The American Spectacle: Dance, Art & Culture Podcast

Thomas King Flagg

The American Spectacle is a dance and arts podcast hosted by author and artist Tom Flagg, featuring in-depth conversations with dancers, choreographers, and cultural leaders. Each episode explores dance, artistic identity, and the role of art in shaping culture, with insights from professionals working across contemporary dance, musical theater, and performance. From dance history and creative process to mentorship, representation, and the politics of art, the series offers a behind-the-scenes look at the artists shaping today’s cultural landscape. Guests include Peter Chu, Michelle Audet, Jamal Story, Marcus Smith, Alexandra Wells, and Shaun Taylor-Corbett.

Episodes

  1. Marcus Smith on Community Revitalization Through Arts and Leadership

    Apr 11

    Marcus Smith on Community Revitalization Through Arts and Leadership

    Marcus Smith joins Thomas King Flagg to discuss how arts programming can strengthen communities, support young people, and create real local momentum. The conversation focuses on Brevard and Melbourne but offers a broader framework: culture grows through consistent platforms, safe spaces, committed leadership, and sustainable models. Smith is a retired U.S. Air Force lieutenant colonel, financial advisor, and community organizer focused on arts, culture, and entertainment as tools for civic renewal. Originally from Atlanta, he chose to remain in Brevard County to build local impact, describing himself as an implementer who turns ideas into visible outcomes. A central concept in the episode is the ACE movement, linking arts, culture, and entertainment to quality-of-life improvements. The goal is not one-off events, but a functioning ecosystem where people can gather, express themselves, and build civic pride. One key example is Brevard’s Got Talent, a recurring showcase designed to provide safe, consistent opportunities for performers. Smith emphasizes the importance of cadence, reliable venues, and open access across disciplines, positioning the program as both cultural platform and development pipeline. Mentorship and youth development are core themes. Smith argues that creative expression provides essential outlets, and without safe channels, communities risk losing opportunities for positive growth. With structure and support, those same spaces can strengthen both individuals and neighborhoods. The conversation also addresses leadership and sustainability. Smith highlights the need for systems, partnerships, and monetization strategies that move beyond short-term donations toward long-term value creation. The episode also connects programming to place, including work around historic venues and local identity, reinforcing how culture, history, and community memory can be developed together. For arts leaders and organizers, this episode offers clear insights: Consistency builds trust and participationSafe spaces enable real community growthCulture functions as civic infrastructureExecution turns ideas into impactWatch the full interview --- Featured Book: The Dressing Drink What if the truth you were hiding was the very thing that could set you free? The Dressing Drink is a deeply personal memoir from Thomas King Flagg, tracing a life shaped by performance, legacy, and long-buried truths. From old Hollywood to backstage dressing rooms, it reveals the forces that shaped both the artist and the man behind the work. 📘 The Dressing Drink — Available on Amazon, Kindle, Audible, & TheDressingDrink.net --- 💃 FlaggDance — Programs, media, and more at FlaggDance.com ✨ Follow Us: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Facebook 🔗 All links & updates: FlaggDance.com/links

