
Misty Copeland and Caryn Campbell
Episode 4 | 33m 28sVideo has Closed Captions
Dr. Durell Cooper interviews the famed dancer about her namesake Misty Copeland Foundation.
Dr. Durell Cooper meets with world-renowned dancer Misty Copeland and Caryn Campbell, director of The Misty Copeland Foundation. They discuss the origin story of the foundation and explore new models for paying it forward to the next generation.
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FLOW with Dr. Durell Cooper is a local public television program presented by WLIW PBS

Misty Copeland and Caryn Campbell
Episode 4 | 33m 28sVideo has Closed Captions
Dr. Durell Cooper meets with world-renowned dancer Misty Copeland and Caryn Campbell, director of The Misty Copeland Foundation. They discuss the origin story of the foundation and explore new models for paying it forward to the next generation.
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Learn Moreabout PBS online sponsorship(gently uplifting music) (gently uplifting music continues) - What's up, everybody?
We are here for another episode of "Flow" to talk to none other than Misty Copeland and Caryn Campbell from the Misty Copeland Foundation.
Come with me.
(upbeat music) (upbeat music continues) And we are back with another episode of "Flow," and I couldn't be more excited than I am to be joined by Misty Copeland and Caryn Campbell, both of the Misty Copeland Foundation.
Welcome to "Flow."
- Thank you.
- Thanks for having us.
- So Caryn, we'll start with you.
If you wouldn't mind telling us a little bit about yourself and how did we get here today?
- My name's Caryn Campbell.
I'm executive director of the Misty Copeland Foundation, and I started in January.
I started out in college going to school for TV film, then went to work in film production in Los Angeles.
Out of college I worked at Paramount.
After that, I went to work for Spike Lee, also in film.
And from there, I had kids, stayed home for a little while, started volunteering, ended up working as a volunteer at the Children's Storefront, which is here in Harlem, a tuition-free school for preschool through eighth grade.
Then from there, I went to Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, and now I'm happy to be here working at Misty Copeland Foundation.
- And Misty, I know you really don't need an introduction, so I won't, I won't try to do one, 'cause I wouldn't be able to do it justice, but would you mind telling the viewers a little bit about who you are?
- Well, I can introduce myself.
(group laughing) I am Misty Copeland.
I'm a principal ballerina for American Ballet Theater.
I'm also president and the founder of the Misty Copeland Foundation.
So I started out dancing, I guess, I'll tell you about my dance life.
I started out dancing and moving my body around the age of seven.
I started choreographing, even though I didn't even know what that word meant, but I would hear music being played throughout my house and would just want to move my body to it.
It was also an escape from a lot of chaos and instability in my home environment.
My mother, I believe, had married her fourth husband by the time I was seven.
And I had been to more than 10 schools, and we were finally living in a place where I felt like this was home to me in San Pedro, California.
So my mother put me and my five siblings into the Boys & Girls Club, and it was really life-changing to be a part of a community center that had tutoring and mentoring and a place that I could go to after school where I was safe and could kind of dive into different areas of athletics and the arts, which was all new to me.
And it was around the age of 13 that there was a local ballet teacher who came into the Boys & Girls Club and was offering a free class on the basketball court.
And I happened to be one of the students that took the class.
She was looking for more diversity to bring into her local ballet school.
I ended up training with her for three years and living with her and her family so that I could catch up on the training, since 13 is very late to start in this field.
And by the time I was 17 years old, I was living in New York City dancing for American Ballet Theater.
- Wow.
Take us back to walking into your first dance classroom as a student.
Did you know immediately this is what you wanted to do with the rest of your life?
Or did you kind of come to it a little bit later?
- You know, it took me feeling safe in that environment.
I felt comfortable, I felt safe at the Boys & Girls Club, but this was such a new form of movement, of music than I'd ever experienced.
So I would not say from that first class, this was something I knew I wanted to do.
I was, you know, used to choreographing to Anita Baker and Aretha Franklin, Mariah Carey and George Michael.
So I was like, what is this classical music?
(group laughing) I'm like, I felt no connection to it.
The environment was very different from what it was at the Boys & Girls Club.
It was very calm, it was very quiet.
And it was the first time that I felt this sense of stability and safety.
There was this sacred space that I could be vulnerable in.
And you're so vulnerable, you're wearing a leotard in tights.
And you know, I was surrounded by people I didn't know, but at the same time, I'd never felt so comfortable in my skin.
And so I think once I was in that environment, I knew immediately this is what I meant to do.
This is what I want to do.
I can't imagine not having this outlet in my life.
And again, it was the first time that I'd ever felt that safe and that I could express and process the things that I was going through, but in a way that worked for me, which was, I was so shy, I didn't like to speak.
