MOVE TV - Debbie Allen

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moveTVnetwork presents: Episode # 40 Debbie Allen On... Fame Special Thanks for the music for this episode: Clock Media Group

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  • Seeing Debbie and Gwen together is such a "rush" - of grace, talent and history. And Debbie's interview was perfect. She personifies what MOVE TV is about: moving bodies, hearts, minds, ideas and passion.

  • Thank you Debbie. This meant so much to me.

  • Great piece on Debbie Allen. You guys ROCK!!!

  • Debbie dancing with Gwen Verdon!

  • Allen was also lead choreographer for the film and television series, winning two Emmy Awards and one Golden Globe Award.In an article from the Museum of Broadcast Communications, the Hollywood Reporter commented on Allen's impact as the producer-director of the television series, A Different World. The show dealt with the life of students at the fictional historically black college, Hillman, and ran for six seasons on NBC.

    Debbie Allen was also selected to appear in the 1979 miniseries Roots: The Next Generations by Alex Haley where she plays the wife ofAlex Haley.

    In 2008 she directed the all-African-American Broadway production of Tennessee WilliamsPulitzer Prize-winning drama Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, starring stage veterans James Earl Jones (Big Daddy), her sister Phylicia Rashād (Big Mama) and Anika Noni Rose (Maggie, the Cat), as well as film actor Terrence Howard, who made his Broadway debut as Brick. The production, with some roles recast, had a limited run (2009-April 2010) in London.images?q=tbn:ANd9GcQ3aOF3nC0za8E3hFv9M0QL159G2OHVNlh1tUGW1la5o5JkcOa0rw&width=300

    Allen has released two solo albums, 1986's Sweet Charity and 1989's Special Look which also had several singles off the album. In 2001, Allen fulfilled a lifelong dream by opening the Debbie Allen Dance Academy in Los Angeles, California. Allen's academy offers a comprehensive curriculum for boys and girls ages four to eighteen in all the major dance techniques including Classical Ballet, Modern, African, jazz, and Hip-Hop. In addition special workshops are held for concentration in the Peking Opera, Martial Arts dance techniques, Flamenco, Salsa, and Tap.

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    Debbie Allen had her Broadway debut in the chorus of Purlie. Allen also created the role of Beneatha in the Tony Award-winning musicalRaisin. She first began receiving critical attention in 1980 for her appearance in the role of Anita in the Broadway revival of West Side Story which earned her a Tony Award nomination and a Drama Desk Award, she would receive a second Tony Award nomination in 1986 for her performance in the title role of Bob Fosse's Sweet Charity. One of her earlier television appearances was in the TV sitcomGood Times in a memorable 2-part episode titled "J.J's Fiancee'" as J.J's drug-addicted fiancee, Diana.


    Allen was first introduced as Lydia Grant in the 1980 film Fame. Although her role in the film was relatively small,Lydia would become a central figure in the television adaptation, which ran from 1982 to 1987. During the opening montage of each episode, Grant told her students: "You've got big dreams? You want fame? Well, fame costs. And right here is where you start paying ... in sweat." Allen was nominated for the Emmy Award for Best Actress four times during the show's run. She is the only actress to have appeared in all three screen incarnations of Fame, playing Lydia Grant in both the 1980 film and 1982 television series and playing the school principal in the 2009 remake.

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    Special Thanks for the music for this episode:

    Clock Media Group

    Deborrah Kaye “Debbie” Allen (born January 16, 1950) is an American actress, dancer,choreographertelevision directortelevision producer, and a member of the President's Committee on the Arts and Humanities.She is perhaps best known for her work on the 1982 musical-drama television series Fame, where she portrayed dance teacher Lydia Grant, and served as the series' principal choreographer. She is the younger sister of actress/singer Phylicia Rashād.

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    Allen was born in Houston, Texas, the youngest of four children to orthodontist Andrew Arthur Allen Sr. and Vivian (née Ayers) Allen, she is a poet (Spice of Dawns and other books) and museum art director.

    She went on to earn a B.A. degree in classical Greek literature, speech, and theater fromHoward University. She holds honoris causa Doctors from Howard University and theUniversity of North Carolina School of the Arts.She currently teaches young dancers. She also taught choreography to former Los Angeles Lakers dancer-turned-singer, Paula Abdul. Her daughter, Vivian Nixon, played Kalimba in the Broadway production of Hot Feet.


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