Posted July 28, 2025
Dallas Black Dance Theatre Announces 2025-2026 Season, METAMORPHOSIS
DALLAS, TEXAS (August 1, 2025) — Dallas Black Dance Theatre (DBDT) announces its 2025– 2026 season, titled “METAMORPHOSIS,” featuring five world premieres alongside celebrated works that explore transformation, discovery, and the power of human expression through dance.
The 49th season marks a significant milestone as the company approaches its historic 50th anniversary celebration.
“Metamorphosis examines the unstoppable forces of movement and expression as vulnerability becomes artistry, the familiar transforms into the unexpected, and dance reshapes our understanding of the world around us,” said Interim Artistic Director, Richard A. Freeman Jr. “This season represents the collision of discovery and transformation that defines our artistic mission.”
The season will open with DBDT’s annual DanceAfrica celebration. This year marks a milestone as the company celebrates 20 years of hosting Dallas’ DanceAfrica tradition under the theme “Legacy of the Drum: 20 Years of Rhythm and Roots.” The landmark celebration includes a full week of free community events, featuring an African dance class led by special guest artist SOLE Defined at DBDT Studios and the DanceAfrica Festival & Marketplace in Klyde Warren Park.
SOLE Defined is a Washington, DC-based company that combines body percussion, tap dance and sand dance to create immersive performances with original musical orchestrations, sound and digital media techniques. They have performed at prestigious venues such as The Kennedy Center, Jacob’s Pillow, and The Lincoln Center.
The season also showcases several notable works, including “Lost in Memory” by the award- winning dancer and choreographer of Turkish-descent, Nejla Yatkin (Dance Magazine’s 25 To Watch & 2023 Guggenheim Fellow). Originally premiered in 2006, this reflective and physically demanding work encourages audiences to contemplate the highs, lows, and rituals that define the human experience. This work will be featured in Director’s Choice Series: CATALYST (November 7-8, 2025).
The Cultural Awareness Series: KALEIDOSCOPE (February 13-15, 2026) program will highlight the showstopping “Nina Simone Project” by internationally-renowned choreographer and artistic pioneer Dianne McIntyre, a work that captures Nina Simone’s regal presence through choreography set to the legendary artist’s signature fusion of classical, jazz, soul, folk, gospel, blues, R&B and pop genres.
Dianne McIntyre’s extensive career spans four Broadway shows, 30 regional theatre productions, a London West End musical, two feature films, three television productions, stage movement for recording artists and created five original full-length dance dramas.
In commemoration of the 70th anniversary of the historic Montgomery Bus Boycotts, during Black History Month in February, the season will also feature “Bodies as Sites of Faith and Protest” by Tommie-Waheed Evans. Inspired by Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “We Shall Overcome” speech, this powerful work explores the resilience and enduring strength of the Civil Rights Movement.
Tickets are on sale now!
All performances will be available in-person or via streaming, continuing DBDT’s interactive hybrid model that was created in 2020 and has enabled DBDT to serve audiences in over 43 countries and 41 states.
For tickets and performance details, visit DBDT.com. 2025/2026 SEASON CALENDAR
2025/2026 SEASON CALENDAR
- DanceAfrica
Legacy of the Drum: 20 Years of Rhythm and Roots
October 3-4 | 7:30 PM | Moody Performance Hall
- CATALYST
Director’s Choice Series
November 7-8 | 7:30 PM |Dee & Charles Wyly Theatre - Behind the Scenes (FREE!)
November 24-25 | 12:00 PM | DBDT Studios - Black on Black
December 5-6 | 6:30 PM – 12:00 AM | DBDT Studios - Espresso Nutcracker
December 13 | 7:00 PM | Majestic Theatre
- KALEIDOSCOPE
Cultural Awareness Series
February 13-15 | 7:30 PM & 3:00 PM | Dee & Charles Wyly Theatre - Rising Excellence
April 17-18 | 7:30 PM | Moody Performance Hall - PRISMATIC
Spring Celebration Series
May 15-16 | 7:30 PM | Dee & Charles Wyly Theatre
American Airlines, Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, Anonymous, Arts & Culture, The Blessing Family Endowment, The Dallas Foundation, The Dallas Morning News, Dallas Post Tribune, Fichtenbaum Charitable Trust, Ford Foundation, FYI50+, Gracepoint Media, Harold Simmon Foundation, Hillcrest Foundation, Holloway Family Foundation, Lexus, Norma & Don Stone, Oversee My IT, Rea Charitable Trust, Roxor, The Shubert Foundation, Texas Commission on the Arts & National Endowment for the Arts, Trendy Africa
ABOUT DALLAS BLACK DANCE THEATRE
Founded in 1976 by Ann Williams, Dallas Black Dance Theatre’s mission is to create and produce contemporary modern dance at the highest level of artistic excellence through performances and educational programs that bridge cultures and reach diverse communities. As the largest and oldest professional dance company in Dallas, DBDT is the fourth-largest Black dance company in the nation, ranks in the top 10 largest contemporary modern dance companies in the U.S. and is included among the nation’s 50 largest ballet companies by Dance Data Project. Located in the thriving downtown Dallas Arts District, the nation’s #1 Arts District (USA Today), DBDT has performed worldwide for over 5 million arts patrons and 3 million students in 33 states and 16 countries on five continents. The performances include three Olympics (1992, 1996, and 2012), the nation’s most prestigious venues (Lincoln Center, Kennedy Center, Broadway, Jacob’s Pillow and Joyce Theatre), and for such luminaries as Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II and South African President Nelson Mandela. Since the pandemic began in 2020, DBDT performances have also been viewed virtually in 43 countries. The Company has been recognized by the National Endowment for the Arts as an American Masterpiece Touring Artist (2008) and received the Texas Medal of the Arts Award for Arts Education (2017). For more details about Dallas Black Dance Theatre, visit DBDT.com.