Youths perform the bele at Sesame Flyers Beacon Summer Camp, 2006
Through the course of its colonial history, from the encounters between the native inhabitants of the Caribbean isles and the colonizing Europeans; through bondage slavery of the Africans, and the indentured labor of East Indians, to the post-colonial era, numerous expressive cultural forms have blossomed in the Caribbean region. Dance has featured prominently among these. The content of this segment of quiliby.com focuses on this aspect of Caribbean expressive culture.
Gene is one of Trinidad and Tobago's foremost dancers, a choreographer, and troupe leader. He got involved in dancing around the time of the twin island state's achievement of political independence from Great Britain in 1962. With the advent of the Prime Minister's Best Village Competition in the '60s, the Harding Place Cocorite Youth Movement was formed and Gene embedded himself in its artistic life, particularly dance, under the leadership of the now-deceased Carlton Francis.
Through this activity he was acquainted with some of Trinidad's leading dancers such as: Jean Coggins, Julia Edwards, and Neville Shepherd with whom Gene performed and toured before forming his own troupe, the Ujaama Folk Performers in 1972. Under the guidance of Gene, Ujaama toured the Caribbean, the United States, Canada, Venezuela, and other places, performing numerous Caribbean dances including the Bele, Pique, Joropo, and the Limbo. Ujaama has won the national limbo competition on multiple ocassions.
In recent years Gene, together with his wife, Rosanna Toney, has taken his talents to Brooklyn New York, and assisted in the transmission of the knowledge and performance of these Caribbean dance forms among the youth, particularly those of Caribbean parentage. He has worked in the youth programs of the Sesame Flyers organisation, helping to develop their dance troupe and artistic programs in general, and shared his cultural gifts by participation in the steelband movement, mas' making and performance, and calypso singing.
© Ken Archer, 2010.