or a saxophone than a snare drum or tom-tom. “He wasn’t dancing like the other
guys,” said his wife Tina. “He was different, dancing tap-for-tap,
note-for-note.” This preference followed the style of Baby Laurence Jackson,
who Collins always accorded much respect, and of the dancer Teddy Hale, a friend
with whom Collins always traded steps. These dancers were all intimately
involved with the new developments taking place in jazz during the late 1940s
and early 1950s. Their fast and free-form improvising was well-suited to the
bebop that was being created by Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie, who Collins
jammed informally with on numerous occasions, expressing in his feet what they
played on their horns, and developing a melodic style of tapping that grew from
his own musicality. “Tap is music,” said Collins. “We use our feet to get the
same sound as an instrument.” He, along with Laurence and Hale, were among the
pioneers of the high speed, packed tempos of bebop-style tap dancing.
Dancing to such jazz standards as Dizzy Gillespie’s “Night in
Tunesia,” Collins also interpreted Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Flight of the Bumblebee”
and Bach’s “Prelude and Fugue in C Minor,” dancing with disarming ease and
shimmering speed. Dressed immaculately in a white or black tuxedo and bow tie,
his sounds were soft and delicate at first, gracefully embellishing the
pianist’s rendition of Bach’s “Prelude.” But little by little, his movements
grew more intense, his feet splashing the stage floor like summer rain pelting a
roof, feet moving nimbly while the upper body remained still, as if allowing the
feet to shoot the breeze with the piano.
The cruelest irony of Collins’ career is
that while he was developing jazz tap along the rhythmic and harmonic styles of
the new bebop, opportunities for tap dancers were drying up across the country.
While the emergence of bebop and the simultaneous decline of swing are cited as
one reason for tap’s demise in the late forties and fifties, traditional dancers
who were not inspired by bop’s intricate rhythms and unpredictable harmonic
changes were duly reluctant to make innovations on their own style and move it
forward with the new music. At any rate, as big bands died out, rock and roll
became popular music, television became the country’s premier entertainment
medium, and ballrooms no longer were the social meeting places, tap dancers had
found less and less work. Collins managed as best he could during this cultural
and musical transition. He formed partnerships with other dancers to increase
his performing opportunities; he learned to play the guitar, and attended the
Berklee School of Music in Boston. By the early 1960s, he was forced to give up
dance entirely and for the next fourteen years, he worked as a polisher and
reupholsterer of used cars. Gradually drifting away from show business circles
entirely, he became an avid golfer and played cards with a small social group,
the Salt and Pepper Club.
In the
mid-seventies, as the tap revival gained its impetus, Collins’ dance career
began to defrost. In 1976, his performance with a number of other formerly
retired dancers in a tap revival show at Boston’s New England Life Hall led to a
new and unexpected line of work-- teaching for the revered tap instructor,
Stanley Brown. For Collins, one night of teaching a week turned quickly into
three or four, and when Brown died in 1978, Collins took over his studio, where
his patience and kind, supportive demeanor became legendary. He was soon
teaching for the Radcliffe Dance Program and the Harvard Summer Dance Center;
and his own school, renamed the Leon Collins Dance Studio, in Brookline, MA,
became home to dozens of students, young and old, who wanted to learn the art.
Among them were such important tap artists as Dianne Walker, Pamela Raff, and
C.B. Hetherington (later Clara Brosnaham Wirth) who became his protégés, and
after his death, continued to manage his school.
Collins’
studio also became a catalyst for his powers of invention. By the end of his
career he had created nearly a dozen routines, extended a cappella dances that
covered virtually the entire range of his own tap vocabulary. These routines,
with names like Routine 1, “The Waltz,” and “Tapapella” are still taught at the
studio by Pamela Raff; and further preserved in written form by pianist Joan
Hill using a system of tap notation she devised. In his performances with Hill,
Collins created a new blend of classical music and jazz that is unique in the
history of tap dance. The “Bach Prelude and Fugue in C minor,” for example,
comprised of jazz rhythms married to Baroque harmonies and counterpoint.
Collin’s signature work was Rimsky-Korsakov’s “Flight of the Bumblebee” which
segued into Cole Porter’s “Begin the Beguine.”
Collins’s
not only taught his students well but also launched their careers on the stage.
As whenever he was asked to perform, he insisted they perform with him. Says
Dianne Walker: “Leon gave me my foundation. He talked about being on time, he
talked about money, he talked about clothes and about expression. He taught me
everything that I know.” "
The air is free, and so is my tap,” said Collins, who approached
his compositions with a clear and understandable phrasing of crisp straight
eighth notes accented and syncopated by clapping sections, quick turns, and
sharp angular movements, dutifully executing on the left and right sides to
giving his performance a certain predictability and satisfying
comprehensibility. “All I’m really trying to do is put a smile on your
face.”
Constance Valis Hill
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