
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or
Based on William Melvin Kelley’s 1964 short story collection, Dancers on the Shore is an anthology series exploring the lives of Black families in Harlem and The Bronx.
The series draws from Kelley’s original sixteen stories about three families; the Careys, the Dunfords and the Bedlows—some interlinked and spanning generations from Reconstruction-era South to 1980s New York—as well as additional works he published elsewhere.
ADAPTED and DIRECTED by Yhane Washington Smith, STORY EDITING by Jesi Kelley, and PRODUCED BY The Family Eye. The theme song “Through the fire” is produced by Rikko 009.
Season 1 follows the Dunfords, a middle-class family living in Harlem’s Sugar Hill in the 1950s. Dr. Charles Dunford and his wife Eleanor raise three children: Chig, the thoughtful eldest; Peter, the sharp-tongued middle child; and Connie, whose path takes an unexpected turn. Their stories explore identity, privilege, and the quiet struggles of being human.
ABOUT WILLIAM MELVIN KELLEY:
Born in Seaview hospital, a sanitorium for tuberculosis patients in New York’s Staten Island in 1937, William Melvin Kelley was raised on Carpenter Avenue in the Bronx. He attended the Fieldston School and Harvard University. His first and most well-known novel “A Different Drummer” was published in 1962 when he was just 23 years old. In his lifetime, Kelley was the recipient of a number of awards; the Dana Reed Literary prize, Harvard University, 1960; Bread Loaf Writers Conference grant, 1962; Whitney Foundation award, 1963; Rosenthal Foundation award, 1963; Transatlantic Review award, 1964; Black Academy of Arts and Letters award, 1970; and the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award for Lifetime Achievement, 2008. In 2021 both he and his wife, Aiki Kelley were awarded the American Book Award for the illustrated re-issue of “Dunfords Travels Everywheres,” which Aiki illustrated.
Dubbed “the lost giant of American literature” by The New Yorker, Kelley was a professor of creative writing at Sarah Lawrence College and lived in Harlem. He died in 2017.
www.williammelvinkelley.com
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
5
44 ratings
Based on William Melvin Kelley’s 1964 short story collection, Dancers on the Shore is an anthology series exploring the lives of Black families in Harlem and The Bronx.
The series draws from Kelley’s original sixteen stories about three families; the Careys, the Dunfords and the Bedlows—some interlinked and spanning generations from Reconstruction-era South to 1980s New York—as well as additional works he published elsewhere.
ADAPTED and DIRECTED by Yhane Washington Smith, STORY EDITING by Jesi Kelley, and PRODUCED BY The Family Eye. The theme song “Through the fire” is produced by Rikko 009.
Season 1 follows the Dunfords, a middle-class family living in Harlem’s Sugar Hill in the 1950s. Dr. Charles Dunford and his wife Eleanor raise three children: Chig, the thoughtful eldest; Peter, the sharp-tongued middle child; and Connie, whose path takes an unexpected turn. Their stories explore identity, privilege, and the quiet struggles of being human.
ABOUT WILLIAM MELVIN KELLEY:
Born in Seaview hospital, a sanitorium for tuberculosis patients in New York’s Staten Island in 1937, William Melvin Kelley was raised on Carpenter Avenue in the Bronx. He attended the Fieldston School and Harvard University. His first and most well-known novel “A Different Drummer” was published in 1962 when he was just 23 years old. In his lifetime, Kelley was the recipient of a number of awards; the Dana Reed Literary prize, Harvard University, 1960; Bread Loaf Writers Conference grant, 1962; Whitney Foundation award, 1963; Rosenthal Foundation award, 1963; Transatlantic Review award, 1964; Black Academy of Arts and Letters award, 1970; and the Anisfield-Wolf Book Award for Lifetime Achievement, 2008. In 2021 both he and his wife, Aiki Kelley were awarded the American Book Award for the illustrated re-issue of “Dunfords Travels Everywheres,” which Aiki illustrated.
Dubbed “the lost giant of American literature” by The New Yorker, Kelley was a professor of creative writing at Sarah Lawrence College and lived in Harlem. He died in 2017.
www.williammelvinkelley.com
Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
494 Listeners
303 Listeners
637 Listeners
49 Listeners
309 Listeners
453 Listeners
612 Listeners
156 Listeners
539 Listeners
120 Listeners
78 Listeners
372 Listeners
234 Listeners
12 Listeners
4,074 Listeners
574 Listeners
64 Listeners
29 Listeners
65 Listeners
189 Listeners
58 Listeners
482 Listeners
89 Listeners
23 Listeners
35 Listeners