Trailblazing Afro-Latina empowered by the South’s racism changed Black representation on her Island – St. Louis American

Posted By on October 2, 2021

Sylvia del Villard dancing

Stories like Sylvia del Villard's journey from Puerto Rico's capital of San Juan to the segregated South in the 1950's are not too common. So it fits that during Afro-Latino awareness month from September 15 to October 15 light is shed on Villard's story.

"The experience she had in Tennessee made a big impact on her and made her realize the value of Black Culture," Artist, Oxil Febles said.

Villard (1928-1990) took a chance to study in the South, in the midst of Brown v Board of Education, and before a 6-year-old Ruby Bridges would be chastised for daring to get educated. Villard was born and raised in Puerto Rico and moved to study sociology and anthropology in Tennessee at the HBU of Fisk University.

"Her mission was to include African history, not as an oddity, not as exotica but as an integral part of what it is to be Puerto Rican," said Dr. Marta Moreno Vega, President, and Founder of Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute.

It was very uncommon for Latinos to migrate to non-coastal states during the first half of the 20th century. So uncommon in fact, according to Latinx, there were fewer than 6,000 Latinos in Tennessee despite a population of more than three million in 1950.

Of that small population, there was not a census on Puerto Ricans, a US commonwealth in Tennessee or in Missouri until around 1960. The census showed in 1960, 300 Puerto Ricans in Tennessee and 1,200 in Missouri, which is significantly less than one percent of both states' population.

Sylvia del Villard

Villard though initially disturbed by the South's flagrant racism, this same experience later empowered and fueled her.

"In Puerto Rico, racism existed there just as it did it the mainland US, Moreno Vega said.

Villard would become well-known in Puerto Rico primarily for Afro-Boricua Ballet where she would dance to Afro-Antillean and Negro Spirituals. Villard danced in Puerto Rico for Compaa Asociacin Latinoamericana de Cultura. She performed inValley Without Echo, inPalesiana y Aquelarre,Palesanisima,Witches of Salem,The Boy Friend,The Crucible, andKwamina.

Villard also acted inLos Traidores de San ngel,The Time We Lost, andLife of Sin.

"Many Puerto Rican people said what she was performing was not Puerto Rican," Moreno Vega said.

She explained Villard pushed diversity and the African culture to the fore-front of entertainment at a time when eurocentrism was predominant.

After Villard left the South because of the racism she completed her studies in Puerto Rico then moved to New York, where she became an actress, dancer, and choreographer, embracing and incorporating her African roots in her work and art.

"She was our Angela Davis," Moreno Vega said. "The Black movement of the late 60s was something she took to Puerto Rico."

Villard encouraged and inspired Afro-Latinos to embrace their African heritage.

Later Villard founded the Afro-Boricua El Coqui Theater in 1968 in Puerto Rico, a milestone and became an important aspect of Black Puerto Rican culture.

She did not shy away from using her voice either and was arguably ahead of her time publicly condemning blackface in the 1970s. She took a stance and faced backlash from the Puerto Rican television industry when she called out actress Angela Mayer's 1974 film featuring blackface. Villard went as far as to publicly call the blackface repulsive and said Blacks are "tired" of it.

Sylvia del Villard performing

Moreno Vega shared Villard's legacy on Black representation.

"There were no Black studies in Puerto Rico," Moreno Vega said. "She was a pioneer; she walked that reality, talked that reality and she performed that reality. Her intent was to provide a lesson on the journey of African descendants."

View post:

Trailblazing Afro-Latina empowered by the South's racism changed Black representation on her Island - St. Louis American

Related Posts

Comments

Comments are closed.

matomo tracker