So through movement, it was just perfect for what I needed at that point in my life.
- Oh, so you bring up such an important point around safety and creating that, the environment that is necessary in order for growth to happen.
When I think of safety and nurturing and caring environments, I think of mothers, more specifically, I think of my nurturing mother, or my alma mater, Southern Methodist University, which, Caryn, you and I have in common.
So at SMU you were a TV and film major.
Right?
- Yeah.
- So how do we go from TV and film to arts admin?
- (laughs) I really think that TV and film, to me, and this job in particular, is kind of the culmination of everything that I've done in my life and in my career.
So TV and film, when I worked there, it was, especially working for Spike Lee, it was a startup.
It was all hands on deck, having to do everything and know and learn so much, so quickly.
And I think that being at the foundation is similar.
I also think that coming from TV and then going into fundraising, you have to be organized.
You have to be extroverted to a certain extent and wanna talk to people.
And then working at Ailey, working in dance and in a similar culture and just learning the world and the language.
So it kind of has all come together so that when I actually, when Misty offered me the job, I thought, "This is it.
Like this is everything that I've ever done in one place."
- Ah, okay.
So you mentioned Misty Copeland Foundation a couple of times, MCF.
So Misty, what inspired you to start MCF?
- Yeah, I mean, it's so connected to everything that you're saying, and it's actually been the experience of the team that we've brought together is that we feel that this has been like a culmination of our life experiences and goals and missions that have kind of come to fruition through this experience, through the Misty Copeland Foundation.
And I wanted to start the foundation because I knew that there was so much value in all of the experiences I've had as an artist, as a young person that grew up in a community that didn't have access and opportunity to the arts, to the fine arts, to ballet, to classical music.
And as a Black woman, I felt that, I feel that I have a very unique experience, and it's a space that needs to be filled.
And so it also just came together at a very important time in the world.
You know, I ended up with an injury to my back right before the pandemic happened.
And so I was already kind of thinking about, how am I using my voice and my purpose and my platform in a way that is equally as important as what I do on the stage?
And then the world shut down, and then the murder of George Floyd, and it really made me step back and think, what do these communities need in this time?
And I think that especially us who are so invested in the arts, understood the importance and the value of what it could do, especially for a human being in a crisis.
And so it just kind of sped up the idea of me wanting to do it.
It was like, "Hey, this is the time.
It needs to happen now."
I think also just experiencing, from my own experiences with my colleagues as Black and Brown dancers, what they needed, what they've needed since they were children, and what they still need, which is a community.
And I think that's been really important within the Misty Copeland Foundation, is creating a space.
You know, we have an incredible advisory council of incredible people who have been able to lend so much of their own experiences in helping us to develop the BE BOLD program, which is our first signature program, which stands for Ballet Explorations: Ballet Offers Leadership Development.
And just, again, through my own experiences of being able to reach back and give, you know, these communities an opportunity to be exposed to something that's going to give them the tools to grow in so many incredible ways.
You know, it's not just about becoming a professional dancer, but it's about becoming a better human being, a better human and part of your society, becoming a leader.
It's just being exposed to what it is to be a part of a team, to have empathy, to be dedicated and committed to something.
I could go on and on about why I wanted to start the foundation.
(group laughing) I'm extremely passionate about it, and I think that it's something that so many communities need.
- Wow, I couldn't agree with you more.
I wanna stay with you for a little bit, but we're gonna shift the focus to Caryn here.
She's the first executive director of MCF.
You know, you told us a little bit about your vision and how much the organization means to you, you know, why was Caryn the perfect person at this time to be able to take the foundation to the next level?
- Yeah, I think that it was really important for me to have someone who's had a lot of varied experiences.
I think that it's so beneficial.
Like, think back to just whenever I speak to dancers, and they're asking for my advice in terms of, you know, is it important for me to just focus on classical dance, or should I experience other genres of movement?
And that's what I feel about Caryn's experience is that she had a taste of lots of different things that make her very well-rounded.
It was also important to have a woman, to have a woman of color.
And I'm just so fortunate that it worked out this way.
We knew that as my incredible advisor, Jane Poland, has said that these people who are right for the position and that are incredibly good at what they do, are not just sitting around waiting for someone to call them.
They're working at other incredible organizations.
So it was just really about the timing, and I'm just so fortunate to have found you (laughs).
- I'm so fortunate (laughs).
- So, Caryn, you do get the phone call or the email.
"Congratulations, you're the new ED of MCF."
What's going on in your mind?
How are you feeling?
Walk us through the day.
- It was incredible.
