Homegoings: A righteous space for art and race
Marjani Forte Saunders
Season 3 Episode 3 | 27m 47sVideo has Closed Captions
An award winning choreographer and dancer who finds genuine joy in sharing her craft.
Marjani Forte-Saunders is an award winning choreographer and dancer who finds genuine joy in sharing her craft. In conversation with host, Myra Flynn, she reflects on her complex journey of loving her body through dance.
Homegoings: A righteous space for art and race is a local public television program presented by Vermont Public
Homegoings: A righteous space for art and race
Marjani Forte Saunders
Season 3 Episode 3 | 27m 47sVideo has Closed Captions
Marjani Forte-Saunders is an award winning choreographer and dancer who finds genuine joy in sharing her craft. In conversation with host, Myra Flynn, she reflects on her complex journey of loving her body through dance.
How to Watch Homegoings: A righteous space for art and race
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship-On the next -Homegoings, award winning -choreographer and dancer -Marjani Forte Saunders -joins us for a very -Vermont outing, -Cheers!
-shares her craft and reflects -on her complex -journey of loving her body -through dance.
-That was one of -the first times -a choreographer ever told me -my body was beautiful.
-And I had been dancing -since I was four.
-What's up Colchester?!
-I've known you -for such a long time.
-Marjani is bicoastal, -I am bicoastal.
-She goes between, -New York and LA, -and I go between LA -and Vermont, -and we were right -around the corner -from each other in Pasadena, -where there are not -a lot of people -who look like us.
-But you only have to drive, -like, ten minutes -to see, like, a lot of people -who look like us.
-Where as Vermont, -it's like, you know, it's -it's harder work -to see a lot of folks -who look like you.
-But it's so funny -how much we have -put friendship, motherhood, -I guess -just like community first.
-But I don't think -I quite realized -how amazing you are -as an artist.
-So I think my first question -for you, -now that, you know, -!folks are getting to know you, -is very simple.
-Who are you -and what do you do?
-I love that -you think that simple.
-Fair enough.
-Im living my life -in this now -and in my before and forever -as an artist.
-I'm a choreographer.
-That means many things -in different spaces.
-!But ultimately its the reality -of organizing bodies -in space.
-And also it is -a process of, seeing -the being beyond the body, -the flesh, beyond the body, -the essence of, human -!experience and our expression.
-And that's one of the things -I love most about what I do, -One of the things that you -are bringing up -is this word body.
-!I think about welcoming spaces -for Black people.
-And I don't know, outside -of all of the music -that was stolen from us, -!that the stages have been that -welcoming -for other genres -like dance and theater, -for Black people -in the Black body.
-When did you realize -that your body was beautiful?
-You did not say, -you're going to dig right -!into my heart when we started, -This is a dance pun -intended of sorts, -I loved, -I always loved the craft.
-I always loved doing what -I do as a performer -and as a maker.
-And those origins are, -in my experience as a child.
-And I know many people say -that, but that's the truth.
-It's like your children -come into a knowing -if we're lucky of themselves -and of their gifts so early, -especially -if they're surrounded by -environments that say yes.
-And that environment for -me was the church -because I got to dance -for folks -and then I, -in dancing for folks -I got to see my joy -be almost contagious.
-And then for us to be -in sort of this other -kind of plane of joy -space together -that's infectious thing -that I look for now -and I intend on conjuring -every time I move my body -and I came to even remotely -look at my body with favor -and joy when I started to -dance for Urban Bush Women.
-That's a company -based in Brooklyn, -New York, founded by -Jawole Willa Jo Zollar -and erected -really in collaboration -with many incredible women, -womb holding artists.
-I say that -with that kind of specificity -because that's -how they identify.
-It wasn't about it -necessarily being exclusive -but being specific -with the storytelling, -stories rooted in -movement and practices -of the African diaspora -that were coming from -the African diaspora, -naming that like, right out.
-And so that included, -contemporary dance practice -bodies trained by Eurocentric -dance forms like ballet.
-I had just left the company -I was really quite injured -by as a dancer.
-In fact, -they fired me.
-What?
-They fired me -for being too fat.
-I was not.
