Editorâs note: This episode was filmed under strict guidelines due to the coronavirus pandemic. A trained COVID-19 safety specialist was on-set and careful parameters were followed with the dancers, who are in a âquarantine podâ together, practicing recommended guidelines including regular testing, temperature checks, constant communication and group accountability. Atlanta is currently experiencing a surge in COVID-19 cases and we hope the community remains safe at home until itâs time to dance together again.
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If thereâs one comfort the 11 members of Dance Champz of Atlanta have found during the coronavirus pandemic, itâs that they can still dance together. âThe pandemic has affected the LGBTQ community and the J-Setting community tremendously because weâre kind of left in limbo,â team founder and captain Leland Thorpe says. âSo when COVID came about, we decided we were going to form a quarantine pod.â
âWe all love to dance and we all wanted to survive this,â he explains.
This practical adaptation in the midst of a global health crisis is emblematic of the groupâs approach to J-Setting. âMy team is very hard core,â Thorpe says. When they compete on the dance floor with their sharp, synchronized movements set to the beats of Baltimore club-style music, the battles are intense.
Darrius Stephens, Leland Thorpe and Ter’Schard Harris of Dance Champs of Atlanta pose in front of Steve Seaberg’s mosaic titled “The Fiddler” in Cabbagetown neighborhood in Atlanta, GA. During the pandemic, the members of Dance Champz of Atlanta formed a pod. The members regularly check their temperatures and test for COVID-19. (Photo by Frederick Taylor and Yusef Ferguson)
âWe put in a lot of work,â team member Darrius Stephens confirms. The Dance Champz rehearse four days a week, sometimes up to four or five hours a day. When a performance is coming up, Stephens says, âWe rehearse almost every day up into that performance.â
Part of their intensity comes from a desire to share their take on J-Settingâone influenced by jazz, modern dance, hip-hop and balletâwith ever-wider audiences. From its very start, J-Setting was a dance born out of resistance to the status quo, and a need for modern flair. Dance Champz are simply carrying that spirit out into the streets of Atlanta.
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The story of J-Setting starts on the campus of Jackson State University in 1970. Shirley Middleton, a former majorette with JSUâs marching band (now known as the Sonic Boom of the South) met with the university president and requested the majorettes be permitted to âput down their batonsâ and start dancing to more contemporary music. (At the time, that meant James Brownâs âMake it Funkyâ and âHot Pants.â) Middleton established the Prancing Jaycettes, who later became the Prancing J-Settes, and the danceline thrives to this day, known for their marching steps, explosive moves and tightly executed routines. Their signature style has even entered mainstream choreography, most notably Beyoncéâs âSingle Ladiesâ music video.
The Prancing J-Settes is the official name of the Jackson State University majorettes, who dance alongside the Jackson State University marching band, the Sonic Boom of the South. (Courtesy of Deontae Williams/University Communications)
At the same time it was filling stadiums, J-Setting was going underground. âWherever there was a marching band,â Thorpe explains, âthere were gay men who wanted to do thisânot just their moves but their costumes.â J-Setting became a fixture in the LGBTQ+ clubs that surrounded the HBCUs where J-Setting was performed; routines seen at football games would get repeated on the dance floor that same weekend. The âSuper Bowlâ of the underground J-Setting scene was in competitions at Atlantaâs now-closed Traxx Nightclub, Thorpe remembers.
A member of the Prancing J-Settes. (Courtesy of Charles A. Smith/University Communications)
The dance style requires militaristic precision, but itâs also about joyâabout knowing oneself and expressing that self-knowledge through dance. (And shiny, sparkly, modified majorette outfits.) Another freeing element of J-Setting comes from its ability to brush away gender binaries with one buck of the body. âBeing able to go in and out of femininity and masculinityâ is one of the key elements, Stephens says. And for Stephens personally, the dance allows him to defy outside expectations about what his own body can and canât do.
J-Setting is still emerging as an art form, and Thorpe wants to push its boundaries to incorporate other dance styles he grew up performing on the sly in Detroit. Heâs interested in challenging some of the relatively new conventions of the male J-Setting scene, both in terms of team size and its membership (Dance Champz has two female dancers in its lineup). Beyond the J-Setting community, the team also hopes for wider acceptance of LGBTQ+ people within the Black community. While Dance Champz have participated in recent Black Lives Matter marches and rallies, Thorpe says he still feels the ostracization that characterized the early days of the underground scene. âIâm considered gay before Iâm Black,â Thorpe says. âWe donât always feel part of our Black community.â
All their hard work is paying off in terms of local recognition. Dance Champz are the only J-Sette team that performs as part of Atlantaâs Pride celebrations. Maintaining their training regimen during the pandemic, Dance Champz are working towards the day when they can gather once again, to share their skills with both fellow J-Setters and the city of Atlanta. More conservative than many in the name of COVID-19 safety, theyâre skipping the club scene for now, forgoing the J-Sette battles at Pride over Labor day weekend, and mainly practicing outdoors.
During the pandemic, the members of Dance Champz of Atlanta formed a pod. The members regularly check their temperatures and test for COVID-19. (Photo by Frederick Taylor and Yusef Ferguson)
âWe have something to prove,â Thorpe says. âWe’re taking advantage of this time to ourselves to get ourselves on the up and up. So when everything opens up, we’re ready to perform. We’re ready to be out there. We’re ready to show our faces.â â Text by Sarah Hotchkiss
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