This beautiful picture book tells the little-known story of Raven
Wilkinson, the first African American woman to dance for a major
classical ballet company and an inspiration to Misty Copeland.
When she was only five years old, her parents took her to see the
Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo.
Raven perched on her crushed velvet seat, heard the tympani, and cried
with delight even before the curtain lifted. From that moment on, her
passion for dance only grew stronger.
No black ballerina had ever danced with a major touring troupe before.
Raven would be the first.
Raven Wilkinson was born on February 2, 1935, in New York City. From the
time she was a little girl, all she wanted to do was dance. On Raven's
ninth birthday, her uncle gifted her with ballet lessons, and she
completely fell in love with dance. While she was a student at Columbia
University, Raven auditioned for the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo and was
finally accepted on her third try, even after being told she couldn't
dance with them because of her skin color.
When she started touring with her troupe in the United States in 1955,
Raven encountered much racism in the South, but the applause, alongside
the opportunity to dance, made all the hardship worth it. Several years
later she would dance for royalty with the Dutch National Ballet and
regularly performed with the New York City Opera until she was fifty.
This beautiful picture book tells the uplifting story of the first
African American woman to dance for a major classical ballet company and
how she became a huge inspiration for Misty Copeland. Theodore Taylor
III's unique, heavy line style of illustration brings a deeper level of
fluidity and life to the work, and Misty Copeland's beautifully written
foreword will delight ballet and dance fans of all ages.