Nicholas Brothers

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The Nicholas Brothers in Stormy Weather
The Nicholas Brothers in Stormy Weather

The Nicholas Brothers were a famous African-American team of dancing brothers, Fayard (19142006) and Harold Nicholas (19212000). With their highly acrobatic technique, high level of artistry and daring innovations, they were considered by many the greatest tap dancers of their day. Growing up surrounded by Vaudeville acts as children, they became stars of the jazz circuit during the heyday of the Harlem Renaissance and went on to have successful careers performing on stage, film, and television well into the 1990's.

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Fayard Antonio Nicholas was born October 20, 1914 born in Mobile, Alabama.[1] Harold Nicholas was born March 27, 1921 in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.[1]

The Nicholas Brothers grew up in Philadelphia, the sons of musicians who played in their own band at the old Standard Theater, their mother at the piano and father on drums. At the age of three, Fayard was always seated in the front row while his parents worked, and by the time he was ten, he had seen most of the great African American Vaudeville acts, particularly the dancers, including such notables of the time as Alice Whitman, Willie Bryant and Bill Robinson.[2] Neither Fayard nor Harold had any formal dance training.[3]

They became the featured act at Harlem's legendary Cotton Club in 1932, when Harold was 11 and Fayard was 18. They were the only entertainers in the African American cast allowed to mingle with white patrons.[4][3]

In that exhilarating hybrid of tap dance, ballet and acrobatics, sometimes called acrobatic dancing or "flash dancing," no individual or group surpassed the effect that the Nicholas Brothers had on audiences and on other dancers.[1] In 1938, there was a face-off dance competition at the Cotton Club between the Nicholas Brothers and the Berry Brothers, an African-American acrobatic dance trio. It has become a legendary confrontation, a sort of dance-fight for supremacy. By some accounts the Berry Brothers were more athletic but the Nicholas brothers were better overall performers - better at pleasing the crowd.[2][5]

Two years later they were in Hollywood and for several decades alternated between movies, nightclubs, concerts, Broadway, television, and extensive tours of Latin America, Africa, and Europe.[1]

The Nicholas brothers taught master classes in tap dance as teachers-in-residence at Harvard University and Radcliffe as Ruth Page Visiting Artists. Among their known students are Debbie Allen, Janet Jackson, and Michael Jackson.[2] Several of today's master tap dancers have performed with or been taught by the brothers - Dianne Walker, Sam Weber, Lane Alexander, Mark Mendonca, Terry Brock,[6] Colburn Kids Tap/L.A, Channing Cook Holmes,[7] Chris Baker, Artis Brienzo, Chester Whitmore, Tobius Tak,[8] Carol Zee and Steve Zee.[9]

Harold died July 3, 2000 of a heart attack following minor surgery.[10]Fayard died January 24, 2006 of pneumonia (a complication from a stroke).[3]

Fayard married three times - his last wife, Katherine Hopkins (2000 - 24 January 2006) (until his death), Barbara January (1967 - 1998) (until her death) with 1 child, and Geraldine Pate (? - 1942) and his[11](divorced) with 2 children, Tony and Paul Nicholas.[12] Fayard was a member of the Bahá'í Faith since 1967.[13]

Upon his death his memorial service was standing room only. Presided over by Mary Jean Valente of "A Ceremony of the Heart", the service was a moving collection of personal tributes, music and dance and as appropriate, one last standing ovation. See program for full details at http://fayardnicholas.com/page14.html[citation needed]

Two of Fayard's granddaughters call themselves the Nicholas Sisters and continue their dances and award winning achievements.[4][14]

Harold was first married to actress Dorothy Dandridge from 1942 to 1951, the couple had one child, Harolyn Nicholas, who was born severely mentally handicapped. Ultimately Harold married three times.[12]

One of their signature moves was to dance down a huge flight of broad stairs, leapfrogging over each other and landing in a complete split on each step. This move was performed in the finale of their most famous performance, the movie Stormy Weather (see photo above).[3] Fred Astaire once told the brothers that the "Jumpin' Jive" dance number in Stormy Weather was the greatest movie musical sequence he had ever seen.[3] In that famous routine, the Nicholas Brothers fearlessly and exuberantly dance on drums and leap across music stands in an orchestra.[3] In the finale, they leap-frog down a sweeping staircase, pictured above.[3] One of their signature moves was a "no-hands" splits, where they went into the splits and returned to their feet without using their hands.[3] Gregory Hines declared that if their biography was ever filmed, their dance numbers would have to be computer generated because no one could duplicate them.[3]

