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Tap America: How a Nation Found Its Feet

Five Guys Named Moe writer Clarke Peters explores the origins, development and modern significance of a great American vernacular art form he has loved since a child – tap dancing.

Clarke Peters, the writer of Five Guys Named Moe and actor in the likes of The Wire and Three Billboards, explores the origins, development and modern significance of the great American vernacular art form he has loved since a child – tap dancing.
From 17th century accounts of the dances performed by African slaves on American soil to celebrated 19th century dance-offs and contests between Irish and African-American dancers, through to the troubled Hollywood heyday of tap in the 1930s and 40s when black dancers were routinely excluded from the film roles their talent deserved.

The Hollywood Greats like Fred Astaire actually owed much of their style to the craft and innovation of unsung black performers such as John Bubbles, Bill Bojangles Robinson, The Nicholas Brothers and Baby Laurence. In the painful years of the 'Great Tap Drought' when audiences abruptly fell out of love with the dance after World War Two – depriving a generation of talented tap dancers of their livelihood. From the 1950s to the 1970s, tap was almost single-handedly kept alive in the mainstream by the genius of Sammy Davis Jr.

Clarke explores the fascinating story of the 'Tap Revival' of the early 1980s – spearheaded by the legendary Gregory Hines – and finds out how tap was made modern again, culminating in the hip-hop-inspired hoofing of Savion Glover and beyond. He ends his journey by meeting some of the biggest stars on today’s tap scene, such as Michelle Dorrance and Chloe Arnold’s Syncopated Ladies (who happen to be Beyoncé’s favourite tap ensemble)!

59 minutes

Last on

Fri 14 May 2021 00:30

Music Played

  • Pharrell Williams

    Happy

  • Horace Silver

    Song For My Father

  • Charles Mingus

    II B.S.

  • Miles Davis

    Shhh / Peaceful (Lp Mix)

  • Fletcher Henderson and His Orchestra

    Sugar Foot Stomp (Album Version)

  • Dick Powell & Wini Shaw

    Lullaby of Broadway

  • Louis Armstrong & The Mills Brothers

    Flat Foot Floogee

  • Duke Ellington and His Cotton Club Orchestra

    Jungle Nights In Harlem

  • Cab Calloway and His Orchestra

    Jumpin' Jive

  • John Lee Hooker & Miles Davis

    Bank Robbery

  • Stevie Wonder

    I Wish

  • Andra Day

    Rise Up

  • The Henry Mancini Orchestra

    Spook!

  • Marvin Gaye

    Got To Give It Up

Credits

Role Contributor
Presenter Clarke Peters
Executive Producer Mark Cooper

Broadcasts

Featured in...

Wire tapper

Clarke Peters uncovers the struggles of tap dance's black innovators.