-They were clear -about their esthetic -and I'm not even saying that -there's -anything wrong with that.
-What I am saying is that, -where is the opportunity -and the space and -acknowledgment of our calling -and the opportunities -to love ourselves?
-Because I wanted to dance -all the time, -and I wanted to -make a living from it, -and I wanted to do it and up -until this moment, before -I joined Urban Bush Women, -I was dying.
-I was -not taking care of my body.
-I was not holding on -to my food, -to try to be an esthetic, -an idea of excellent.
-So when I joined -Urban Bush Women -Jawole said to me, -you're wearing -these big clothes -in rehearsal all the time and -I can't really see your body.
-Why are you doing that?
-Your body is beautiful.
-Then you lost it?
-!Yeah, I mean, I think that was -one of the first times -a choreographer ever told me -my body was beautiful.
-And I had been dancing -since I was four, -and at this point I was 21.
-I think it usually takes me -a lot longer to cry -in these interviews.
-Yes!
-Let's just start picking.
-All right.
-You look like a snack.
-Okay.
-Just because they're -so yummy.
-There you go.
Nice.
-And no leaves and no leaves.
-And that's like -a perfect apple.
-Let's cheers our apples, -should we take a bite?
-Cheers.
Cheers.
-Alright.
-You travel how many -days in a year?
-At this point?
-In an ideal sense, -it's at least a week -a month.
-Yeah.
-Because traveling is called -an income.
-I know.
-That's the thing.
-We can't outsource -our job.
No, no.
-!This bag is heavy.
Okay.
Yeah.
-No I got it.
-You're going.
-You're the star.
Cheers.
-Oh I wish.
-Okay.
-You're like whatever.
-These are more tart.
-I like the tart.
-You do?
-Yeah.
-You seem so disappointed.
-You're like disgusted -with that apple.
-You hate that apple so much.
-I don't hate it.
-Its just the other ones -were like so sweet.
-I was missing -the tart in those.
-I want some more of those.
-What are those kind again?
-Honey Crisps, over here.
-Okay, let's do it.
-They look orange and yummy -just like Honeycrisp apples.
-Oh, my gosh, -I love that you love these.
-Oh, my gosh, -you really love them.
-You're right.
-These are so good.
-They're so sweet.
-Oh, Okay.
-I gotta make room for more.
-Okay, lets do it!
-And Im supposed to -dance later?
-Youre going -to be full of apples.
Yeah.
-I think it was during Covid.
-We were neighbors.
-We were in lockdown -and we both love hot yoga.
-Don't groan at us.
-We like it.
Okay?
-We both love hot yoga.
-We like that 108 degree room -to to do our stretching -and do our yoga in.
-And we didn't, we -couldn't go to any studios.
-So I heated up my bedroom.
-We're at the same age -and we were both mothers, -and I think we probably spent -a good ten minutes -in front of the mirror.
-Both of us -saying what has happened -to our bodies?
-Yep.
-So I wonder about motherhood -with you and your journey.
-How did your, -I guess, dysmorphia, -!I don't know if you would like -to call it that.
-How did your dysmorphia do -while pregnant, -or before pregnancy or after?
-And how was it in that moment -in my bedroom during Covid?
-Myra, Myra, Myra.
-We had a home birth, -we had our child at home -in Harlem, in this -appartment.
-And a home birth -was a -total wholistic experience.
-Like what youre eating, -how youre thinking, -how your praying, -what youre writing, -how you're seeing, -What kind of fun youre -putting in your system?
-Are you making love?
-are you watching -what you put into your system -what are you watching?
-Because everything about -your mind -is about -deconditioning -your reliance -on a medical system -that is producing fatality -for Black women -who are having children -at a rate that is, -let's just say alarming.
-Okay?
-3 times as likely as white -women and children to die.
-Still nearly four.
-It's it's disgusting -to be a first world nation.
-That makes no sense.
-That makes no sense.
-And Black -women are getting C-sections -and rates that are insane.
-Like, you know, literally, -I have -!story after story after story, -friends, close friends -who are being rushed -through the process -of giving birth to their -children, this is not a lie.
-This is right now.
-This is like happening -right now in our hospitals.
