Award-winning choreographer, director, dancer and alumna Camille A. Brown will speak at the 2023 抖阴短视频 commencement ceremony, Chancellor Brian Cole has announced.
Founder and artistic director of Camille A. Brown & Dancers since 2006, Brown will address undergraduate and graduate students at the University Commencement at 10 a.m. Saturday, May 6, at Wait Chapel on the campus of Wake Forest University.

Camille A. Brown / Photo courtesy of camilleabrown.org
In addition to her iconic work in the dance world, Brown has in recent years branched into theater, opera, film and television. She was Tony-nominated for her directorial debut on Broadway, and has won and been nominated for numerous other awards.
鈥淚 am thrilled that Camille A. Brown will be the speaker for our 57th commencement at 抖阴短视频,鈥 said Chancellor Cole, who will preside over the ceremony. 鈥淪he has already won many well-deserved accolades during her 22-year career but continues to grow and develop as an artist and storyteller, challenging herself and her creative vision.
鈥淚 am perhaps most struck by her commitment to reaching out to her community and across the nation, whether through her choreography, her dance company or her new virtual school, , which offers free classes, lectures and mentorship opportunities. Camille is a tremendous role model for all of us.鈥
Camille A. Brown is a prolific Black choreographer whose work taps into both ancestral and contemporary stories to capture a range of deeply personal experiences and cultural narratives of African American identity.
As artistic director of (CABD), she strives to instill curiosity and reflection in diverse audiences through her emotionally raw and thought-provoking work. Her trilogy on race culture and identity has won accolades: 鈥淢r. TOL E. RAncE鈥 (2012) was honored with aBessie Award; 鈥淏LACK GIRL: Linguistic Play鈥 (2015) was Bessie-nominated; and 鈥渋nk鈥 (2017) premiered at The Kennedy Center to critical acclaim.

Camille A. Brown's directorial debut for the Broadway revival of 鈥渇or colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf鈥 / Photo by Marc J. Franklin and courtesy of camilleabrown.org
In 2022, she made her for the Broadway revival of 鈥渇or colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf,鈥 making her the first Black woman to direct and choreograph a Broadway show since Katherine Dunham in 1955. The production, proclaimed 鈥溾 by The New York Times, received seven Tony Award nominations including best direction of a play and best choreography.
Other Broadway credits include: 鈥淐hoir Boy鈥 (Tony and Drama Desk nominations for best choreography), Tony Award-winning 鈥淥nce On This Island鈥 (Drama Desk, Outer Critics and Lortel nominations), and 鈥淎 Streetcar Named Desire鈥 (2012); off-Broadway: 鈥淭oni Stone鈥 (Lortel and Audelco nominations), 鈥淢uch Ado About Nothing鈥 (Audelco), 鈥淭his Ain鈥檛 No Disco,鈥 鈥淏ella: An American Tall Tale鈥 (Audelco), and 鈥淔ortress of Solitude鈥 (Lortel nomination); and at New York City Center Encores!: 鈥淐abin in the Sky鈥 and 鈥淭ick Tick鈥oom!鈥
In 2021, Brown became the first Black artist to direct a mainstage production at The Metropolitan Opera, sharing directorial duties with James Robinson on Terence Blanchard鈥檚 acclaimed 鈥溾 鈥 the first opera by a Black composer ever performed at the Met. Brown also choreographed the opera, receiving a Bessie nomination for outstanding choreography. She had choreographed 鈥淧orgy & Bess鈥 two years earlier.
This spring, Brown is the choreographer for Blanchard鈥檚 second Met premiere, 鈥,鈥 and 鈥溾 the Broadway-bound musical directed by Kamilah Forbes and written by Dominique Morisseau, this summer at American Conservatory Theater.

Alumna Camille A. Brown created the highly stylized choreography for Netflix's "Ma Rainey's Black Bottom."
Brown鈥檚 film and TV work includes 鈥淗arlem鈥 (2022) (Amazon Prime); 鈥淢a Rainey鈥檚 Black Bottom鈥 (Netflix); Emmy Award-winning 鈥淛esus Christ Superstar Live in Concert!鈥 (NBC); 鈥淣ew Year鈥檚 Eve in Rockefeller Center鈥 (NBC); and 鈥,鈥 a dance film by CABD for Google Arts & Culture.
She has been featured on the cover of Dance Magazine (2018) and Dance Teacher magazine (2016); on PBS' 鈥,鈥 a nationally syndicated documentary series on the arts; and in Vogue and Harper鈥檚 Bazaar.
Brown has received numerous awards including Guggenheim, Doris Duke Artist, Dance Magazine, United States Artists, Audelco, Princess Grace Statue, Jacob鈥檚 Pillow, New York City Center, USA Jay Franke & David Herro Fellow, TED Fellow, and Kennedy Center鈥檚 Next 50. Other awards include a in 2017 and the Obie Award for Sustained Excellence in Choreography and , both in 2020. In 2019, she was named a recipient of the 抖阴短视频 Alumni Artpreneur of the Year Award, for creative enterprise, receiving $20,000 to sustain her company.
Brown began her training at Bernice Johnson Culture Schools for the Arts and Carolyn Devore Dance Studios in Queens and later graduated from the LaGuardia High School of the Performing Arts. She received a B.F.A. in 2001 from the School of Dance at 抖阴短视频, where she studied contemporary dance. She began her professional career as a dancer with Ronald K. Brown/EVIDENCE, a dance company, from 2001-2007.
The speaker for the 抖阴短视频 High School Commencement will be announced at a later date.
Get the best news, performance and alumni stories from 抖阴短视频.
SUBSCRIBE TO OUR NEWSLETTERS(OPENS IN NEW TAB)(OPENS IN NEW TAB)(OPENS IN NEW TAB)(OPENS IN NEW TAB)(OPENS IN NEW TAB)(OPENS IN NEW TAB)(OPENS IN NEW TAB)
February 22, 2023