请输入您要查询的百科知识:

 

词条 Oscar DeGruy
释义

  1. Acting career

  2. Bahá'í Youth Workshops

  3. See also

  4. References

  5. External links

Oscar DeGruy (born 1950)[1] is an African-American actor who has appeared in over a dozen films and TV shows over 30 years,[2] started the Bahá'í Youth Workshop performance model in 1974, and has assisted hip hop artists.[3]

Acting career

DeGruy was a regular on The New Bill Cosby Show for the 1972-3 season[4] and appeared in shows as diverse as Room 222 to Hill Street Blues. His first role was on The Young Lawyers in 1970 and in 2008 he completed work as a supporting actor in Zero Option based on a true story.

In Good Times in 1974 Degruy was featured in a two-part episode "JJ and the Gang". JJ is forced into a gang led by Mad Dog (DeGruy) who wounds JJ. After the trial Mad Dog is confronted by his mother who confesses "I never thought I could feel this way about my child, but I hate you" and the two exchange emotional arguments over the missing husband/father. JJ's father, James, ultimately feels sympathy for Mad Dog witnessing the family argument over the absent father.[5]

Bahá'í Youth Workshops

A former member of the Black Panthers[6] DeGruy changed his approach to racism issues and "had to do something" - so he and his wife brought performing arts theater with performance arts of step dance and street dancing together with the Bahá'í principles of equality, racial harmony and unity of religions. In 1982 DeGruy was joined by Juliet Soopikian and together they co-wrote the Workshops's manual in 1987.[7] In 1995 there were over 100 Workshops in the United States and another 100 scattered across 50 other countries. Over 1000 such Workshops have formed over the years some of which have toured internationally.[1]

There are several standard performances that are part of the Workshop's manual – one is the "Racism Dance." Two young members from oppositely styled groups (by clothing colors or other visual cues) come together in the middle of the "stage" and start to become friendly. They are then theatrically dragged back to their "own" groups by the blindfolded adults, who communicate through gestures their mistrust of and hatred for the other group and the central players are given blindfolds to wear of their own. In the dramatic climax, however, the young ones shed their blindfolds, return to center stage, and demonstrate the races can unite. At the end, their example leads everyone to remove their blindfolds and come together in a final joyous dance sequence.[1]

In 1995 a select group of six young women formed a Workshop to perform at the NGO Forum on Women in China, parallel to the UN Fourth World Conference on Women and performed five times. They were selected to perform in the closing ceremony, before some 15,000 people two pieces – "a dance on domestic violence showing women as peacemakers, and a rap on the nobility and dignity of women, showing and the importance of women and men working in partnership."[1]

See also

Stepping (African-American)

References

1. ^{{Cite news | last = Dacey | first = Jessica | last2 = Community | first2 = Bahá'í International | author2-link = Bahá'í International Community | title = Around the world, Bahá'í youth workshops promote tolerance | periodical = One Country | volume = 9 | issue = 2 | date = July–September 1997 | url = http://www.onecountry.org/oc92/oc9204as.html }}
2. ^{{cite web |author=anonymous | title = Filmography | work = IMDB | publisher = IMDB | url = https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0214861/ | accessdate = 2008-04-26}}
3. ^{{Cite news |author=Bahá'í International Community | title = Hip-hop hits spiritual chords | newspaper = Bahá'í World News Service | date = 2007-08-12 | url = http://news.bahai.org/story/572}}
4. ^{{cite web |author=Collector's Choice Archival Television Audio, Inc. | title = Category: Variety "N" | work = Collector's Choice Archival Television Audio | publisher = Collector's Choice Archival Television Audio, Inc. | url = http://www.atvaudio.com/ata_category_search.php?current_page=1&category=V&alpha=N | accessdate = 2008-04-26}}
5. ^{{cite book | last = Neal | first = Mark Anthony | title = Soul Babies: Black Popular Culture and the Post-soul Aesthetic | publisher = Routledge | year = 2002 | pages = 68–9 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ynXpJGilL1AC&pg=RA1-PA68&vq=degruy | isbn = 0-415-92657-2}}
6. ^{{Cite news | last = Harper | first = Marques G. | title = Performing for peace and unity, A troupe of Baha'i followers dances and recites downtown for a hard crowd to please | newspaper = The Oregonian | date = 1999-08-06 | url = http://bahai-library.com/newspapers/080699.html}}
7. ^{{cite web |author=Baha'i Youth Workshop | title = Baha'i Youth Workshop | work = Baha'i Youth Workshop Official Website | url = http://bywconference.org/default.htm | accessdate = 2008-04-26}}

External links

  • Official Bahá'í Youth Workshop Website
  • several websites of various workshops
{{authority control}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Degruy, Oscar}}

8 : Living people|1950 births|African-American Bahá'ís|African-American male actors|American male actors|Street dance|20th-century Bahá'ís|21st-century Bahá'ís

随便看

 

开放百科全书收录14589846条英语、德语、日语等多语种百科知识,基本涵盖了大多数领域的百科知识,是一部内容自由、开放的电子版国际百科全书。

 

Copyright © 2023 OENC.NET All Rights Reserved
京ICP备2021023879号 更新时间:2024/9/22 17:32:37