-And and what I have -to literally teach myself, -my midwife -is going to do this, -not my gynecologist, -its a process.
-And I didn't really do it.
-Well, what I mean, -I didn't decondition well.
-So I kept my gynecologist -even though once I told -her that -she wasn't delivering, -She wasnt nice -to me anymore.
-This is my conditioning.
-!So I'm just saying that to say -that, -this is just such a process -that I had to work through.
-After I had our son, -then I would be faced -with my body -dysmorphia on a whole - 'nother level, because I got -a commission for a project -that would be called -Memoires of a Unicorn.
-This would be my first -Bessie Award winning -project.
-Seven years -you toured that project.
-!I mean, what were you thinking -in your mind?
-Like, I got to lose this -weight quickly, right?
-You know what that -meant, Myra?
-Starvation?
-Lost my milk.
-All I wanted to do was -nurse my baby.
-Oh, my gosh.
-You understand?
-It was very tricky.
-I did for a little while.
-I didn't for a little while -and I now understand -you cant be sweating so -much and lose all the fat -that your body needs -to make the milk.
-But thats the dysmorphia, -thats the sickness.
-Because again, from age -4 to 21, youre fat.
-He's nine now -and I dont know -that Ive reconciled.
-He litterally went like -this, you guys.
-He didn't want it?
-He was like, you aint -got it in there woman.
-Get the other milk thing.
-You know what I mean?
-I can joke about it now -because I feel I understand, -I understand, I overstand -what was happening -and Ive forgiven -and love myself again.
-And he's nine -and hes dope!
-Can we give -some applause please?
-Yes.
Yes.
-The beauty of being an artist -is that I get to connect -with other communities.
-I get to connect -with Black people -across the world.
-And find them.
-So you look for us -wherever you go.
-I went to Berlin -and I asked my curator, -who are the radical Black -experimenters in the city?
-Wow.
-I really want to meet them, -the folks -who are asking -some critical questions -about our wellness, -about -our history.
That's so good.
-I'm in heels.
-Ditto.
Oh, yeah.
-Cowboy boots, but -still counts.
-Do you want to do an orchard -dance?
-I mean, I absolutely would.
-Don't tease me.
-I will tease you.
-Seriously, -I'm not even joking.
-Yeah.
-Oh, that was so beautiful.
-This other thing -happened during Covid, -and this was the witness -of a Black man being publicly -murdered by a police officer.
-And we have, -on Homegoings, -especially gone in on this -!for such an example of a shift -for so many different things.
-But art and you and your body -and dance -and touring and money -and D.E.I.
-Things like D.E.I.
-What happened -to your career -!during this time and your art?
-Memoires of a Unicorn -was first inspired -because we had watched -Eric Garner experience -the same thing.
-Remember that?
-Statton Island.
-And then before Eric -there was Trayvon.
-We heard about Trayvon -and we heard him, -we heard -them play that audio.
-Remember that?
-And then we saw the -video of Philando Castile -being shot in the car -next to his baby -and his girlfriend, -his wife, his partner, -his person.
-Yeah.
-Ee just keep going.
-There's so many -who have been murdered -by, folks either -!masquerading as police, right?
-Or folks -who are actually representing -the system -that is designed -to protect us.
-Okay.
-So, when the country watched -this man be slowly -strangled to death -by a police officer's knee -and the pandemic had -us just quiet enough -to say, oh, hell no!
-If you hear somebody -say that around you -you should -!just look around a little bit, -!because its about to pop off, -meaning that -people of color, -we said, our generation -was saying again, -Enough.
-By any means necessary, I -quote Malik Shabazz, -We will -no longer be silent.
-We will become violence -if need be.
-We are going to -overturn the system.
-So what did the -system do?
-No you aint, take -some money, here.
-We got a lot of money.
-You remember?
-We got stipends, -you got a certain award.
-You got a big old -tax break.
-People say, oh -because of the pandemic, -we don't want -all the institutions to fail -so we going to use the money, -you know what Im saying?
-Theres all these reasons -why we want to use -money and those may be -legit in some ways, it's also -definitely, absolutely to -quiet -the voice of revolution.
-And it did successfully.
-Because we could go local.
-That's a benefit.
