Blondell Cummings was an American modern dancer and choreographer. She is known for her experimental choreography and was a fixture in the New York and Harlem dance scene for decades.
Early life
Blondell Cummings was born in Florence, South Carolina on October 27, 1944. When she was an infant, her parents, Roscoe and Oralee Cummings, moved from South Carolina to Harlem. In South Carolina, her parents had been sharecroppers, growing cotton and tobacco, and when they moved to New York, her father worked as a cab driver and her mother as a domestic aid then a nurse. When Cummings was in her teens, her family relocated to Queens.
One of Cummings's most well-known works was Chicken Soup, a 1981 solo based on her childhood memories of her grandmother in the kitchen, featuring music by Meredith Monk, Collin Walcott, and Brian Eno. In 1982 when Ishmael Houston-Jones created the Parallels series at Danspace, Chicken Soup was the hit. In a review of a 1983 performance of the work, the New York Times observed,
All she did was stand beside a shopping bag, sit in a kitchen chair, scrub the floor and dance with a frying pan. But she plunged the viewer into a remembered time and place, when the ladies of the neighborhood sat around a kitchen table as real as any Walker Evans photographed and talked of "childhood, friends, operations, death and money."
In a more recent article on Ishmael Houston-Jones, Joan Acocella of The New Yorker, wrote of the piece,
In 1981 Blondell Cummings made a dance, "Chicken Soup," in which, while scrubbing a floor on her hands and knees—an act of exemplary realism—she would repeatedly break off, rear up, and shake, in jagged, convulsive movements, as if she were in a strobe light. Then, with no acknowledgement of this interruption, she would go back, serenely, to scrubbing the floor. This strange back and forth made the piece very interesting psychologically: the floor-scrubbing so homey and soapy and nice, the convulsions so violent and weird. Was this woman happy doing this domestic task, or did she hate it so much that she was going crazy?
Commissioned by the Japan Society, this piece explores points of comparison and contrast between the experiences of an African-American woman and a Japanese woman. This piece was a collaboration with Junko Kikuchi and was based on the 1962 novel by Kōbō Abe titled The Woman in the Dunes.
Cummings was included in the documentaries Retracting Steps: American Dance Since Postmodernism and the PBS series Free to Dance: The African American Presence in Modern Dance. A testament to her reputation in the dance scene and performance community, Cummings was on the Bessie Award Selection Committee in for many years.
''We Wanted a Revolution: Black Radical Women'', ''1965–85''