It was so amazing to think that I was going to get to work with Misty, and not knowing her well then, and we've actually said that we don't, we haven't known each other for that long, but we feel as though we have.
But knowing many dancers and how disciplined and hardworking they are, I knew going in that it was gonna be an amazing experience, and that I would learn a lot.
She would teach me a lot.
Jane has taught me a lot.
Just thinking about it before it began, I knew it was gonna be an incredible experience, and it was just the continuation of my journey.
- Hmm.
Misty, I think about your career, and narrative change has always been central to what it is that you've been doing, I mean, breaking so many barriers.
How would you say MCF is also contributing to this narrative change?
You started to allude to it a little bit earlier, but if we could just go a little bit deeper into that piece.
- I mean, I feel that the program that we've created BE BOLD, which is the initial program for the foundation is really about teaching children about ballet in a new way.
You know, we're going to show them about Black dance history, leadership, social justice, and having fun.
So having two teaching artists and a musician in a classroom where they're not necessarily learning in a traditional way and they're not hearing classical music, it's contemporary music, we've taught the teaching artists and musicians how to train and teach these kids and how to engage with the children in a different way.
And I think that is a huge change.
That's a sea change.
And I do have to say that working with a child psychologist so that we can actually, you know, show a portrait of a dancer so that we can see what the impact is that we're having on these kids, and how it's changing their behavior is really important, as well as working with you, Dr. Durell Cooper.
It's been incredible.
You've been an integral part of creating this framework, and the framework, really, we're calling it a framework, not a curriculum, because it's changing constantly, and we're basically building the plane as we're flying it.
So, you know, that that's a new way of doing things as well.
- Yeah, as Caryn is saying, it's been really important that we have professionals on board who understand what it is to develop a child, you know, a child and their experiences.
And you have been such a big part of it, and I would say in helping us to understand what narrative it is we, you know, want to tell, and that we wanna be leaders in that way.
And so just being able to create a space with you, with our teaching artists, and have them open up and share their real and true and raw experiences of what it's been like to work within the classical ballet environment and world, and understanding the things that need to be changed, the narrative that needs to be changed from within because of our experiences.
But I thank you for creating an environment like that for these dancers to feel that they can open up, so that we can learn, so that we can not repeat the same, you know, mistakes that have been perpetuated for so many generations.
And that's really at the root of the BE BOLD program, as well, is trying to not perpetuate these traumas that a lot of people feel that come into the dance world, but also going in and creating a new way of storytelling and connecting with these different communities.
You know, so we're starting out in the Bronx, coming into Harlem as well, through the Boys & Girls Clubs, and we're looking at other community centers and organizations that align with us, but it's important that we connect with these communities and their culture so it doesn't feel like it's this white European art form that we're bringing into to these communities.
And they're like, "Well, what does that have to do with us?"
But it's through the music, it's showing different musicians, people who look like them, teachers that can relate and connect to their experiences.
And that's really vital and something that's missing from the ballet world and ballet community.
- Oh, I couldn't agree with you more on that.
And kind of continuing along the narrative change piece, you've just written your eighth book, "The Wind At My Back."
- (laughs) Yeah.
- Tell us a little bit about, you know, what it's been like touring it, and even the process of writing it, because, I mean, listening to you, you've been, you were going through such, you know, a tumultuous time at this you point, you know, really recovering to get back to the stage.
What was it like for you during this writing process?
- Yeah, every writing process is so unique in what I've experienced and also at different points in my life and my career.
But "The Wind At My Back" was extremely beautiful because, I mean, it's my mentor Raven Wilkinson.
It's our story.
You know, it's the incredible journey that she had throughout her career as a Black ballerina in the 1950s, and then us coming together and how she impacted my career moving forward.
I don't think I would've been promoted to principal dancer had she not come into my life.
But the process of writing this book, I was pregnant at the time.
I, you know, thinking about what this means to give birth to a Black boy in America today.
And it was a very emotional process.
But I think that it's so important as an artist for me to express that we can share our experiences through so many different lenses and so many different ways of expressing ourselves, you know?
Just because I'm a dancer doesn't mean that's the only way that I can express myself.
And that's been important with BE BOLD as well, is giving these students, giving these children, the agency to say, to know that they can speak up for themselves.
And it's not just through their bodies, but through their voices.
And that's something that's been so important for me that I've learned from Raven Wilkinson, was what that looks like to be able to stand up for yourself, especially as a Black woman in a very white world that is dominated by men, though most people probably wouldn't think of the classical ballet world in that way, but it is.
And having that kind of support allowed me to find my own voice within my career.
And all of that is expressed in the book.