    23 min
  2. Rafael Xavier on Breaking, Storytelling, and Mentorship

    Apr 11

    Rafael Xavier on Breaking, Storytelling, and Mentorship

    Rafael Xavier joins Thomas King Flagg for a conversation on breaking, creativity, and what it takes to build a durable artistic life. The episode traces Xavier’s path from early hip hop influence to choreography, theater, filmmaking, and youth mentorship. For artists and educators, it offers practical lessons on discipline, curiosity, and meeting young people where they are. Xavier is a breaker, choreographer, and interdisciplinary artist known for blending hip hop movement with theater, visual storytelling, and music. His work spans performance, film, and education, including connections to academic spaces like Princeton and long-term youth engagement. He first connected with breaking as a teenager after seeing it on Soul Train. Even as the form faded from some environments, he stayed committed. That persistence became foundational to both his career and creative identity. A turning point came through Rennie Harris Puremovement and the production Rome & Jewels, where he saw breaking, rap, and narrative coexist on a theatrical stage. This shaped his long-term direction as a choreographer. A central theme in the episode is process. Xavier describes building his practice across writing, photography, music, and movement, allowing curiosity to evolve into a clear artistic voice. His approach emphasizes patience and consistency over short-term visibility. He also discusses his film Swerve, inspired by Philadelphia’s bike culture and developed during the COVID shutdown. The project reflects his broader focus on storytelling rooted in real communities and mentorship. Xavier’s approach to mentorship is direct: meet young people where they are, build trust, and guide them through consistent engagement. He argues this relationship-based method creates stronger outcomes than one-way instruction. The conversation also addresses digital culture, noting the gap between watching dance and practicing it. Xavier emphasizes that real growth still depends on presence, repetition, and community. For artists, educators, and arts leaders, this episode offers clear insights: Interdisciplinary training builds durable artistsPatience is a professional skillMentorship must be relationalCommunity stories can scaleWatch the full interview --- Featured Book: The Dressing Drink What if the truth you were hiding was the very thing that could set you free? The Dressing Drink is a deeply personal memoir from Thomas King Flagg, tracing a life shaped by performance, legacy, and long-buried truths. From old Hollywood to backstage dressing rooms, it reveals the forces that shaped both the artist and the man behind the work. 📘 The Dressing Drink — Available on Amazon, Kindle, Audible, & TheDressingDrink.net --- 💃 FlaggDance — Programs, media, and more at FlaggDance.com ✨ Follow Us: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Facebook 🔗 All links & updates: FlaggDance.com/links

    26 min
  3. Elka Samuels Smith on Tap Dance, Culture, and Arts Advocacy

    Apr 11

    Elka Samuels Smith on Tap Dance, Culture, and Arts Advocacy

    Elka Samuels Smith joins Thomas King Flagg for a conversation about dance as family legacy, cultural language, and public responsibility. The episode explores tap history, dance management, arts funding, and what it takes to rebuild dance ecosystems in local communities. For artists, educators, and presenters, it offers a practical view of how dance sustains itself: intergenerational mentorship, credible business support, and long-term advocacy. Smith is a producer, manager, and dance advocate raised in a multigenerational dance family. She grew up at JoJo Smith Dance Factory, where movement was part of daily life and dance functioned as a shared language across generations. A central theme is dance as more than performance. Smith describes it as cultural memory and communication, reinforced through family gatherings rooted in rhythm, music, and collaboration. The idea is simple: movement is innate, not niche. The episode also highlights tap dance as both an artistic discipline and a business ecosystem. Smith emphasizes its technical and historical depth, while advocating for greater recognition alongside mainstream performance industries. She also points to connections between tap, step, and other percussive forms as an opportunity to expand audiences. Her path into management came through necessity, supporting tap artist Jason Samuels Smith. What followed was a hands-on process of learning contracts, navigating industry standards, and building an artist-first approach grounded in trust and long-term sustainability. Mentorship remains a key through-line. Smith describes how knowledge in tap is passed through direct relationships with elders, archival material, and lived experience, reinforcing the need for active preservation and institutional support. The conversation also addresses how communities can rebuild dance access. Smith notes that talent and ideas already exist; the challenge is aligning resources, venues, and leadership to support growth. For arts leaders and educators, this episode offers clear insights: Dance is core cultural infrastructureStrong management supports artistic longevityPercussive forms create crossover potentialFunding must support entire ecosystemsWatch the full interview --- Featured Book: The Dressing Drink What if the truth you were hiding was the very thing that could set you free? The Dressing Drink is a deeply personal memoir from Thomas King Flagg, tracing a life shaped by performance, legacy, and long-buried truths. From old Hollywood to backstage dressing rooms, it reveals the forces that shaped both the artist and the man behind the work. 📘 The Dressing Drink — Available on Amazon, Kindle, Audible, & TheDressingDrink.net --- 💃 FlaggDance — Programs, media, and more at FlaggDance.com ✨ Follow Us: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Facebook 🔗 All links & updates: FlaggDance.com/links

