Since Inlet Dance Theatre’s inception in 2001, we have believed that all black lives matter. We have always used dance as a peaceful form of artistic activism, often using dance as a weapon of protest. These things are evident in the company’s repertory, programming,...
CLICK HERE FOR FULL ARTICLE Grant Segall, The Plain Dealer January 9, 2020 At school, a young African-American learns to strut, dance the Harlem shake, spin a basketball on his finger, grab his crotch and overcome a bully. Welcome to the “Booker T. Malcolm Luther...
CLICK HERE FOR FULL ARTICLE Dave DeOreo Jean-Marie Papoi February 21, 2020 Dominic Moore-Dunson was conflicted about his African-American identity as a boy growing up in Akron. Sitting around the lunch table one day at Miller South middle school, his friends were...
CLICK HERE FOR FULL ARTICLE Dan Polletta Dave DeOreo March 18, 2020 Inlet Dance Theatre, which celebrates its 20th anniversary in 2020, was in the midst of its first national tour when concerns about the coronavirus required the company to suspend any further...
CLICK HERE FOR FULL ARTICLE Kevin Barry January 3, 2020 While the world was learning about the horrors the women endured on Seymour Avenue, the building that the Astrup Awning Company was housed in from 1883 through 1995 stood in the background. News...
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