Tamsier Joof Aviance
Tamsier Joof Aviance | |
---|---|
Born | Tamsier Joof 17 May 1973 Kensal Rise, London, England |
Education | London Studio Centre; Middlesex University; University of Wolverhampton[1][2][3] |
Occupation(s) | Dancer, choreographer, actor, model,entrepreneur,[1][2][4][5] Radio presenter[6] and author[7] |
Years active | 1989–present (on-and-off) |
Known for | dance, radio personality |
Parent | Bai Modi Joof[8] |
Relatives | Alieu Ebrima Cham Joof (uncle);[8] Pap Cheyassin Secka (cousin); Bai Konte (great-uncle); other relatives: Joof family |
Website | Seereer Heritage |
Tamsier Joof Aviance or Tamsier Aviance (né Tamsier Joof[9][10] — 17 May 1973,[2][11][12] former stage name: Tam Jo[2]) is a British dancer, choreographer, actor, model, entrepreneur, radio presenter, and author. He took the name "Aviance" after joining the House of Aviance — one of the legendary vogue-ball houses in the United States. As well as appearing in several musicals, and as stage backing dancer for Mary Kiani, Take That and Janet Jackson,[1][2][13] he was also known within the London voguing scene during the 1990s and is among the original London vogue dancers of that era.[14][15]
Early life and education
[edit]Tamsier was born in North West London (Kensal Rise) into a Senegalese-Gambian family.[2] His late father was a Gambian barrister and solicitor,[16] and his mother a business woman.[2] Tamsier left the UK when he was two years old after his father decided to move his family back to the Gambia and establish his chambers there.[2][16] He returned to the UK couple of years later to pursue his education. In an interview with West Africa magazine, Tamsier said:
Coming from an African family where education is everything, I felt I needed to please both my parents and myself. I love dance and hated accounting, but accounting provided respectability in African circles so I studied both.
— [2]
Tamsier studied classical ballet, jazz, African, contemporary, Latin, tap and labanotation.[2][11] He attended Middlesex University, the University of Wolverhampton and the London Studio Centre and holds an Accounting and Finance Honours Degree, a PGCE and a Performing Arts Dance Degree.[1][2][3] As of 2006, he was a non-active qualified teacher and an Associate of the Imperial Society of Teachers of Dancing and the International Dance Teachers Association.[17][18] Tamsier also took additional classes at London's Pineapple Dance Studios and Danceworks in various dance styles such as breaking; commercial jazz with the late Nicky Bentley (one of the earlier dance teachers at Pineapple Dance Studios[19][20]) and with choreographer Shanie, whom he describes as influencing his commercial funk and jazz style.[2] He also studied popping and street locking with Jimmy Williams - one of the early UK street lockers, and attended workshops with internationally renowned guest choreographers like Bryant Baldwin (USA) and Mauro Mosconi (Italy).[1][2]
Career
[edit]Dance and choreography
[edit]Tamsier worked as a stage backing dancer for Mary Kiani, Kym Mazelle, Jocelyn Brown, Martha Wash, MN8, Take That, Honeyz, Impact Dance Productions (UK, Sadler's Wells) and also appeared on Janet Jackson's 1995 World Tour at Wembley Arena (London leg of the tour, small portion).[1][2][13] Some of his musical theatre work include Starlight Express, Fame, Rent, Hot Mikado and The Wiz.[1][11][13][21][22][23][24][25] Choreographic work include "Consecrated Love" for the Yozo Fass Dance Theatre Company, which he co-choreographed and performed in;[1] "Dance Fusion" for the Choreographer's Ball (London); and "Our Town Story" for East London (London Borough of Hackney) with Ujamaa Arts, supported by McDonald's for the year 2000 Millennium Dome Show.[26]
Along with his experience in mainstream dance genres such as jazz and ballet, Tamsier was also involved in the underground London vogue scene during the late 1980s or early 1990s.[14] By the early to late 1990s, Tamsier was one of the most recognisable New way voguers within the London underground scene and worked extensively in several London clubs as a podium dancer / voguer including Heaven Nightclub, Equinox, The Tube, Lowdown, Trade, Vox and Busby's.[2][14][15] It was whilst working as a dancer in the early 1990s at Heaven that Tamsier met the legendary Jean Michel who will become one of his closest friends and vogue mentor. The two regularly frequented the London club scene giving performances and engaging in vogue battles with other London voguers.[2]
In 1997 whilst working for Heaven Nightclub's host and performer — Miss Kimberley as a backing voguer, Tamsier was interviewed and photographed by the alternative culture magazine Bizarre. Tamsier's "interesting look and voguing talent" made him a prime candidate for an interview.[15] Tamsier credited his old friend and mentor Jean Michel for teaching him the elements of vogue and for mentoring him, as well as watching legendary U.S. voguers like Willi Ninja and Hector Xtravaganza. As a regular user of Pineapple Dance Studios in Covent Garden and Danceworks in Bond Street, Tamsier encouraged his mentor to run vogue classes in these studios. When Jean Michel was finally given a spot at Danceworks, Tamsier helped spread the word among his dancer friends "some of whom have had no exposure to real voguing other than what they've seen on Madonna's 1990 Vogue video." Tamsier regularly attended the class and supported his mentor.[15]
Teaching