    22 min
  4. Jamal Story on Dance, Identity, and Arts Education

    Apr 11

    Jamal Story on Dance, Identity, and Arts Education

    Jamal Story joins Thomas King Flagg for a conversation on dance, identity, and why arts education matters far beyond the stage. Episode 3 connects personal story with practical leadership: how artists grow, how communities benefit, and how institutions build lasting cultural impact. For dancers, educators, and arts leaders, the focus is clear: rigorous training, public engagement, and long-term investment in young people. Story is a performer, choreographer, and educator whose work spans concert dance, commercial projects, and community engagement. He has also served in advocacy roles with the Entertainment Community Fund and the SAG-AFTRA National Dancers Committee, giving him a grounded perspective on both artistry and career sustainability. “Dance chose me.” He describes a non-linear path into dance, beginning with a focus on science at the California Academy of Mathematics and Science, with dance emerging through school access and a background in gymnastics. He later attended Southern Methodist University while also studying journalism, reflecting both artistic commitment and practical planning. A central idea in the episode is the lasting value of concert dance, which Story describes as a “commodity of beauty.” His point is practical: when clearly supported and communicated, dance remains culturally relevant. The conversation also explores how arts ecosystems shape communities. Story emphasizes that education, access, and programming are not side efforts, but core infrastructure that influence long-term audience development. The episode also addresses digital change and evolving performance models, asking how technology can expand reach without replacing the power of live experience. For arts leaders and educators, this episode offers clear insights: Career paths are often non-linearConcert dance retains lasting valueEducation supports long-term cultural growthCommunity strategy shapes impactThis is a conversation about more than dance. It’s about access, adaptability, and the role of movement in shaping individuals and communities. Watch the full interview --- Featured Book: The Dressing Drink What if the truth you were hiding was the very thing that could set you free? The Dressing Drink is a deeply personal memoir from Thomas King Flagg, tracing a life shaped by performance, legacy, and long-buried truths. From old Hollywood to backstage dressing rooms, it reveals the forces that shaped both the artist and the man behind the work. 📘 The Dressing Drink — Available on Amazon, Kindle, Audible, & TheDressingDrink.net --- 💃 FlaggDance — Programs, media, and more at FlaggDance.com ✨ Follow Us: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Facebook 🔗 All links & updates: FlaggDance.com/links

    27 min
  5. Michelle Audet on Building Dance Audiences Through Education

    Apr 11

    Michelle Audet on Building Dance Audiences Through Education

    Michelle Audet joins Thomas King Flagg for a conversation about what actually builds the future of dance: education, producing, and intentional audience development. Episode 2 moves beyond headlines and into systems. Through decades of work at the highest levels of the arts, including founding leadership in education at New York City Ballet, Audet has focused on one central question: how do you design access to live performance in a way that lasts? Her career began with an early realization that she was drawn not only to performance, but to the structure behind it. As she explains, producers and administrators shape how art reaches people. That perspective defined her path as an arts leader. A formative moment came when she saw The Firebird performed by Maria Tallchief. She describes it as a “magic moment,” reinforcing a key idea throughout the episode: a single powerful live performance can influence a lifetime. Audet’s career continued through Skidmore College and Saratoga Performing Arts Center, where she helped bridge academic training with real-world institutional experience. A major focus of the conversation is her work building the education department at New York City Ballet. She outlines a critical truth: without education, long-term audience development collapses. Rather than treating access as simple exposure, Audet emphasizes program design. She describes adapting performances for first-time student audiences by curating shorter programs, adding context, and aligning structure with attention span without sacrificing artistic quality. One defining example is a morning performance at Lincoln Center, where approximately 2,500 public school students experienced live ballet, many for the first time. The result was not passive viewing, but lasting engagement. For arts leaders and educators, this episode offers clear insights: Education is a core growth strategyAccess must be intentionally designedProducing shapes artistic outcomesEarly exposure builds lasting connectionThis is a conversation about building systems that sustain the arts and ensure new generations continue to discover live performance. Watch the full interview --- Featured Book: The Dressing Drink What if the truth you were hiding was the very thing that could set you free? The Dressing Drink is a deeply personal memoir from Thomas King Flagg, tracing a life shaped by performance, legacy, and long-buried truths. From old Hollywood to backstage dressing rooms, it reveals the forces that shaped both the artist and the man behind the work. 📘 The Dressing Drink — Available on Amazon, Kindle, Audible, & TheDressingDrink.net --- 💃 FlaggDance — Programs, media, and more at FlaggDance.com ✨ Follow Us: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Facebook 🔗 All links & updates: FlaggDance.com/links

