The Toronto Caribbean Carnival- Liberation & the dancing body: With Ronald A. Taylor and Collette ‘Coco’ Murray

 

Live on CIUT 89.5 FM

Airing Date: July 24, 2024
Host/ Producer: Nicole Inica Hamilton

Assistant Production Manager/ Episode Editor: Amber Downie-Back

 

Featured Guest(s): Ronald A. Taylor and Collette ‘Coco’ Murray

On this episode, Ronald A. Taylor (Artistic Director of Ronald Taylor Dance) and Collette ‘Coco’ Murray (Artistic Director of Coco Collective) open up about the Toronto Caribbean Carnival, and the exploration of the dancing body in relationship to liberation from bondage.


About Ronald A. Taylor:

Ronald A. Taylor is the Artistic Director of the Toronto-based company Ronald Taylor Dance (formerly known as Canboulay Dance Theatre) founded in 1993. Taylor’s talent was first nurtured by the late Astor Johnson of the innovative Repertory Dance Theatre (Trinidad).  After leaving Trinidad and Tobago, the birthplace of internationally acclaimed dance pioneers Geoffrey Holder and Beryl McBurnie, Taylor enrolled in the renowned The Juilliard School – Dance division in New York. Under Héctor Zaraspe, international ballet master and private teacher to Rudolf Nureyev and Margot Fonteyn, Taylor graduated with a BFA in Dance. His stay with Dance Theatre of Harlem (DTH) afforded him two prestigious awards – the DTH Scholarship Award and the Maxwell and Muriel Bluck Scholarship award.  Taylor moved to Canada in the early ’90’s and emerged as a leading force in Black Dance. During that period, he turned his focus on training new graduates in theater and dance, at the same time collaborating with the umbrella of dance organization “dance Immersion”. True to his Caribbean roots, his work fuses Modern with Folk, and traditional Ballet in a distinctive style which Taylor describes as “Contemporary Caribbean”. Ronald has successfully pursued a Master of Arts degree at York University. In his capacity as a dance educator, Taylor taught at York’s Faculty of Fine Arts and at designated school programs across Ontario, Western Canada, Belize, USA and parts of the Caribbean. He was also selected to be part of The Djerassi Resident Artists Program in California, a program internationally recognized as one of the eminent artist residency programs for artists of superior talent, who are chosen from a diverse range of backgrounds and geographical locations. |

 

About Collette ‘Coco’ Murray:

Collette Murray is a multi-award-winning artist-scholar, cultural arts programmer, and dance educator. With 20 years in the Canadian arts sector, she specializes in Afro-diasporic dance forms from the West African region, Caribbean Folk, and carnival arts and stilt-walking explorations as Coco Moko Jumbie. Murray studied with master teachers from West Africa, the Caribbean, and the USA and performed with several Toronto-based dance companies. As an advocate for equity in the arts, her artistry extends beyond performance to teaching, cultural arts education, mentoring, curation, community arts engagement and publications. Currently, Murray is Chair of the Board of Directors for Dance Umbrella of Ontario and a National Board member of Canadian Dance Assembly. Miss Coco Murray is her mobile dance education business informed by research and praxis of anti-racism in dance and amplifying African diasporic arts knowledge. Collette pursues a PhD in Dance Studies at York University and presents at national and international panels at academic conferences. Murray holds a Master of Education, a Specialized Honours BA in Race, Ethnicity & Indigeneity, a Certificate in Anti-Racist Research and Practice from York University, and a BA in Sociology from the University of Toronto. Murray received international recognition by the National Dance Education Organization's 2023 Outstanding Leadership in Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion in Dance Education, 2022 Racial Justice Award in Creative Arts by Urban Alliance on Race Relations Ontario and 2019 Toronto Arts Foundation’s Community Arts Award for significant contributions to creating access to arts and culture in Toronto.