Motown Choreographer: The LEGENDARY...INCOMPARABLE
CHOLLY "POPS" ATKINS

It's with great sadness to announce that legendary choreographer Cholly "Pops" Atkins passed away on April 19th. Ron Tyson wanted to send this message to encourage you all to keep Cholly and his family in your thoughts and prayers.
Cholly Atkins worked with Motown artists such as The Supremes, The Four Tops, Smokey Robinson, Gladys Night, Marvin Gaye and The Temptations. He also worked with The O'jays, Love Committee and Aretha Franklin to name a few. He taught us to command the stage in ways that would enhance our performances and "sell" our songs. Not only did he teach...but he constantly educated our minds......teaching us respect for our craft, respect for other artists, and pride in who we are what we have to offer as entertainers. Cholly was a true unsung hero and second father to many in the music industry. "Pops" will be greatly missed...we'll always love him and cherish the great times we had with him. He will be forever in our hearts.
---Love Always, RON TYSON
DC Drive Featuring Cholly "Pops" Atkins
You Need Love / DC Drive featuring Cholly Pops Atkins
ARTS
Founding a Movement - Cholly Atkins
ILLUSTRATION/TOM CHALKLEY
BY LEE GARDNER
In a fitting bit of blind fate, the teen-pop explosion of recent years fizzled in 2003 just as Cholly Atkins ended his days on Earth. No doubt Atkins' name would mean nothing to Backstreet Boys or Britney Spears, but they and several other generations of pop and R&B artists would probably never have succeeded at the level they did without Atkins' pioneering work, which, despite being eminently visible, not to mention visual, has hidden in plain sight for decades. Beginning in the mid-1950s, Atkins taught singing groups — including all the major Motown artists from the record label's heyday — how to move with grace and to move together, how to accentuate their vocal performances with their bodies, how to create more excitement onstage with a few choice gestures and steps.
In other words, how to not just stand there.
Born in Pratt City, Ala., in 1913 and raised in Buffalo, N.Y., Charles Atkinson had won a local Charleston contest before he'd even hit puberty and was a professional tap dancer traveling the black vaudeville circuit by his teens. After a stint playing drums in an Army band during World War II, the rechristened Cholly Atkins formed a wildly successful and influential tap duo with Charles "Honi" Coles. But as the '50s waned, older forms of showmanship such as vaudeville and tap were edged out by television and rock 'n' roll.
Atkins second career started with a doo-wop group called the Cadillacs, who hired him in the mid-'50s to jazz up their stage act. For the Cadillacs and a growing client list that included Little Anthony and the Imperials and Gladys Knight and the Pips, Atkins put together routines typified by moves simple enough for relative amateurs to nail and precise enough to impress when performed in unison — "vocal choreography," he came to call it.
Motown hired Atkins in 1965, and soon he became an integral part of the assembly-line grooming and branding of the label's blockbuster artists, including the Miracles, the Temptations, and the Supremes. In the case of the Temptations, the flamboyant choreography he orchestrated for each song became as integral to the group's identity as its singers or songs. In some instances, Atkins' choreography has become part of the songs themselves. Ask someone over 40 to sing the chorus of the Supremes "Stop! In the Name of Love" and they very well may throw up their arm, palm outward, and continue on through the rest of the arm movements Atkins devised to sell the lyrics, even though they may not be able to remember a single line of the song's verses.
As in the '50s, times and tastes changed. Atkins was among the longtime Motown loyalists left behind when the label decamped from Detroit to Los Angeles in 1971, and the number of R&B groups depending on Atkins-style choreography began to dwindle. A few years later, he and his second wife, Maye, relocated permanently to Las Vegas, where he worked in nightclubs. But Atkins lived long enough to see his beloved tap undergo a renaissance. He won a Tony award for choreographing the 1988 tap-revival show Black and Blue and enjoyed a third career as a revered teacher and a personification of living dance history.
The impact he had on Motown's art and artists was profound — the Temptations continued to return to Atkins for periodic refreshers until his death on April 19 of pancreatic cancer at age 89; Gladys Knight and the Supremes' Mary Wilson were with him when he died — but his legacy reaches further. The choreography found in the videos and stage acts of contemporary pop, R&B, and hip-hop artists is usually a far cry from the polish and elegant economy of Atkins' classic Motown-era routines, but it all hearkens back to a practice that Atkins codified and perfected. And though teen pop may have stutter-stepped its last for now, the next time four or five young singers need something to do with the rest of their bodies while their vocal cords do the hard work, Atkins' spirit is sure to be somewhere nearby.