[edit]Tamsier was a dance teacher and lecturer, teaching jazz, ballet and contemporary. He taught at Carol Straker Dance School in London, Wood Green High School College of Sports, the University of Birmingham and the London Guildhall University.[4][11][27][28] Tamsier ran workshops in various inner city schools in London and the Midlands. He was a dance coach/consultant for Sandwell and Dudley Borough Council in partnership with the region's development agency (Advantage West Midlands) and ran dance workshops throughout the West Midlands and also taught the Qualifications and Curriculum Authority's GCSE and A-level dance syllabi at various schools in the region including the A-level labanotation syllabus.[29] He also taught advance/professional jazz at various dance studios including Adage Dance Studios in Harborne (Birmingham).[29]
Retirement and comeback
[edit]Tamsier retired from professional dancing (on-and-off) in 2001 to pursue other business ventures, taking only non-lengthy dance contracts or teaching.[11] In March 2015, Tamsier came out of retirement to appear on FKA twigs music video "Glass & Patron" as a vogue dancer starring alongside Javier Ninja, David Magnifique and Benjamin Milan.[9] The video was officially released on FKA twigs YouTube channel on Monday, 23 March 2015.[9]
Acting and modelling
[edit]Tamsier did some acting and modelling during his career working with artistic directors like Michel Wallace (the French choreographer and artistic director of the Yozo Fass Dance Theatre Company) and Paa C Quaye (the Ghanaian actor—director and artistic director of Ujamaa Arts).[1] Tamsier appeared as background actor in the 2002 drama Dirty Pretty Things;[4] in the 2003 comedy Love Actually.;[4] and in the Wicked (2024 film). He was also a film, television and theatre costume model for Academy Costumes, and one of his major modelling jobs was modelling the costumes of the Tomb Raider 2 film directed by Jan de Bont and starring Angelina Jolie.[4]
Entrepreneur and radio broadcasting
[edit]Tamsier was a former director of Bluewings Employment Security & Training Limited and Blue Light Training Services Limited[30] both of which he resigned from[5][31] and now runs his own businesses.[5] He is an investor in African businesses seeking start-up or expansion capital through MYC4.[32] Tamsier was also the founder of the Seereer Resource Centre (SRC), an organisation he conceived in 2008.[5] The SRC preserves and promotes Seereer culture. Tamsier is a member of that ethnic group.[5] He is co-author of Learn to speak Saafi-Saafi: The complete language course and author of the Learn to speak the Seereer languages syllabus.[7] Tamsier is also the founder of Seereer Radio[6][33] which broadcast 24/7 for the Serer and Senegambian community. Tamsier is a presenter on Seereer Radio and is the main anchor on the Cosaan Seereer Show, a weekly cultural program which he co-hosts with Demba Sene, Mamadou Fall, Moussoukoro Sidibé and new host Laity Sene.[34] He is also a regular on the Open Mike Show presented by Mamadou Fall. Tamsier is a strong opponent of President Yahya Jammeh's regime and regularly speaks out against the brutality of the Jammeh regime on Seereer Radio, and occasionally on Gainako Radio.[35] Tamsier regularly visits the Gambia to report on the country's political situation for Seereer Radio. He covered the trial of lawyer Ousainou Darboe and his Executive Committee, 9 May 2016 political prisoners - imprisoned for demanding electrical reform and the Gambian presidential election, 2016.[36][37][38][39] He is one of few (if not the only) Gambian radio presenters living in the diaspora that regularly criticises the Jammeh regime yet continues to enter the country. Whilst he was still in the Gambia covering the 2016 presidential election and the release of Ousainou Darboe from jail, he continued to criticise the brutality of the Jammeh regime as he has done on previous visits. When asked by his colleagues whether he fears for his life being so candid about his criticism of the Jammeh regime, he replied "I may not be born here but my grandparents were born here and have fought and died for this country. If I do not have more stake in this country than Jammeh, then Jammeh certainly does not have more stake in this country than me."[40] On the same topic, Tamsier had said on the Open Mike and Cosaan Seereer shows that "a real Serer does not fear death." He is also known for carrying out investigative journalism against the Jammeh regime and his enablers and outing them on the radio.[41] He is one of few radio critics of Jammeh to have interviewed President-Elect Adama Barrow face-to-face on Gambian soil during the Jammeh regime (done at least twice). The first being Barrow's election campaign in Bakau on 29 November 2016, and after his victory in the 2016 presidential election - face-to-face interview at the Kairaba Hotel on 7 December 2016.[39]
Personal life and controversy
[edit]"One cannot love Seereer history and culture yet despise Seereer religion. Seereer history and culture are closely linked to Seereer religion and cannot be separated from it. The true history and culture of the Seereer people is embedded in Seereer religion. And in similarity, the true history and culture of the African people is embedded in the Traditional African religions. To truly understand and appreciate our great history and culture, we must first love, respect and honour the religion of our forefathers in its orthodox form, free from any syncretism or dilution. Only then would we be able to decipher Seereer religion with a clean and open heart to get to the bottom of our true history and culture. It is in the Seereer religion where the secret ingredients which make up our history, culture, philosophy and civilisations are found."
