The advance students of the Young Actors Guild performed at the April 4th Foundation's 19th Annual Commemorative Awards. (Photo by Wiley Henry) |
Chrysti
Chandler stood in the back of the room and looked on approvingly while her
young dance troupe was performing at the April 4th
Foundation’s 19th Annual Commemorative Awards at the Hilton Hotel in Memphis.
This was one of the dance troupe’s finest moments and more than entertainment
filler on the program that evening. It
was symmetry and poetry in motion. Their precise moves were imbued with the
spirit of the ancestors.
“I
think they did a great job,” said Chandler, basing her opinion on the applause
from the audience and numerous positive comments that were posted on social
media platforms.
The venue was one of many for Chandler that showcases the talent
and creativity of the members of the Young Actors Guild (YAG), a nonprofit
dance and theatre academy she founded 28 years ago.
Chrysti Chandler is the group's founder and artistic director. (Photo by Sabrina Norwood) |
YAG Community Arts is located at 619 North Seventh St. in Memphis.
There are two satellite locations: 1926 First Commercial Dr. N. in Southaven,
Miss., and 1391 Ferguson St., also in Memphis.
YAG has performed at hundreds of venues in the Mid-South and before
prominent individuals since its inception. The impact that YAG has had in the
community has touched over 10,000 youth, according to the group’s website.
In 2021, Chandler will be preparing to move YAG’s complete
operation into the old Memphis Fire Station No. 22 at Lamar and Pendleton after
the building is converted into studio and dance spaces.
The building will be christened the Harriet Performing Arts for
Children.
“It will be named after Harriet Tubman (the abolitionist who freed
more than 300 slaves),” said Chandler. “We’re planning to break ground in six
months and complete it in the next two years.”
There will be space for artists to practice their dance moves and
a lobby as well. “I don’t know the seating capacity right now,” she said,
adding: “We will do workshops so they (youth) can do their own work on stage.”
After the “Harriet” is up and fully operational, Chandler plans to
teach youth to develop, direct and produce their original plays. She wants them
to learn the full gamut of production.
“Our hope is to bring in tourists so they can see the talent that
we have in Memphis,” she said. “We will have other ongoing productions, but
this will be coming from Memphis’ own playwrights.”
If the “pieces” are good enough, Chandler plans to enter them into
festivals. She is confident that her group can measure up in talent and
creativity, no matter the age bracket.
Alexandria Edwards, for example, is proof that Chandler’s
performing arts group can move up to the next level. The 15-year-old breezed
through the monologue at the awards program with passion and emotional fervor before
the entire group started moving to the music and rhythm of gospel artist Kurt
Carr’s “For Every Mountain.”
Alexandria is one of 150 kids that Chandler is training at the
dance and theatre academy. “They come from everywhere,” she said, even as far
away as Philadelphia, Chicago and Atlanta, when the summer camps convene.
Three of her students, she pointed out, auditioned in California
and were accepted into the Debbie Allen Dance Academy Summer Intensive in Atlanta.
Others have gone on to realize varying degrees of success.
In 2006, Gideon McKinney made it as a semi-finalist in Season 5 of
“American Idol” before he was eliminated. In 2013, Kris Thomas, also a singing
phenom, competed in Season 4 of “The Voice.” And in 2018, Gideon’s younger
sister, Evvie McKinney, won the first season of “The Four: Battle for Stardom.”
“I trained them all,” said Chandler, who performed her first play,
“Little Red Riding Hood,” when she was just 5 years old in the back yard of her
mother’s home in South Memphis.
She converted the patio into a stage. The audience, she said, filled
up the backyard. Many of them arrived from Glenview, Castalia and other
neighborhoods in South Memphis. Her creativity was just beginning to blossom at
that tinder age.
“The arts kept me alive,” she said. “That was my escape.”
Chandler’s group is scheduled to perform a tribute to Michael
Jackson, “To Michael With Love,” on May 4, 6 p.m., at the University of Memphis
Rose Theatre. This is another opportunity for them to show their teacher and
trainer that they are ready for the big stage.
For more information about the Young Actors Guild, call
901-240-2103 or 662-536-6122. A capital campaign is underway to help transform
the firehouse into the Harriet Performing Arts for Children. Contact Sabrina
Norwood at 901-240-2103 for details.
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