Wednesday, January 30, 2013

Jean-Leon Destine, Haitian Dancer and Choreographer


Jean-Léon Destiné, Dancer, Dies at 94



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Jean-Léon Destiné, a Haitian dancer and choreographer who brought his country’s traditional music and dance to concert stages around the world, died on Jan. 22 at his home in Manhattan. He was 94.
Jean-Léon Destiné at the Roxy in Manhattan. Much of his work functioned as commentary on Haiti’s legacy of colonialism.
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His family confirmed the death.
Considered the father of Haitian professional dance, Mr. Destiné first came to international attention in the 1940s and remained prominent for decades afterward.
As a dancer, he performed well into old age. In 2003, reviewing a program at Symphony Space in New York in which he appeared, Anna Kisselgoff wrote in The New York Times that Mr. Destiné’s number stopped the show. She added, “He looked agile and nuanced, mesmerizing in a bent-legged solo.”
As a choreographer, he directed own ensemble, which came to be known as the Destiné Afro-Haitian Dance Company.
The company, which presented work from throughout the Caribbean, was devoted in particular to dances from Haiti. Accompanied by vibrant drumming — Mr. Destiné collaborated for many years with the distinguished Haitian drummer Alphonse Cimber — these dances were often infused with elements of voodoo tradition.
As reviewers noted, Mr. Destiné and company could dance, to all appearances, as if possessed.
Much of Mr. Destiné’s work also functioned as commentary on Haiti’s legacy of colonialism and slavery. In “Slave Dance,” a solo piece he choreographed and performed, the dancer begins in bondage only to emerge, in astonished joy, a free man.
In “Bal Champêtre” (“Country Ball”), among the most famous works choreographed by Mr. Destiné, the foppish customs of Haiti’s French colonists are satirized through sly subervsions of a Baroque minuet.
In the United States, Mr. Destiné was seen on Broadway; at the New York City Opera, where in 1949 he was a featured dancer in the world premiere of William Grant Still’s “Troubled Island,” set in Haiti; and, as a performer and teacher, with the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival in Becket, Mass. He also taught at New York University and elsewhere.
Jean-Léon Destiné was born on March 26, 1918, in Saint-Marc, Haiti, to a middle-class family: his father was a local government official, his mother a seamstress. After his parents divorced when he was a boy, he moved with his mother to the capital, Port-au-Prince, where they lived in reduced circumstances.
From a very early age, Jean-Léon was captivated by Haitian music and drumming. As a youth, he learned traditional dance by attending the religious rituals and other celebrations of which it had long been an integral part. He also sang in the folkloric ensemble directed by Lina Mathon Blanchet, a prominent Haitian musician.
In the 1940s, the young Mr. Destiné received a Rockefeller Foundation scholarship to study printing and journalism in the United States. After taking classes at Howard University in Washington, he moved to New York, where he learned to operate and maintain linotype machines, then used to cast type for printing newspapers other publications.
Mr. Destiné, who eventually became an American citizen, also continued dancing. In the late ’40s he spent several years with the company of Katherine Dunham, considered the matriarch of black dance in the United States.
With Ms. Dunham’s company, he danced on Broadway in the revue “Bal Negre” at the Belasco Theater in 1946.
Returning to Haiti for a time in the late ’40s, Mr. Destiné founded a national dance company there at the behest of the Haitian government. By the early ’50s he had established his own company in New York.
Mr. Destiné’s survivors include three sons, Gérard, Ernest and Carlo, as well as grandchildren and great-grandchildren.

Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Meles Zenawi, Ethiopian Prime Minister


Meles Zenawi Dead: Ethiopian Prime Minister Reportedly Dies At 57


AP  |  By  Posted:  Updated: 08/21/2012 2:00 am
ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP) — Meles Zenawi, Ethiopia's long-time ruler who held tight control over this East African country but was a major U.S counter-terrorism ally, died of an undisclosed illness after not being seen in public for weeks, Ethiopian state television said Tuesday. He was 57.
Meles died Monday just before midnight after contracting an infection, state TV announced Tuesday. Hailemariam Desalegn, who was appointed deputy prime minister and minister of foreign affairs in 2010, is now in charge of the Cabinet, state TV said.
Meles hadn't been seen in public for about two months. In mid-July, after Meles did not attend a meeting of heads of state of the African Union in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia's capital, speculation increased that his health problems were serious.
Ethiopian officials gave no details and said the prime minister was in "very good" health and would return to office soon, but international officials said quietly it was unlikely he would recover.
State TV on Tuesday showed pictures of Meles as classical music played in the background.
Born on May 8, 1955, Meles became president in 1991 and prime minister in 1995, a position that is both the head of the federal government and armed forces.
The U.S. has long viewed Meles as a strong security partner and has given hundreds of millions of dollars in aid over the years. U.S. military drones that patrol East Africa — especially over Somalia — are stationed in Ethiopia.
Though a U.S. ally, Ethiopia has long been criticized by human rights groups for the government's strict control. Dissent is met with a strict government response.
During Meles' election win in 2005, when it appeared the opposition was likely to make gains, Meles tightened security across the country, and on the night of the election he declared a state of emergency, outlawing any public gathering as his ruling party claimed a majority win. Opposition members accused Meles of rigging the election, and demonstrations broke out. Security forces moved in, killing hundreds of people and jailing thousands.
In 2010 Meles won another five years in office while receiving a reported 99 percent of the vote. Meles is the longtime chairman of the Tigray People's Liberation Front and has always identified strongly with his party.
"I cannot separate my achievements from what can be considered as the achievements of the ruling party. Whatever achievement there might have been, it does not exist independent of that party," Meles once said when asked what he thought would be his legacy.
Meles grew up in the northern town of Adwa, where his father had 13 siblings from multiple women. He moved to the capital, Addis Ababa, on a scholarship after completing an eight-year elementary education in just five.
State TV said funeral arrangements would be announced soon.

Sunday, January 6, 2013

Jack Twyman, NBA Hall of Famer


Jack Twyman, NBA Hall of Famer, dies at 78

By — News services and staff reports,May 31, 2012
Jack Twyman, a member of the Basketball Hall of Fame who was one of the NBA’s top scorers in the 1950s and became the guardian of a paralyzed teammate, died May 30 at a Cincinnati hospice. He was 78. He had an aggressive form of blood cancer, his son, Jay Twyman said.
Mr. Twyman played for the University of Cincinnati and spent 11 seasons in the NBA with the Rochester and Cincinnati Royals. He averaged a career-high 31.2 points per game in the 1959-60 season, second only to basketball legend Wilt Chamberlain. Mr. Twyman played in six NBA All-Star games.
In 1958, after teammate Maurice Stokes was left paralyzed after a head injury suffered during a game, Mr. Twyman became his guardian to help Stokes receive medical benefits.
Mr. Twyman later was a basketball analyst on television. His most famous work as an announcer came in Game 7 of the 1970 NBA finals between the New York Knicks and the Los Angeles Lakers, when he stopped himself mid-sentence during the pregame to announce that he saw injured New York center Willis Reed coming through the player tunnel. It had not been known whether Reed would be able to play because of an injured thigh muscle, but he went on to lead New York to a 113-99 victory.
Mr. Twyman scored 15,840 points in his career, for an average of 19.2 points a game, and was inducted to the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1983.
He also left his mark on the NBA for the way he helped Stokes, who was a budding star in 1958. In the last game of that season, Stokes hit his head on the floor. He later had a seizure, slipped into a coma and was left paralyzed.
In addition to becoming Stokes’s guardian, Mr. Twyman organized an exhibition game with NBA players to raise money for his teammate. That game became an annual tradition to raise money for needy former players. Stokes died in 1970.
John Kennedy Twyman was born May 21, 1934, in Pittsburgh. At the University of Cincinnati, the 6-foot-6 Mr. Twyman led the team in scoring and rebounding for three consecutive seasons.
He was named an All-American in 1955, when he averaged 24.6 points and 16.5 rebounds per game. He was drafted in the first round by the Rochester Royals in 1955. The franchise moved to Cincinnati two years later.
Survivors include his wife, Carole; four children; and 14 grandchildren.