    32 min
  6. Peter Chu on Finding the Rhythm Within (Dance & Leadership)

    Apr 11

    Peter Chu on Finding the Rhythm Within (Dance & Leadership)

    Choreographer and director Peter Chu joins Thomas King Flagg for a conversation on craft, identity, and the belief that movement education should be accessible to every child. From the Bronx to Cocoa Beach, and from a late pivot in training to Juilliard School, Chu’s journey is anything but linear. His path reflects a mix of discipline, adaptability, and creative range shaped by breaking, martial arts, athletics, and formal dance. In this episode, Chu shares how those influences formed his movement language and how he navigated limited access to structured dance training. Rather than waiting for ideal conditions, he built his path through exploration and persistence. A defining moment comes during his Juilliard audition, where he faced a lack of prepared material and had to improvise under pressure. The takeaway is clear: preparation matters, but adaptability carries artists through pivotal moments. The conversation also explores his transition from performer to choreographer and arts leader. Chu discusses building a project-based company, evolving it into a nonprofit, and creating commissioned work with organizations such as Gibney Company and Hubbard Street Dance Chicago. For artists and educators, this offers a practical model for sustaining a long-term career. A central theme throughout the episode is access. Chu speaks to the growing gap between natural childhood movement and the limited availability of arts education, drawing from outreach work impacting over 100,000 students. His message is direct: movement is not a luxury, but a fundamental right. For educators, choreographers, and arts leaders, this episode offers clear insights: Creative range comes from cross-trainingSustainable careers require structureAccess must be built into the workEducation drives long-term impactThis is a conversation about more than dance. It’s about leadership, opportunity, and the role of movement in shaping identity and culture. Watch the full interview --- Featured Book: The Dressing Drink What if the truth you were hiding was the very thing that could set you free? The Dressing Drink is a deeply personal memoir from Thomas King Flagg, tracing a life shaped by performance, legacy, and long-buried truths. From old Hollywood to backstage dressing rooms, it reveals the forces that shaped both the artist and the man behind the work. 📘 The Dressing Drink — Available on Amazon, Kindle, Audible, & TheDressingDrink.net --- 💃 FlaggDance — Programs, media, and more at FlaggDance.com ✨ Follow Us: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Facebook 🔗 All links & updates: FlaggDance.com/links

    22 min
  7. Ruthie Rosenfeld on Preserving American Dance History and Legacy

    12/30/2025

    Ruthie Rosenfeld on Preserving American Dance History and Legacy

    Ruthie Rosenfeld joins Thomas King Flagg to discuss American dance legacy, archival responsibility, and the importance of preserving artistic history before it disappears. The episode centers on the life and influence of Zachary Solov and the broader ecosystems that shaped American dance. For artists, scholars, and institutions, it reinforces a clear idea: preservation is active work, not passive remembrance. Rosenfeld is a cultural steward and advocate involved in dance-lineage preservation efforts. Her perspective combines personal memory, historical research, and archival practice, with a focus on documenting history with rigor and care. A central theme is the scope of Solov’s influence. The conversation traces his impact across performance, choreography, and institutional development, positioning his career as part of a larger cultural system rather than an isolated legacy. The episode also addresses the urgency of archiving. Without structured systems, key histories, methods, and artistic lineages are lost. Rosenfeld emphasizes that preservation must be intentional, funded, and professionally managed. Another key point is the shift from oral history to structured documentation. Memory alone is not enough. Effective preservation requires organization, cataloging, and long-term accessibility. Rosenfeld frames legacy as a resource for the future. Historical knowledge can inform training, programming, and leadership decisions, making archival work an investment in the next generation of artists. For arts leaders and institutions, this episode offers clear insights: Archive early and consistentlyFund and staff preservation properlyTreat legacy as cultural infrastructureEnsure collections remain accessibleWatch the full interview --- Featured Book: The Dressing Drink What if the truth you were hiding was the very thing that could set you free? The Dressing Drink is a deeply personal memoir from Thomas King Flagg, tracing a life shaped by performance, legacy, and long-buried truths. From old Hollywood to backstage dressing rooms, it reveals the forces that shaped both the artist and the man behind the work. 📘 The Dressing Drink — Available on Amazon, Kindle, Audible, & TheDressingDrink.net --- 💃 FlaggDance — Programs, media, and more at FlaggDance.com ✨ Follow Us: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Facebook 🔗 All links & updates: FlaggDance.com/links

