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Vershawn Sanders Ward Teaches Afro-Contemporary Dance

Season 1 Episode 4 | 2m 24s

Dulé Hill goes to Red Clay Dance Company, where he meets the founder Vershawn Sanders Ward, a dance instructor enriching her underserved community through the art of African Diasporic dance.

This program was made possible by a grant from Anne Ray Foundation.
Extras
Dulé meets incarcerated playwrights who are breaking the cycle of violence in Chicago.
Larry & Joe are blending Latin folk and bluegrass music to show music has no borders.
Dulé Hill explores how music can provide solace and healing with musician Amythyst Kiah.
A Syrian-American musician brings awareness to the civil war in his family’s homeland.
Deaf dancer Shaheem Sanchez changes how Dulé Hill thinks about dance.
Dulé Hill shares his motivation for mastering tap dance and carrying its legacy forward.
In Chicago, Dulé Hill explores why art and activism are synonymous.
Dulé Hill joins the Andre Theatre Collective for their first casting session.
Dulé Hill meets refugee children with Bassel Almadani at the Syrian Community Network.
Bassel Almadani and his band, Bassel & The Supernaturals, perform the song “Black Water.”
In Chicago, Dulé Hill explores why art and activism are synonymous.
In Texas, Dulé Hill discovers artists fighting for representation of their communities.
Dulé Hill explores how music can provide solace and healing in Appalachia.
Dulé Hill connects with artists using their craft to rewrite their narrative.