Completely fascinating and horrifying. She's riveting, A wonderful woman. Miles a total total bastard. When he wasn't literally punching her out, throwing her against the walls and then naked through the front door ctc, he was destroying her, her ambitions and her career.
One of the GREAT mysteries of jazz is how this music can be played with exquisite sensitivity, awareness and tenderness by those who in "civilian" life are barely emotionally functional, with the personal empathy and human decency of a house brick...
It's on YOUTUBE and VIMEO. Just search on "Frances Taylor Davis - Life before and after Miles Davis.
BN.
Frances Taylor Davis shares her life history as a pioneering dancer with Katherine Dunham dance company, her marriage to Miles Davis and renewal after as a survivor. Recorded at the Italian Cultural Center, Los Angeles. 50min feature. Rick Bowman videographer.
Bio:
At the age of sixteen, Frances Taylor was granted a scholarship to study Dunham Technique in New York with the famed Katherine Dunham. It wasn’t until two years later in 1948, at the age of 18, she trained with Katherine Dunham and toured extensively with the professional company to Europe and South America. It was on tour in 1948, that Frances was recruited for a special presentation to perform with the esteemed Paris Opera Ballet. She was the first Black in the history of the company to perform with them. Arriving in Paris she joined the Paris Opera Ballet, another first, as the Paris Press quickly labeled her “the Leslie Caron of the tropics.” Frances took up acting, appearing with Sammy Davis Jr. in Porgy and Bess, Mr. Wonderful, and Shinbone Alley. In 1958, Frances married Miles Davis; the relationship spanned nine years. A Broadway dancer, Frances's career faltered after she left the hit musical “West Side Story” as Miles told her, “A woman should be with her man.” Upon reflection, Frances states of her relationship with Miles: “There’s got to be full treatment of his genius, as well as his shortcomings". Frances Taylor Davis continues to educate and inspire others with her story of survival and renewal"
One of the GREAT mysteries of jazz is how this music can be played with exquisite sensitivity, awareness and tenderness by those who in "civilian" life are barely emotionally functional, with the personal empathy and human decency of a house brick...
It's on YOUTUBE and VIMEO. Just search on "Frances Taylor Davis - Life before and after Miles Davis.
BN.
Frances Taylor Davis shares her life history as a pioneering dancer with Katherine Dunham dance company, her marriage to Miles Davis and renewal after as a survivor. Recorded at the Italian Cultural Center, Los Angeles. 50min feature. Rick Bowman videographer.
Bio:
At the age of sixteen, Frances Taylor was granted a scholarship to study Dunham Technique in New York with the famed Katherine Dunham. It wasn’t until two years later in 1948, at the age of 18, she trained with Katherine Dunham and toured extensively with the professional company to Europe and South America. It was on tour in 1948, that Frances was recruited for a special presentation to perform with the esteemed Paris Opera Ballet. She was the first Black in the history of the company to perform with them. Arriving in Paris she joined the Paris Opera Ballet, another first, as the Paris Press quickly labeled her “the Leslie Caron of the tropics.” Frances took up acting, appearing with Sammy Davis Jr. in Porgy and Bess, Mr. Wonderful, and Shinbone Alley. In 1958, Frances married Miles Davis; the relationship spanned nine years. A Broadway dancer, Frances's career faltered after she left the hit musical “West Side Story” as Miles told her, “A woman should be with her man.” Upon reflection, Frances states of her relationship with Miles: “There’s got to be full treatment of his genius, as well as his shortcomings". Frances Taylor Davis continues to educate and inspire others with her story of survival and renewal"
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