    26 min
  8. Bill Shipley on Arts Funding, Community Spaces, and Cultural Access

    12/16/2025

    Bill Shipley on Arts Funding, Community Spaces, and Cultural Access

    Bill Shipley joins Thomas King Flagg for a conversation about the practical side of building arts culture: funding, infrastructure, and sustained local support. The episode examines how dance and creative programs can be integrated into everyday civic life. For organizers and advocates, the message is clear: if communities want arts to grow, they need spaces, systems, and long-term commitment. Shipley is a community-focused leader whose work centers on local engagement, educational opportunity, and resource-building for arts and youth programs. He speaks directly to the challenge of sustaining cultural initiatives in environments where funding is inconsistent and priorities shift. A central theme is arts funding as a structural issue. Shipley notes that arts programs are often the first to be cut during budget reductions, despite their long-term impact on education and community identity. His argument is direct: arts investment is not optional, but foundational. The conversation also highlights the role of community event spaces as cultural engines. Accessible venues create opportunities for performance, learning, and gathering, supporting both youth development and intergenerational engagement. Another key idea is participation over professionalization. Not every participant will pursue a career in the arts, but that does not diminish the value of engagement. Creative participation builds confidence, communication, and social connection. Leadership is framed as consistency. Shipley emphasizes showing up, building trust, and maintaining programs over time. Sustainable cultural growth depends less on one-time initiatives and more on reliable systems. For organizers and arts leaders, this episode offers clear insights: Consistent funding builds long-term impactCommunity spaces enable participationEngagement matters beyond career outcomesReliable leadership builds cultural trustWatch the full interview --- Featured Book: The Dressing Drink What if the truth you were hiding was the very thing that could set you free? The Dressing Drink is a deeply personal memoir from Thomas King Flagg, tracing a life shaped by performance, legacy, and long-buried truths. From old Hollywood to backstage dressing rooms, it reveals the forces that shaped both the artist and the man behind the work. 📘 The Dressing Drink — Available on Amazon, Kindle, Audible, & TheDressingDrink.net --- 💃 FlaggDance — Programs, media, and more at FlaggDance.com ✨ Follow Us: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Facebook 🔗 All links & updates: FlaggDance.com/links

    18 min
  9. Carol Cusack on Irish Dance, Community, and Cultural Continuity

    12/05/2025

    Carol Cusack on Irish Dance, Community, and Cultural Continuity

    Carol Cusack joins Thomas King Flagg to discuss Irish dance, community traditions, and the social role of performance culture. The conversation explores how dance lives both on formal stages and in everyday spaces. For artists and organizers, the takeaway is clear: dance remains strongest where participation is active and intergenerational. Cusack brings lived experience from Irish cultural contexts where dance, music, and community gathering are closely connected. She reflects on influences ranging from local traditions to major productions, offering a perspective grounded in both cultural memory and observation. A central theme is Irish dance as community practice. Cusack emphasizes that it is not only a stage form, but something embedded in local events and shared identity. This ongoing participation keeps the form visible and relevant. The episode also references landmark productions like Riverdance and Lord of the Dance, while reinforcing the importance of grassroots activity. Large-scale productions and local practice are not in competition; they strengthen each other. Another key thread is hybridization. Cusack discusses how dance traditions can intersect and evolve, expanding audiences while maintaining cultural context. This reflects a broader view of dance as living culture. The conversation also highlights the role of schools and community institutions. When people gather regularly through shared spaces, dance becomes part of daily life rather than occasional performance. For artists and cultural leaders, this episode offers clear insights: Community participation sustains dance cultureLarge and small platforms both matterCross-form work can expand relevanceLocal institutions drive long-term continuityWatch the full interview --- Featured Book: The Dressing Drink What if the truth you were hiding was the very thing that could set you free? The Dressing Drink is a deeply personal memoir from Thomas King Flagg, tracing a life shaped by performance, legacy, and long-buried truths. From old Hollywood to backstage dressing rooms, it reveals the forces that shaped both the artist and the man behind the work. 📘 The Dressing Drink — Available on Amazon, Kindle, Audible, & TheDressingDrink.net --- 💃 FlaggDance — Programs, media, and more at FlaggDance.com ✨ Follow Us: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Facebook 🔗 All links & updates: FlaggDance.com/links