And it was just a really beautiful experience to be able to think back on and our relationship and all that Raven has done for me and for generations of Black and Brown dancers.
- Oh, wow.
You know, what I'm thinking of when you mentioned that is how important mentorship really is in our lives to help us get to these next levels that sometimes we don't even know exists.
Or if we do see it, it might be in like TV and movies, but, you know, to actually have someone who has been there and done that.
And, Caryn, I would say, you know, looking at your role at MCF, like the amount of leadership that you bring at that level to the organization, you provide a light for everybody to look to, and, you know, you're really a beacon as to how to lead in those spaces in those ways.
And kind of thinking about that, and how, you know, the field of dance has unique challenges, we would say, particularly for people of color working within those spaces.
You know, what are some of those challenges that you see as, or we'll say, opportunities that you see as sort of most pressing that MCF is hoping to address?
- We've gone into the community a little bit already, being in our second cycle, and we've had caregiver orientations where we've talked to the parents and whoever's raising the children that are in part of the program.
And I would say that we're already, in talking to these people, we've already heard stories of children wanting to be more self-confident, wanting to feel safe in their environment, things that I think often they haven't felt, you know, especially as Black and Brown children in particular.
I think that's a big part of it right there.
And then there's body image problems, you know, or things that we're trying to make it easier for them to talk about.
There's a lot of mental health issues.
I feel like you and Dr. Leblanc have been helping the teaching artists understand the children and how to work with them where they are.
And especially coming out of covid where there've been so many delays and so many issues for this age of children, we're gearing the program towards, you know, 8 to 12 year olds.
So I think in those ways, we're really trying to make change, you know, in a meaningful way.
- Oh, I love that.
And, you know, one of the things that you're kind of making me think of is, you know, even though, you know, we might be looking at these different opportunities from our different lenses, so as dancers or as theater artists or as visual artists or as musicians, it really exists in this ecosystem where there's all these different moving parts.
And unfortunately one of those moving parts is philanthropy and like funders.
Oftentimes what we see on the stage is because, well, that's what people have given to.
So for like, you know, funders who might be watching this, you know, what's something that we could say to them to, you know, encourage them to participate in this narrative change, particularly as it relates to people of color within dance?
You know, what can we, what advice or or nuggets of information could we drop to them to kind of, you know, start to think about our existence in a slightly different way?
- I would say really what they need to know about BE BOLD, in particular, is that we're a new program, but we've been very successful.
We're gonna be in our one-year anniversary of the programming, the third cycle in September.
And it's very important for everyone to understand what we're doing, that we wanna be successful, that we're striving to make this program something that we can scale up as we move forward.
But in the moment, that we wanna make it a sustainable long-range program that we can reach many children, have many teaching artists, but we need everyone to work with us in the community.
We need everyone to be on board with what we're doing, see what we're doing and be open to helping us, whether it's through, you know, advice or, you know, connections or financial help.
We could use it all as a very new organization.
- What can I expect outta MCF over the next five years?
- We're so excited.
We wanna just grow.
Right now we're creating this amazing program, but we wanna find a way to make it possible for us to grow.
So we need more teaching artists and more musicians, and we're going to train them, and we're gonna look for more sites of where we can have the programming.
You know, it's after school for a reason.
I mean, Misty came from after school.
It's so important.
And we know, we've seen the data, that especially coming out of covid, that doesn't exist for especially arts programming in Black and Brown communities.
So we really want to engage the communities and have people help us grow the program.
- Caryn, I kind of wanna go back to this idea of funders and how they can support the work of MCF.
What does it mean to you for a funder to really show up in true partnership and not just, you know, "Here I'm gonna donate some money, and then you won't hear back from me until it's time for some sort of report on what you did with the funds that I gave you."
What does true partnership really look like, and how can some funders really support the work?
- There are so many ways that we can be in partnership to collaborate.
We've talked about having some opportunities for the children to be able to see performances, or to be able to, as I said before, you know, I didn't know what an executive director was, but for them to be able to have the opportunity to learn about, you know, different jobs, different roles that people hold and being able to meet them.
So that's another piece of it, that's part of the mentorship part that we hope to develop more of.
So it isn't just about writing a check, it's about expanding our universe, the MCF and BE BOLD universe to include people who have connections in all different areas.
So not just to be, you know, giving us money, but also to expanding our world.
And, you know, we also talk about governance and how board members, boards need to understand what the arts education realm looks like and what is actually happening for these children.
They need to be educated.
So we need to expand with and collaborate with our partners, the funding partners, to your point, so that we're not just asking for money, but we're having more conversations and making it possible for them to see what we're doing and also how to help us grow.
