African Voices Spring 2020 AVSPRING2020 | Page 10

pen to paper. Is Sechita, a Southern creole carnival hoochie-coochie dancer, or an Egyptian queen destined to dance for her court? If she is both then she is, in fact, as Zake writes, “the recordin’ of history.” Her words can only be written by a (Black) woman writer who is also a dancer. In Nappy Edges, published right after for colored girls, Zake says “no gust of wind tickle me.” Here she speaks of a Black dancer’s woman-body, not an anorexic ballerina, but a Yoruba descendant woman-body that has a butt and some thighs and enjoys the relationship between the two: ...a triangle where the ridge of their Jeans/meet/in the top of the thigh Where the leg warmers open up in preparation For a demi-plie/if I were one of them I wd always know/I’m sure/when one of the moments when the heat swells from inside me/ & I am walkin or thinkin with my hips Forward some kinda soothing of this burnin Up/wd seem more important/but since my legs Grow like petals/one thigh on the other/I Have never a chilled moment in the Crevice of my pelvis/no gusts of wind Tickle me/ . . . Dance, Eros, woman, body and blackness massage each other, here, in a way that the lack of one of these components would yield a totally different chiaroscuro of black and white. The whole is definitely more than the sum of its parts. Besides Zake’s readings at Berkeley women’s hangouts like The Bacchanal, she also read at San Francisco’s Minnie’s Can Do on Haight Street, a bar where the Black “community” (read just regular folks) mingled with the Black literati and avant-garde performing artists. This was the place where Zake liked to read the most. She read her poetry there perched on her bar stool in front of the mic next to the piano, with her current black book of recently scribbled poems, inscribed in her infamous lowercase, cryptically invented vernacular English with melodic phrases of Spanish and French. This image of the poet was often made complete with a glass of chardonnay sitting next to her on the piano. She would flip nervously through the pages, take a puff of a cigarette, light upon a particularly resonating eye-catching poem, take a sigh, and begin her drone-like pitch, which combined a well-read erudition with a street-wise audacity that voiced a woman’s point of view. She was interested in what bell hooks calls “self- discovery” for Black women. She spoke from a Black woman’s perspective when it wasn’t that popular or trendy — when the revolution was about Black solidarity that meant support the “brothers” and don’t talk back; but she dared to, even then. Sometimes on the agreed-upon poem I would emerge, in generic costume or whatever I happened to be wearing that night, whirling, and undulating to imagined drums or saxophone, and Zake’s real voiced imagery. Sometimes it was purely spontaneous. She would instruct, “Listen and start whenever you feel it.” I remember improv dancing in 1974 at Minnie’s to her “I’m a poet who,” which eventually became a for colored girls tour- de-force for the “Lady in Orange” on Broadway: 10 african Voices