    23 min
  10. Anna Morgan on Dance Research, Training, and the Thinking Dancer

    11/18/2025

    Anna Morgan on Dance Research, Training, and the Thinking Dancer

    Anna Morgan joins Thomas King Flagg to discuss dance education through the lens of research, pedagogy, and studio practice. The episode centers on a key question: what kind of dancer are we training for today’s landscape? Morgan’s answer is clear: technical capacity matters, but so do agency, creativity, and critical thinking. Morgan is a dance researcher and educator working across studio training, curriculum development, and broader arts discourse. Her work bridges practical teaching and analytical inquiry, offering a grounded perspective for educators, parents, and institutions. A central theme is the distinction between passive and “thinking” dancers. Morgan argues that training should develop artists who can interpret, respond, and create, rather than simply reproduce movement. In contemporary environments, this kind of agency is essential. The conversation also highlights the broader value of dance education. Morgan emphasizes that training supports health, confidence, communication, and embodied intelligence, extending far beyond professional dance pathways. Funding and access remain critical challenges. Morgan addresses how resource allocation shapes who gets training and at what level, linking funding gaps to inequities in opportunity and program quality. The implication is clear: access depends on intentional investment. The episode also explores teaching models and standards. Morgan suggests that structured training and student voice can coexist when pedagogy is thoughtful. Strong teaching is not rigid imitation, but guided development that responds to real learners. For educators and arts leaders, this episode offers clear insights: Train for both technique and agencyFunding decisions shape access and outcomesResearch-informed pedagogy improves resultsEducation extends beyond career pathwaysWatch the full interview --- Featured Book: The Dressing Drink What if the truth you were hiding was the very thing that could set you free? The Dressing Drink is a deeply personal memoir from Thomas King Flagg, tracing a life shaped by performance, legacy, and long-buried truths. From old Hollywood to backstage dressing rooms, it reveals the forces that shaped both the artist and the man behind the work. 📘 The Dressing Drink — Available on Amazon, Kindle, Audible, & TheDressingDrink.net --- 💃 FlaggDance — Programs, media, and more at FlaggDance.com ✨ Follow Us: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Facebook 🔗 All links & updates: FlaggDance.com/links

    23 min
  11. Shaun Taylor-Corbett on Broadway, Indigenous Storytelling, and Dance