Tamsier Joof Aviance[42]
Although Tamsier was brought up in a Muslim household, he rejected Islam in his early life and became a devout follower of A ƭat Roog (the Seereer religious faith, religion of his ancestors).[43] In his Open Mike broadcast titled: Prejudice against Seereer religion (A ƭat Roog) and other Traditional African religions in Senegambia and other parts of Africa (Wednesday, 8 February 2017), Tamsier criticised some quarters of the Senegambian and African Muslim and Christian communities by referring to them as "hypocrites who like to demonise the traditional religions of their forefathers—yet when their prayers are not answered by their foreign Gods, they revert to the religions of their ancestors through Traditional African religious seers/diviners—seeking answers or solutions to their problems."[43] Tamsier went on to state that: "One cannot love Senegambian history and culture or African history and culture for that matter yet despise Traditional African religion, because African history and culture are deeply rooted in the Traditional African religions."[43]
Tamsier is also known for criticising the powerful Muslim brotherhoods of Senegal and their families for their "greed", "selfishness", and meddling in Senegalese politics; the Mauritanian government for failing to eradicate slavery in Mauritania and the African Union and ECOWAS for their failure to intervene and eradicate this "ghastly practice" in Mauritania.[44] He is also quite vocal in criticising the Senegalese Muslim Marabout schools' (daraa) "abuse of children" (talibés ) sent to their Quranic schools for learning, through the use of "physical abuse", "starvation", "cruely", and being sent to beg on the streets of Senegal.[45]
See also
[edit]External links
[edit]- Lamin Faye, "Interview with Tamsier Joof", Seereer Resource Centre, 28 March 2015, retrieved 6 April 2015
- Tamsier Joof Aviance at IMDb
- Tamsier at the Internet Music Video Database (IMVDb)
- The Seereer Resource Centre and Seereer Radio joint podcast : Listen to shows presented by Joof
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i London Metro : Review of "Consecrated Love" (and interview of choreographers) - 7 August 1999, p. 57.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p "Senegambian taking the dance world by storm", West Africa, 5 June 1995, p. 4.
- ^ a b Middlesex University Records - adm (1996)
- ^ a b c d e The Casting Collective artist biography : "Tamsier Joof" (2000—2003)
- ^ a b c d e "About Us" Archived 2 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine, Seereer Resource Centre's website, and "The Team" Archived 7 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine, retrieved 29 March 2015.
- ^ a b Tamsier Joof on Seereer Radio
- ^ a b Learn to speak Saafi-Saafi: The complete language course by Tamsier Joof, The Seereer Resource Centre and Demba Sene. Published by Seereer Heritage Press (2017) [in] Google books [1]
- ^ a b Cosaan Seereer : Exclusive interview with the late Alhaji Alieu Ebrima Cham Joof (aka : Cham Joof) by the Seereer Resource Centre and Seereer Radio [2]
- ^ a b c "FKA twigs - Glass & Patron (Official Music Video YTMAs)", YouTube. Tamsier credited as a dancer.
- ^ Wonderland Magazine: "NIGHT CRAWLING 004: REALNESS KIKI VOGUE BALL" [3]
- ^ a b c d e The Comet newspaper (Stevenage) interview : "This is it", 23 August 2001, p. 21.
- ^ Tamsier's director profile in Find the company; retrieved 27 March 2015.
