Thursday, May 19, 2016

Throwback Thursday and Eddie Brown


Throwback Thursday and Eddie Brown

Eddie Brown was born on July 27, 1915 in Omaha, Nebraska. His early dance training came from his uncle, and when he was sixteen he entered a tap dance contest where he was spotted by Bill Robinson. Eddie went on to win first place in this contest and Robinson invited him to move to New York with him, but Eddie’s mother refused to allow it. A few weeks later, he hopped a freight train and made his way to New York.

Less than two years later, he joined the Bill Robinson Revue at the Apollo Theatre, where he stayed from 1933 to 1939. Here he honed his craft and learned by watching Robinson and his perfectionism.
Later, he moved to California, where he remained. He worked with groups and as a soloist, experimenting and improvising. He even worked with a drummer, Dave Tough, and they developed a type of call-and-response routine.

Eddie Brown performed throughout the decades, from the 1940s to the 1980s, when he tried – and failed – to retire. He went on to appear in many tap festivals with dancers such as Honi Coles, Gregory Hines and Savion Glover.

Eddie Brown calls his style of tap dancing the “scientific rhythm” because, he says: “You heard all this music/rhythm but couldn't see where it was coming from.”  

Eddie Brown died on December 28, 1992.

From the Big Blue Book of Ballet Secrets:

Dance History Factoid #22s:  
“Eddie Brown was a famous tap dancer who employed what he called “scientific rhythm”.

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― Shah Asad Rizvi

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