Oprah and former Alvin Ailey dancer open center in Bedford-Stuyvesant

Sade Baderinwa Image
Friday, June 12, 2015
EXCLUSIVE: Oprah helping out Brooklyn dance students
Sade Baderinwa has the exclusive.

BEDFORD-STUYVESANT (WABC) -- The Oprah Effect, we've all heard about it but to experience it is quite another.

Your life can change on a dime.

And it did for Dwana Smallwood one of the premier dancers for Alvin Ailey.

What started as invite from Oprah turned into more than a half million dollar donation to a dancer's dream.

"Oh my goodness, what a journey from Green Avenue down the street to right now. It's been an extraordinary journey," said Dwana Smallwood, a dancer.

It's a journey that took Smallwood from the streets of Bedford-Stuyvesant to performing around the world as one of the premiere dancers for Alvin Ailey's elite dance company for 12 years. She is considered one of the best modern dancers since Judith Jamieson and Mikhail Barishnakof. Her power and her grace are electrifying.

"Even though Alvin Ailey is one of the biggest companies in the world, and that was the only place I wanted to dance, and I kept thinking is that my life's purpose to perform," Smallwood said.

And that could be enough for some but not for Dwana. So when life came knocking at her door once again, she did as she always did. She danced her way to the next opportunity this time appearing on "The Oprah Winfrey Show".

But that performance morphed into so much more.

"I said please, please, please would you go to my school in South Africa and teach my girls what you know," Oprah Winfrey said.

And she did. Her passion took on a new form as a teacher.

But what was supposed to be a one week stay at the school, turned into a four year odyssey.

"First I was begging for a week. Then I was begging for a year," Winfrey said.

The lessons extended far beyond dance, even for Dwana.

"It unleashed this person that knew that I could reach young people. I could figure out what's going on with a young woman and I could help her figure out the brilliance within her," Smallwood said.

"What she did at my school, she came in to teach dance but she taught them about life, she taught them all of the social emotional skills that we know it takes to really be successful, and not only survive but to thrive in the world," Winfrey said.

With her mission accomplished in South Africa, home was calling her back.

"I truly love Brooklyn and I love Bed-Stuy," Smallwood said.

But she returned with a gift.

She opened the Dwana Smallwood Performing Arts Center in the very neighborhood where she grew up. It's a neighborhood long battered by crime, poverty and drugs.

"We got to put it right in their faces and make them see there is another choice, there is another way there are other options," Smallwood said.

"I feel safer in here with people who are about me and I know can protect me," said Adege Joseph, a student.

This 4,000 square foot space was made possible by more than a half million dollar donation by Oprah. Using her blueprint in South Africa, Dwana used her brute honesty to mold and inspire these young girls to dream bigger dreams.

"Ms. Dwana has inspired me to become anything I want to become," said Sahai Heyward, a student.

"She taught me how to be a better person, how to respect myself," said Imani Smiley Herring, a student.

While Dwana's journey is far from over, one pli at a time, she's changing lives and fulfilling her life's purpose.

"I want to give you wings so you can fly can just give you the tools to compete on the world stage as a dancer, as a doctor, a teacher, anything you want," Smallwood said.

"She helped us learn that we can always do our best and to never give up. Whenever we're falling or we need help with anything, we have to keep on trying and just stand up and be strong," a student said.

For more information please visit: http://dwanasmallwoodpac.org/

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