-We were talking about this -in the car.
-In the local apple orchard.
-Thats right!
We -could frequent the orchard -instead of the grocery store -that's 20 minutes away.
-We could grow gardens -in our local community, -you understand?
-We we started a -neighborhood block group -in Pasadena.
-I remember, yeah.
-Of course.
Yeah.
-We could start to organize -locally because we werent -pushing so hard, -trying to feed ourselves.
-!Do you understand what happens -when you slow down?
-When we get to slow down, -we remember our humanity.
-You see, when -the money came back, -people started to invest.
-We started to build -more Black businesses.
-We started -to have more independence.
-This is again, -this is a cycle.
-And you can find this -cycle occurring -throughout U.S. history -every 20 years.
-And actually also in line -with pandemics -or giant flus or plagues, -social revolutions -soon after to follow.
Yes.
-And the thing about it -that is so deep is that these -social revolutions it's -not just people saying, hey, -I deserve it -because I'm Black.
-You do.
Okay.
-Because this country was -built on your ancestors -and nothing aint -never been paid back.
-So it's not just about that, -but it's also like, -where is your humanity?
-!When are we going to get right?
-When are you going to say -honestly, oh, I'm wealthy -because my grandparents -were wealthy -and because their -grandparents were -wealthy because -they had a bunch of slaves?
-When do we say that?
-I think you just did.
-I did.
-<applause> -Yeah.
-And when do we say, -I want to put this, -I want to reinvest this.
-I want to close -that karmic loop.
-And I want to reinvest -this into folks -who are -building community -and working to reestablish -and to heal the wounds -that come from the -systemic disenfranchisement -of Black communities -and Im centering -Blackness here -because I'm talking about -the central roots -of the slave trade -!that this country is built on.
-communities of color, -Bipoc, Black, -indigenous people of color, -meaning that -our chicano communities -Black African diaspora -!communities from the Caribbean -our Pueto Rican, our -Domincan communites, -you know, all across were -talking about folks -who will come here -and be called one thing, -but they're really from -India, you know?
-Like we're talking about -people with melanin.
-We're talking about people -who cannot progress -into whiteness simply because -of the shade of their skin -by simply eliminating -the accent in their tongue -and their practices.
-So if they can't wear -traditional garments -out of their house -because then they will -no longer be -considered white, -that's who Im -talking about.
-So it is essential to me -that in a country's -relationship to repair -that we understand -some of that early sin -that we understand -what we're doing -with indigenous peoples, -not just names.
-Right, but how are we -reinvesting -the way that weve raped -and pillaged the land?
-How are we reinvesting?
-How are we trusting -communities of color to do -the repair work themselves, -if we put our funding -into them to do it?
-That's what happened -during Covid, and that's why -it felt so good -for a minute.
-So back to you -and your body.
-Well, -I started experiencing -this excruciating pain -in my trigeminal nerve.
-And I can -no longer participate.
-I can't really talk.
-The pain is so sharp.
-It's like someone slapping -me in my jaw.
-Long story short, -after a couple of M.R.I.s, -I'm diagnosed -with multiple sclerosis.
-So all of this -that you've gone through -with your body, some of it -self-inflicted.
-And now this -moment of no control.
-How did you feel -after learning that news -How dare my body.
-How dare she -do this to me?
-<police radio chatter> -<heavy breathing> -Somewhere in my -dance career -I tore my A.C.L.
-And when I did, -in that stillness I started -studying Zen Buddhism.
-One of the core -concepts that -it references -and in the texts -that I was studying -was this notion of -clouds and water, -to be like -clouds and water.
-The notion is that -clouds and water advance -through, above and around -anything.
-Clouds, theyre around -the globe at all time.
-They change form -but they do not go away.
-They just change.
-They might become water -and water -can permeate anything, -even stone -over time.
-Brilliant elements -that teach us about -how we can be, -literally be.
-<music> -<applause> -Thanks so much for -joining us.
-If you want to continue -to be a part -of the Homegoings -family, stay in touch -at homegoings.co -and subscribe to the -homegoings podcast -wherever you listen.
-Take good care.
Homegoings: A righteous space for art and race is a local public television program presented by Vermont Public