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The Jagged Path Dance performance

  • Appalachian Theatre 559 West King Street Boone, NC, 28607 United States (map)

About the event

Join us for an original dance performance choreographed by Laurie Goux at the Appalachian Theatre. The Jagged Path dance performance will put the themes of the Jagged Path exhibition in motion. Featuring performers from around the United States, this exciting event will include West African dance, Afro-Caribbean dance, Tap, Clogging, Modern dance, and more. This event is something you don't want to miss, so get your tickets today!

Tickets are available on the Appalachian Theatre website (above) or at their box office.

This event is made possible through the support of the Watauga Arts Council and the North Carolina Arts Council. This event is sponsored, in part, by the Appalachian Theatre Facility Subsidy Fund, with generous support  from the Town of Boone, Watauga County, and private donors.


Artist Bios

Laurie Goux

Laurie Goux has been performing, choreographing and producing since 1981. She is an alumna and former faculty member of Columbia College Dance Center where she taught Modern Dance as a part of the core curriculum. Laurie has performed and taught at the Augusta Festival at D&E since 2010, teaching Blues, West African, Afro-Brazilian and Caribbean dance and lecturing on the African influence in Appalachian culture.

Goux has performed in the works of Loretta Livingston, June Finch, Shirley Mordine, XSight! Performance Group, Jan Erkert, Robin Lakes, Kate Kuper, Lin Shook, Tommy Gomez, Carol Bobrow’s “Hiroshima Trilogy,” Claudia Gittleman’s “Amartia” and Martha Clarke’s “Haiku” performed by Mordine & Company trio with Tim O’Slynne and Brian Jeffery. She produced “Suite Chicago Blues” featuring Max-A-Million’s rendition of Willie Dixon’s song, “My Babe” in collaboration with the DuSable Museum and Chicago Blues Museum exhibit and choreographed and performed in the Nation of Islam’s First Saviors Day musical production of “Trials of a Queen,” directed by Donna Farrakhan. Her dancing has shared the stage with many celebrated international music artists, including Max-A-Million, Youssou N’Dour, Mori Keba Kouyate, Queen Asabia and Rafo International Combo.


Kaia Kater

Montreal-born Grenadian-Canadian Kaia Kater's jazz-fueled voice and deft songcraft have garnered acclaim from NPR, CBC, Rolling Stone and No Depression. On her JUNO nominated and Polaris Music Prize long-listed album ‘Grenades', Kaia leans into a wide array of sounds and styles in order to convey a broad range of emotions and topics, most notably her paternal ancestry. For 2021, Kaia is taking part in the Slaight Music Residency at the Canadian Film Center and released a new single "Parallels" in October. She is currently a songwriter on The Porter TV series (CBC/BET) and is working on a full-length album, on track for release in 2023.


Jimmy Payne Jr.

Jimmy Payne Jr. began his tap dance lessons at Jimmy Payne School of Dance located in Chicago. His teacher and father was legendary dance master Jimmy Payne, who taught tap and Afro-Caribbean dance to thousands of dance enthusiasts and professionals for over seventy years. Jimmy Payne Jr. continues the tradition by performing and teaching in Chicago and abroad.

Jimmy has performed at the Chicago Blues Festival, the Chicago Jazz Festival, Dance Chicago, and with Chicago Human Rhythm Project. He also has performed with legendary saxophonist Von Freeman at the Chicago Cultural Center, with jazz great Orbert Davis at the Arts Club in Chicago, and with Bradley Williams 21st Century Jazz Review, whom he accompanied on a trip to India for a series of concerts.

Critics have described Jimmy as "a tap classicist with a composer's mind," (Chicago Sun Times) "the real deal," (Maui Times) and the Chicago Tribune referred to him as "smoking virtuosity." Jimmy has also won an award with Black Theater Alliance for best performance in concert. He currently teaches at Columbia College where he has been faculty for over 20 years.

Jimmy's style of tap is rooted in intricate rhythms and movement. This style of tap is commonly referred to as rhythm tap and was taught by Jimmy Payne Sr. Jimmy Payne Sr. was taught by Broadway legend Buddy Bradley.