CHARLES "CHOLLY" ATKINS
A salute to the Tony Award winning Master Dancer, Master Choreographer
and Master Teacher, Cholly Atkins -- the quintessential American dance artist.

Cholly Atkins "the Man with the Moves"
Sept. 13, 1913 -- April 19, 2003
Famed Motown Choreographer
Cholly Atkins
Whether dancing with William Porter as part of the two man Rhythm Pals, coaching the world renowned Cotton Club Boys for appearances with Bill Robinson in Broadway's The Hot Mikado, setting the standard for elegance with tap legend Charles "Honi" Coles, appearing with the Mills Brothers, the Earl Hines Band, the Louis Armstrong Band, the Cab Calloway Revue, Count Basie, Lionel Hampton, Charlie Barnet and Billy Eckstine, Mr. Cholly Atkins has epitomized excellence and class.
He directed, staged and choreographed acts for countless Motown artists including the Cadillacs, Shirelles, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Marvin Gaye, the Supremes, Gladys Knight and the Pips, the O'Jays, Temptations and Aretha Franklin. The National Endowment for the Arts awarded Mr. Atkins its highest dance award - the three year Choreographer's Fellowship.

Cholly Atkins - "A Class Act"
Cholly Atkins dies at 89
BY DAVID LYMAN
Detroit Free Press -- http://www.freep.com
Knight Ridder/Tribune Information Services
Saturday April 19, 2003
DETROIT
They didn't know his name.
But Friday night, when the Funk Brothers got to that point in "Stop! (In the Name of Love)" -- the point where the Supremes plant their feet and defiantly thrust their arms forward - nearly every person in the Detroit Opera House joined in with the choreography.
"You saw 2,000 people doing a Cholly Atkins move," said Brian Pastoria, a partner in the Harmonie Park Creative Group and a longtime friend of Atkins. "It was amazing."
Charles "Cholly" Atkins, the former vaudeville star credited with giving Motown groups their sharp and sassy moves, died late Saturday April 19, 2003 in a Las Vegas hospital. He was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer in February. He was 89.

Cholly Atkins
Mr. Atkins was a star long before Berry Gordy brought him to Detroit in 1964 to add a Broadway polish to his stable of talented but rough-hewn Motown performers.

Berry Gordy

The Supremes
Atkins had been a legend on the vaudeville circuit, where he was half of a fabled tap dance duo with Charles "Honi" Coles. And in 1989, he shared a Tony award for choreography for Broadway's "Black and Blue."
But it was during Atkins' years in Detroit, when he helped shape the glory days of Motown Records, that he made his lasting mark on American popular culture. He put the Look in the Motown Look, creating precise choreographic routines - vocal choreography he called it - that helped define the music of the Temptations, the Four Tops, the Supremes, the Miracles, Martha and the Vandellas and others.
It was a major part of the mainstream refinement that allowed Motown groups to vault the racial barriers that stood in the way of so many black performers before them.
"He taught us to move in spite of our capabilities," said Martha Reeves, lead singer of Martha and the Vandellas, who worked with Atkins for more than a decade. "Before he started, he would analyze the songs and he would have a mapped-out set of steps for each vocal movement. Our performances had twice the value because of his input," Reeves said.