So whether that's being able to take kids to a performance at Alvin Ailey or American Ballet Theater, or having a dancer come in and talk to the kids about what they do and how they got there, or a musician or a visual artist.
Like just so that we grow and expand what they learn and know about the world.
- Hmm, I love that.
- And that, Misty, if I may pivot just a little bit, you are making your comeback to the stage.
How has that process been like for you, you know, post, you know, everything that's happened in your life personally and professionally?
- You know, I'm really, I feel like within the pandemic, it allowed me to look at dance and the arts in such a different light.
You know, we didn't have a stage to perform on in that time.
It made me think about, what is a stage and what does that really look like for different communities?
And so I feel like I'm at a point in my life and in my career where I'm looking at the stage in very different forms.
So I'm excited about this next project that I have coming up.
It's a short film.
It's actually very much aligned with the work that we are doing within the Misty Copeland Foundation.
It's a social justice art activism film focused on the community of Oakland, California.
I'm starring in it, I'm dancing.
- So wait, is this a scoop?
Did I scoop you on this?
(Misty and Caryn laughing) The premiere is happening soon.
I can't say when, but it's something that we're going to be screening to many communities.
It's focusing on intergenerational relationships and equity and also the housing crisis in Oakland, California, and gentrification.
So it's a beautiful story, and it's all being told through dance.
There's no dialogue.
And so this is the beautiful thing about the arts is that, you know, finding different ways of getting it out there to more people.
And that's kind of where I'm at, I think, in my life and career, is finding unique and powerful ways to bring dance to as many people as possible.
- Does it have a title?
Can we?
- It's called "Flower."
- "Flower," oh, I love that.
Ah, Misty and Caryn, you both have something in common, and that's being a mother.
How has motherhood really impacted your life?
It's like, how has it not?
But how has motherhood impacted your life?
- I'm very new to this.
(group laughing) She's got a lot of more experience than I do.
- Caryn is like, "Not that much more."
- Not a lot.
(group laughing) - You know, I think that, you know, being pregnant with my son, Jackson, we started working on creating the foundation before I got pregnant with Jackson, but with this idea in mind that I want to be able to create a better opportunity, a better world for children like my son.
And so it's definitely been a big part in shaping how I look at these young people that, you know, it's so important that we're putting people in front of them who are qualified, who want to teach children, who love working with children, that have, you know, the experience, the fire and the passion inside of them.
And so I think being a mom has really made me step back and understand the importance of that.
That it's not just about whether or not they've taught ballet class before, but there's so much more involved in working with children.
- And I think being on the other end and having a Jackson.
(group laughing) - We both have Jackson.
That it is critical to see children in this world, this arts world, and what it can do for them, whether it's dance or music or acting, you know, whatever it is, that it makes such a huge difference in their lives and the people they become, that I think it's so important for us, and that's what I love so much about being a part of the foundation and in particular working with BE BOLD as the first program, because we're going to be able to help do that to future generations of children that might not have this opportunity.
- Any final words that, Caryn, we can start with you, that you would like to share with the viewers?
- I think that in this time of coming out of the pandemic, it's really important for people to see what children are doing, like how they are living their lives, especially in these Black and Brown communities where they don't have an opportunity for so many things.
And I feel like that's what's so important about BE BOLD, is just opening something up for them, you know, something different for them to see.
Because if I were to say anything about my own life, I as a 10, 15, 20-year-old had no idea what an executive director was.
So just having an understanding of what life is like in the world for them, not necessarily to be the next Misty Copeland, although that would be fantastic.
But just to understand who Misty is and what her journey's been, and how it is so important for all of us, you know, to keep growing.
- Hmm, Misty?
- Yeah, I mean, I think that, you know, the people that I speak to most are, you know, young people, and giving them hope and inspiration and motivation to be more than they ever thought they could be, because that's been my life and my journey, and it's because of the arts.
And I think that, you know, for your viewers, that it's just important to really understand the power and how necessary and how valuable arts education is.
And that it's not fluff, it's not a side dish, it's something that deserves our full commitment.
And so I hope that through the foundation and through this program, that we can set an example and show the power of what dance can do for many communities and many children.
- Ah, well, thank you.
Thank you both so much.
You continue to inspire me, and I know you're inspiring many others.
And BE BOLD, I know it's a name of a specific program with MCF, but it's really how you both have lived your entire lives, and as a result of that, you've given others the courage to do the same.
So thank you.
- Thank you.
- Thank you so much.
(upbeat music) ♪ Oh, yeah ♪ Oh, oh ♪ Ooh ♪ Oh, oh ♪ Oh, oh ♪ Oh, oh ♪ Oh ♪ Oh, yeah
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