Reginald Robinson

Reginald Robinson’s love for traditional jazz styles started in 1984 with his older brother listening to Swing recordings at home. In 1986 while in 7th grade a city funded arts program gave an assembly at his school called “From Bach to Bebop” with a live jazz ensemble. In 1992 with the help of pianist Jon Weber, Robinson’s professional music career began when he recorded a demo of 17 original tunes. Soon after his first album was released on Delmark Records in 1993 he received an invitation from pianist Marian McPartland to appear as a guest on her popular radio show “Piano Jazz.”
Robinson’s music has been used in theater and film; The Goodman Theater’s 1995 production of Each One As She May, Intimate Apparel – a play 2003, Compensation – an independent film 2000, and he served as a contributing historian for the 2010 documentary Chicago’s Black Metropolis.
In 2004, he was awarded the rare and distinguished John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Award for his innovative ragtime piano works and music research. In June of 2017 Robinson worked with Illinois Humanities to present “An Evening at the Pekin Theater” the first owned and operated African American music theater in the world. In 2018 Robinson was commissioned by pianist Norman Malone and Kartemquin Films to compose a ragtime work for the left hand and premiered a work in tribute to pioneer African American bandleader James Reese Europe commissioned by Symphony Center Presents on November 2nd at Symphony Center. In Dec 2018 Robinson gave a performance/ lecture on Scott Joplin’s music at The Schomburg in New York.
In 2019 Robinson teamed up with MacArthur fellows Susan Sygall (CEO of Mobility International-USA and the Women’s Institute on Leadership & Disability) and flutist Claire Chase for a special music concert of disability activism and artistry. In addition to concertizing, Robinson is internationally known for his lectures at colleges and universities, which has aided to preserving the legacy of African American history.


Sadira Muhammad

Sadira Muhammad is a seasoned Chicago dance artist, grounded in the community, practicing Afro-Cultural movement accented by modern dance phraseology. She has a background in the field of Teaching Artistry where she integrates history and literature with cultural dance to share with students in Chicago Public Schools. She has cultivated the additional component of creating a traveling elementary school dance troop. This has aligned with CPS SEL and Community Engagement goals.
Sadira is an Adjunct Faculty member of Dance at Governors State University Theater and Performance Studies. She is also a guest lecturer at Columbia College Chicago School of FIne and Performing Arts.


Baba Khalid Saleem

Khalid Abdul N'Faly Saleem is an internationally renowned African music specialist. He joined the faculty of Appalachian State University’s Department of Theatre and Dance this fall, where he serves as an instructor of African Drumming for Dance, and as Music Director of Diyé African Dance and Drum Ensemble with Sherone Price, Dance Director.

 Previously, Khalid served as musical director of Sankofa African Dance and Drum Ensemble at the State University of New York College at Brockport. He continues on the faculty of the American Dance Festival where he also performs and is a dance musician for both African and modern dance classes each summer. He has traveled internationally to the Caribbean, Europe, Asia, Africa, and South America with the well-known Chuck Davis Dance Company (where he was the founding music director), as well as with The Egwen Dancers, The Big Drum Dance Company of Granada, and Les Guidivoir (Côte D'ivoire).

Khalid was a featured performer in the Dance Black America concert film shown nationally on PBS, and on multiple commercial recordings of African music. He has had the honor to compose, arrange, direct, or perform for presidents, bishops, ambassadors, and great choreographers such as Donald McKale, Katherine Dunham, Pearl Primus, Tally Beaty, Molissa Fenley, Betty Jones, Lavina Williams, Cleo Parker Robinson, members of the Limon Company and the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater Company, Papa Ladji Camara, Baba Djimo Kouyate, and Chief Bey to name a few. Khalid's latest international cultural exchange travels have taken him to South Korea with the Korea American Dance Festival (KADF) program and to Brazil to work with Mestre Ramos, Mestre Toni Vargas, and Mestre Peixinho of the popular Senzala Capoiera School located in Rio De Janeiro. As part of a cultural exchange with Cuba, Khalid taught West African rhythms and studied Afro-Cuban folklore in Santiago. In 2004, Khalid accepted an invitation to perform with the Chuck Davis African American Dance Ensemble at their 21st anniversary gala performance and to be a part of a film documentary on the life of Dr. Chuck Davis.    


Sherone Price

Sherone Price is an associate professor of dance studies in Appalachian State's Department of Theatre and Dance, where he also serves as Dance Director of the Diyé African Dance and Drum Ensemble. He received his dance training at North Carolina Central University, Duke University, and the American Dance Festival (ADF). He earned his BFA from the University of North Carolina-Greensboro and his MFA from Hollins University/American Dance Festival. He has been on the ADF faculty since 1995. Previously, Sherone taught for the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts (Young Arts) in Miami, FL and at The University of North Carolina Greensboro. He performed as a principal dancer with the internationally renowned Chuck Davis African American Dance Ensemble. Sherone also worked with John Gamble/Jan Van Dyke Dance Company, was a dancer and choreographer with Greensboro-based Otesha Performing Arts Ensemble, and was a dancer and choreographer with the Delou Africa Dance Ensemble (Miami, FL). Sherone was selected by Talley Beatty to perform his classic Mourner's Bench at the 1993 Scripps/ADF Award Ceremony. Sherone is a past recipient of a Regional Artist Grant to study West African Dance and Drumming in Guinea, West Africa.Sherone teaches courses in African Dance, Dance History, and The Dance Experience, among others.


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