Under
Miss Lewis’ direction, ELSFA built a unique
teaching program emphasizing character-building and
multi-disciplinary arts instruction integrated through
performance and exhibitions. With
a staff exceeding 100, ELSFA annually offered rigorous
classes in all of the arts to more than four hundred
six to twelve year-old boys and girls, a hundred
teen and adults, and it also taught all of the arts
and technical theater in Norfolk Correctional Institution,
where in cooperation with the prestigious Little,
Brown, Publishers, inmates released Who Took the
Weigh, a book of verse and essays.
Extraordinary teachers of superb professional standing—such as African
percussionist M. Babatunde Olatunji, dancer-choreographers Talley Beatty, Billy
Wilson and George Howard, along with brilliant Bostonians such as musician/composer
John A. Ross, Fashion Carousel team Gus and Lucy, dramatist Vernon Blackman—taught
at the school where most students paid minimal fees. NCAAA
professional companies in dance and music, often
drawing on the ELSFA’s students, flourished,
performing in Boston, at Jacob’s Pillar, in
Carifesta in the Caribbean, as well as in Brazil,
Senegal, and Europe. The creative mix was intoxicating,
and from it came many exciting productions including
the NCAAA’s well-known production of Langston
Hughes’ Black Nativity.
For
the visual arts, Miss Lewis enlisted the help of
the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, (MFA) in developing
and sustaining the NCAAA’s Museum under the
direction of Edmund
Barry Gaither. This
relationship produced ten jointly sponsored MFA exhibitions
featuring the finest in African and African-American
visual arts. In
l986, teaching and performing arts programs of the
NCAAA were interrupted due to a fire, however the
Museum continued on a separate site. Presently, new
plans are being made to restore the teaching and
performing arts divisions of the NCAAA, to expand
its Museum, and to endow its future. Miss
Lewis’ work brought many famous figures to
Boston and to her students, including pugilist Muhammad
Ali, actors Ossie Davis and Ruby Dee, musicians Thomas
Dorsey, Mary Lou Williams and Eubie Blake, and activist
Leon Sullivan. Eartha Kitt, Nina Simone, and many
stellar personalities made a point of visiting her
center. During
Boston’s 350th anniversary celebrations, she
caused Dakar, Senegal to be invited to the Great
Cities of the World Conference, and co-presented
Contemporary Art of Senegal at the Museum of Fine
Arts, as well as Poetry of the Negritude Movement
at the French Library. Miss
Lewis hosted the first delegation from the People’s
Republic China to visit the United States during
the Nixon presidency, and still later co-hosted United
States Ambassadors to African nations at Boston’s
zoo. Miss
Lewis, who possessed an extraordinary will partly
inspired by Marcus Garvey’s philosophy of self-reliance
and nationalism, visualized an artistic and cultural
center that would empower and dignify black creative
and intellectual development, and celebrate black
artistic genius on the world stage. Her
life’s work was to establish this dream, through
her teaching and through the institutions that she
founded. As
a visionary, Miss Lewis’s dream was extraordinarily
powerful. Tens of thousands were touched directly
by her school and the NCAAA performances locally,
nationally and internationally. Additionally,
her vision and work commanded national respect as
demonstrated by honors such as the Presidential Medal
for Art presented to her by President Ronald Reagan,
and her designation as a Fellow in the first group
of John D. and Catherine T. McArthur Foundation Awardees. Miss
Lewis also received the Commonwealth Award, Massachusetts’ highest
award in the arts, and myriad other honors including
nearly thirty honorary doctorates from universities
including Harvard and Brown. In
October of 2003, the National Visionary Leadership
Project in ceremonies at Washington’s J. F.
Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, named Miss
Lewis, along with Ray Charles and John Hope Franklin,
as a Visionary Elder. Click
to return to main NCAAA History.
|