Kykunkor, or
The Witch Woman, was produced at the Little Theater on West 44th Street, New York City. In 1934, a studio on East 23rd Street named the Unity Theatre allowed for the new opera to premier in early May. Dafora's musical/drama is the story of a bridegroom who is cursed by a witch doctor named Kykunkor, and of this groom's attempts to remove the curse. The audience consisted of only sixty people, "but after
John Martin's favorable review in the New York Times on 9 May, 425 people appeared that evening, 200 of whom had to be turned away because of an overflowing theatre." (Perhaps this is not accurate. The Little Theatre had 300 seats when it was built in 1912. By 1924, it had been expanded to seat 599) Because of Martin's influential review, the show moved to larger venues and continued to show for four months to packed audiences The cast consisted of eighteen men and women, a mix of African and African-American performers. The show was colourful and exciting, with live music and continuous, stimulating drumming, and the audience was exposed to a "visual feast of 'semi-naked black men and women, posturing, writhing, crazily whirling, dancing insanely—vitally,'..." At a time when American
concert dance was dominated by austerity and an overwhelming emphasis on the struggle of the individual heroine, such as with
Martha Graham and
Humphrey-Weidman pieces, Dafora's bright, lively and exotic show was a lively and appealing alternative. The masculinity of the male dancers and the developing interest of the African culture among white modern artists and intellectuals in the US and Europe also brought much attention to
Kykunkor. But
Kykunkor was more than just an exciting piece, it was an innovation.
Kykunkor was "the first opera presented in the United States with authentic African dances and music, performed in an African tongue by a mainly African-born cast". "
Kykunkor proved that black dancers working with material from their own heritage could be successful on the American concert stage." However, at the same time it reinforced that black dancers could only be accepted into the concert dance scene if they danced within the "primitive" genres of dance; the American and European high-art concert dance was a place for white and European artists. The critic John Martin, while praising the dance, also stated that "'Negroes cannot be expected to do dances designed for another race.'" Asadata Dafora opened the field of concert dance to the black performers, but not until later in the century would Black American dancers begin to be recognised as serious and worthy performers in American concert dance. == Other stage work ==