  • "Pie, Pie Blackbird" (1932) (short subject)
  • The Emperor Jones" (1933) (Harold Nicholas)
  • "Syncopancy" (1933) (short subject) (Harold Nicholas)
  • Kid Millions (1934)
  • "An All-Colored Vaudeville Show" (1935) (short subject)
  • The Big Broadcast of 1936 (1935)
  • Coronado (1936)
  • "The Black Network" (1936) (short subject)
  • My American Wife (1936)
  • Babes in Arms (1937)
  • Calling All Stars (1937)
  • My Son Is Guilty (1939)
  • Down Argentine Way (1940)
  • Tin Pan Alley (1940)
  • The Great American Broadcast (1941)
  • Sun Valley Serenade (1941)
  • Orchestra Wives (1942)
  • Stormy Weather (1943)
  • Take It or Leave It (1944)
  • The Reckless Age (1944) (Harold Nicholas)
  • Carolina Blues (1944) (Harold Nicholas)
  • "Dixieland Jamboree" (1946) (short subject)
  • The Pirate (1948)
  • Pathe News Reel (1948)
  • Botta e Riposta (1951)
  • El Misterio del carro express (1953)
  • El Mensaje de la muerte (1953)
  • Musik im Blut (1955)
  • Bonjour Kathrin (1956)
  • L'Empire de la nuit (1963) (Harold Nicholas)
  • The Liberation of L.B. Jones (1970) (Fayard Nicholas)
  • Uptown Saturday Night (1974) (Harold Nicholas)
  • That's Entertainment! (1974) (archive footage)
  • Brother, Can You Spare a Dime? (1975) (archive footage)
  • Disco 9000 (1976) (Harold Nicholas)
  • That's Dancing! (1985) (archive footage)
  • Tap (1989) (Harold Nicholas)
  • That's Black Entertainment (1990) (archive footage)
  • The Five Heartbeats (1990) (Harold Nicholas)
  • "Alright" (Janet Jackson song) and video (1992)
  • The Nicholas Brothers: We Sing and We Dance (1992)
  • Funny Bones (1995) (Harold Nicholas)
  • I Used to Be in Pictures (2000)
  • Night at the Golden Eagle (2002) (Fayard Nicholas)
  • Broadway: The Golden Age, by the Legends Who Were There (2003)
  • Hard Four (2005)

  • Brotherhood in Rhythm: The Jazz Dancing of the Nicholas Brothers by Constance Valis Hill, ISBN 0-19-513166-5

  1. ^ a b c d e Kennedy Center biography of Faynard Nicholas
  2. ^ a b c d The Nicholas Brothers' official website
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Dancer Fayard Nicholas dies at 91." USA Today (Associated Press) (Jan. 25, 2006).
  4. ^ a b c IMBD biography for Fayard Nicholas
  5. ^ That's the Joint!: the hip-hop studies reader By Mark Anthony Neal, Murray Forman p.34-5
  6. ^ Classes and Performances with Tap Masters
  7. ^ Los Angeles Choreographers and Dancers - Colburn Kids Tap/L.A
  8. ^ National Tap Ensemble cast
  9. ^ Everybody Dance! meet our teachers
  10. ^ NPR Obituary.
  11. ^ Find-a-Grave bio of Fayard Nicholas
  12. ^ a b Fayard Nicholas of renowned Nicholas Brothers dancing duo dies, Jet, February 13, 2006
  13. ^ Selected profiles of African-American Bahá'ís
  14. ^ Century Ballroom Presents, 2nd Annual The Masters of Lindy Hop and Tap
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n http://www.tapdance.org/tap/people/nichbros.htm - Fayard and Harold Nicholas biography
  16. ^ PBS Documentary "Free to Dance" timeline(2001), Great Performances
  17. ^ IMBD Biography for Harold Nicholas
  18. ^ National Museum of Dance Hall of Fame Inductees

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