UCI’s McKayle: ‘I Never Quite Knew What to Expect’
The late Jerome Robbins touched many careers during his life, including that of modern-dance choreographer and UC Irvine dance professor Donald McKayle.
McKayle, 68, worked with Robbins twice: in “West Side Story” on Broadway in 1957, and earlier collaborating on plans, ultimately unsuccessful, to work with a dance troupe in Israel.
Robbins first saw McKayle in a production of Langston Hughes’ “Simple Speaks His Mind” in Harlem in 1948.
“Robbins had come and watched my work. . . . [Later] he asked me to be the dance captain on ‘West Side Story,’ ” McKayle recalled by phone Thursday between classes at UCI.
“Howard Jeffries was the [first] dance captain. When he was away on vacation, I filled in for a year or so. I [also] danced it,” he said. “Whenever any of the Sharks were injured, I would jump in.”
In 1953, McKayle, Robbins and modern dancer Anna Sokolow made plans to go to Israel to work with the Imbal Company, a Yemenite dance group.
“But we never got to do it.” McKayle said. “The funds didn’t come through. It was about the time of the McCarthy hearings, which became a big problem because Jerry had named people and was not greeted with a great deal of cordiality.
“He was an extremely talented man,” McKayle said. “But not very personable. Not really. . . .
“Sometimes he would say hello. Sometimes he wouldn’t,” he said. “I never quite knew what to expect from him, so I didn’t expect anything. Jerry’s reputation is very well-known. That didn’t take away from his talent.”
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