    11/04/2025

    Shaun Taylor-Corbett on Broadway, Indigenous Storytelling, and Dance

    Shaun Taylor-Corbett joins Thomas King Flagg for a conversation on performance, cultural storytelling, and what it takes to sustain excellence on major stages. For performers and producers, the episode offers a practical model for combining commercial excellence with cultural integrity. Taylor-Corbett is a stage and screen performer with Broadway credits and a background shaped by dance, theater, and choreography influences at home. He reflects on training across movement styles and the demands of high-level production environments. A central theme is readiness under pressure. The episode details the technical demands of Broadway, including rapid role preparation and complex partner work. Taylor-Corbett emphasizes discipline, adaptability, and consistency as essential skills for sustaining a professional career. The conversation also explores his commitment to integrating Indigenous powwow dance, singing, and drumming into theatrical work. He frames this not only as artistic innovation, but as cultural visibility and responsibility. Rather than positioning tradition and contemporary theater as separate, the episode shows how they can strengthen each other. Taylor-Corbett explains that many Indigenous dance forms carry specific meanings and cultural functions, expanding the understanding of dance beyond entertainment into knowledge and memory. The discussion also addresses representation on mainstream stages. Taylor-Corbett highlights the importance of pairing visibility with authenticity, ensuring that cultural work remains grounded and accountable to the communities it represents. For performers, educators, and arts leaders, this episode offers clear insights: Representation requires depth and contextTechnique strengthens storytellingTradition and innovation can coexistReadiness under pressure drives opportunityWatch the full interview --- Featured Book: The Dressing Drink What if the truth you were hiding was the very thing that could set you free? The Dressing Drink is a deeply personal memoir from Thomas King Flagg, tracing a life shaped by performance, legacy, and long-buried truths. From old Hollywood to backstage dressing rooms, it reveals the forces that shaped both the artist and the man behind the work. 📘 The Dressing Drink — Available on Amazon, Kindle, Audible, & TheDressingDrink.net --- 💃 FlaggDance — Programs, media, and more at FlaggDance.com ✨ Follow Us: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Facebook 🔗 All links & updates: FlaggDance.com/links

    18 min
  12. Alexandra Wells on Ballet Legacy, Reinvention, and Dance Leadership

    10/22/2025

    Alexandra Wells on Ballet Legacy, Reinvention, and Dance Leadership

    Alexandra Wells joins Thomas King Flagg for a conversation about ballet legacy, artistic resilience, and leadership across performance and direction. The episode traces a career shaped by family influence, elite companies, and repeated reinvention. For dancers and arts leaders, it offers a practical perspective on longevity: train deeply, adapt quickly, and continue evolving your role. Wells is a ballet artist and arts leader whose career spans high-level performance and directorial work across major institutions. She reflects on early influences from her mother’s dance background and the realities of committing to a life in ballet. A central theme is the tension between passion and practicality. Wells describes navigating family expectations around stability while pursuing a demanding artistic path. That dynamic ultimately strengthened her discipline and long-term focus. The episode also highlights key career turning points, including opportunities within elite company environments. Wells emphasizes how readiness, timing, and trust intersect at the highest levels, and what it takes to sustain artistic authority in competitive settings. A major leadership thread is reinvention. Wells discusses the transition from performer to director, coach, and mentor, framing it as both a practical shift and an expansion of artistic responsibility. Career longevity, she suggests, depends on growing beyond performance while maintaining standards. The conversation also underscores the importance of dance history and mentorship. Wells connects lineage, repertory, and training, emphasizing that preserving knowledge is essential to sustaining artistic quality across generations. For dancers and arts leaders, this episode offers clear insights: Longevity requires continuous adaptationPreparation makes opportunity usableMentorship sustains artistic standardsTradition and innovation can coexistWatch the full interview --- Featured Book: The Dressing Drink What if the truth you were hiding was the very thing that could set you free? The Dressing Drink is a deeply personal memoir from Thomas King Flagg, tracing a life shaped by performance, legacy, and long-buried truths. From old Hollywood to backstage dressing rooms, it reveals the forces that shaped both the artist and the man behind the work. 📘 The Dressing Drink — Available on Amazon, Kindle, Audible, & TheDressingDrink.net --- 💃 FlaggDance — Programs, media, and more at FlaggDance.com ✨ Follow Us: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Facebook 🔗 All links & updates: FlaggDance.com/links

    35 min

About

The American Spectacle is a dance and arts podcast hosted by author and artist Tom Flagg, featuring in-depth conversations with dancers, choreographers, and cultural leaders. Each episode explores dance, artistic identity, and the role of art in shaping culture, with insights from professionals working across contemporary dance, musical theater, and performance. From dance history and creative process to mentorship, representation, and the politics of art, the series offers a behind-the-scenes look at the artists shaping today’s cultural landscape. Guests include Peter Chu, Michelle Audet, Jamal Story, Marcus Smith, Alexandra Wells, and Shaun Taylor-Corbett.