- ^ a b c The cast, Flymonkey Productions : "The Wiz" (2000 & 2001) at Hackney Empire. Review of this show can be found in the London Evening Standard, 11 May 2001.
- ^ a b c The Face, July Issue, 1991, p. 10.
- ^ a b c d Bizarre, April 1997, p. 15.
- ^ a b William Dixon Colley, "Champion of free speech (Tribute)", The Nation (Gambia), 7 June 1993.
- ^ ISTD : List of non-active Associates (2006)
- ^ IDTA : Non-active Associates (2006)
- ^ "Nicky Bentley obituary", The Guardian, 7 October 2009 (retrieved 27 March 2015).
- ^ Jamie Welham, "Woman who helped the stars dance dies at 48", Camden New Journal, 16 October 2009 (retrieved 27 March 2015).
- ^ The Cast : "Hot Mikado", The Gordon Craig Theatre in association with Josef Weinbeger (August 2001). Reviews in The Comet (Stevenage), 16 August 2001, p. 45.
- ^ UK Theatre Web Database. Retrieved: 27 June 2023
- ^ UK Theatre Web Database. Retrieved: 27 June 2023
- ^ UK Theatre Web Database. Retrieved: 27 June 2023
- ^ UK Theatre Web Database. Retrieved: 27 June 2023
- ^ Hackney Gazette review of Our Town Story (East London, Hackney's entry), 5 January 2000, p. 3.
- ^ London Guildhall University "Academic Staff" (bio) (1999)
- ^ Carol Straker Dance School prospectus : "Biography of teachers" (2000)
- ^ a b Advantage West Midlands Newsletter, May 2004, p. 17.
- ^ Tamsier Joof's director profile in Duedil; retrieved 27 March 2015.
- ^ Tamsier Joof's director profile in Company Director Check.
- ^ Tamsier Joof's investor profile Archived 14 August 2017 at the Wayback Machine in MYC4; retrieved 27 March 2015.
- ^ "Seereer Radio | The Voice of the Seereer Community". Seereer Radio | The Voice of the Seereer Community. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
- ^ "Seereer Radio | The Voice of the Seereer Community". Seereer Radio | The Voice of the Seereer Community. Retrieved 18 April 2018.
- ^ The Seereer Resource Centre and Seereer Radio joint podcast : Tamsier covering Mamadou Fall on the Open Mike Show on 17 May 2016 Archived 2 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine (one of many samples of Tamsier speaking against the Jammeh regime)
- ^ The Seereer Resource Centre and Seereer Radio official podcast : Lawyer Ousainou Darboe and executive committee’s hearing : Gambia demonstration - Tamsier Joof interviews with Fatoumata Tambajang, Yamoundow Gaye and unnamed man (13 June 2016) Archived 2 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ The Seereer Resource Centre and Seereer Radio official podcast : Open Mike Special : Presented by Mamadou Fall, Tamsier Joof and Demba Sene (Monday, 9 May 2016) Archived 2 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ The Seereer Resource Centre and Seereer Radio official podcast : 14 June 2016 : Judge’s ruling on the 6 female demonstrators arrested on 9 May 2016 Gambia demonstration Archived 2 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Seereer Radio : Open Mike Specials Gambian Elections 2016 - broadcast on 29 and 30 November 2016; 1st, 2, 5 and 7 December 2016. Presented by Mamadou Fall and Tamsier Joof [4]
- ^ Seereer Radio : Open Mike, Presented by Mamadou Fall, Tamsier Joof and Mousssoukoro Sidebe (7 December 2016)
- ^ Listen to : Open Mike presented by Tamsier Joof (Tuesday, 17 May 2016) Archived 2 October 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Tamsier Joof" - Presenter profile [in] Seereer Radio [5]
- ^ a b c Open Mike : Prejudice against Seereer religion (A ƭat Roog) and other Traditional African religions in Senegambia and other parts of Africa (Wednesday, 8 February 2017) [6]
- ^ Open Mike : Slavery in Mauritania (Monday, 6th Feb 2017)
- ^ Open Mike : Presented by Moussoukoro Sidibé (Tuesday, 4th October 2016) [7]
- Living people
- 1973 births
- Serer dancers
- English choreographers
- Serer choreographers
- Black British male actors
- Serer writers
- Serer male actors
- House of Aviance
- British male models
- English people of Senegalese descent
- English people of Gambian descent
- People from Kensal Green
- People from Paddington
- English male dancers
- English male actors
- 20th-century British dancers
- 20th-century English male actors
- British critics of Islam
- British critics of Christianity
- Gambian pan-Africanists
- Senegalese pan-Africanists
- Joof family
- Actors from the London Borough of Brent