Martha and the Vandellas
Born Sept. 13, 1913, in rural Alabama, Atkins moved with his mother and brother, Spencer, to Buffalo, N.Y., when he was five or six. Inspired by the choreography of a grade-school teacher who staged variety shows, he parlayed his skills into work as a street performer, a dancing and singing waiter and, in the years before World War II, a dancer touring with Count Basie and Louis Armstrong. After the war, he teamed with Coles.
But by the mid-1950s, public interest in tap dance was fading, and Atkins was hired to add onstage pizzazz to a vocal group called the Cadillacs.


The Four Tops
"It was like nothing you had ever seen," said Duke Fakir, a member of the Four Tops, which soon after worked with Atkins.
Atkins was known throughout the industry as a gentleman. Indeed, his biography, co-authored by New York dance historian Jacqui Malone, is titled "Class Act: The Jazz Life of Choreographer Cholly Atkins".
For all of his reputation as a straight arrow, though, Atkins' name was a total fabrication. Cholly was a name he heisted from Cholly Knickerbocker, a society columnist for the New York Journal-American. And Atkins was a shortened form of his last name, Atkinson, which was regarded as too long for theater marquees.
"Besides, 'Coles and Atkins' sounded better than 'Coles and Atkinson,' " said Maye Atkinson, 84, his widow.

Coles and Atkins
One of Atkins' earliest Detroit connections was with the Miracles.
"We had been to the Apollo about a year before we met Cholly and we didn't have any choreography at all," said Bobby Rogers, one of the group's original members. "We were just popping our fingers and moving our feet a little. The owner of the Apollo said, 'I don't want you guys back here ever again.' " The Apollo Theater in New York was then the top venue for black singers.
When the Miracles had an enormous hit with "Shop Around," they took some of their royalty money and hired Atkins.
"He worked us eight hours a day at his house on Buena Vista," recalls Rogers. "He gave us a class that no one else in the country had."

The Miracles
Atkins and his wife moved to Las Vegas in the mid-1970s, several years after Motown Records relocated to Los Angeles. There, he continued to work with groups he had helped make famous.
The recognition that many people felt he deserved eluded him.
"Motown never mentioned his name," said his wife. She recounted a Motown 25th anniversary celebration in which her husband was supposed to introduce the Temptations. Four hours before the performance, he was told his part had been cut.
"He never complained about it, but it broke his heart," she said.

The Miracles
In the mid-1990s, though, that recognition finally came - but not from Motown. Like so many of the tap masters before him, Atkins was rediscovered by major U.S. dance festivals. He was given grants and honorary degrees; he continued to teach, perform and share the inspirational tales of his career.
"He gave us more than steps," Fakir said. "Cholly gave us wisdom. He taught us how to touch an audience and about living life. He was Motown's father figure."
Choreography may have made Atkins a star, but he rarely danced outside the studio.
Atkins and his wife met June 22, 1962, on a blind date in New York. Neither was really interested in a relationship. She had a career at Macy's. And Atkins was still recovering from the death of his second wife, Dottie Saulters, two years earlier. An earlier marriage had ended in divorce.
The couple went dancing. "We danced every dance that night," Maye Atkinson said Monday from the couple's Las Vegas home. "But after that we never did dance again. Come June, we would have been married 40 years. But he wouldn't dance. 'That's my business,' he always said. 'I don't dance unless I get paid.' I guess I should have paid him."

Cholly Atkins
In 1929, when Cholly Atkins was working as a singing waiter near Buffalo, N.Y., he met William Porter and they formed the act known as "The Rhythm Pals."
Atkins teamed with singer and dancer Dottie Saulters in the early 1940's, then in 1946, he teamed with Charles "Honi" Coles and formed the famous act, "Coles and Atkins."
Cholly Atkins appeared with many bands including the Earl Hines Band, the Louis Armstrong Band, the Cab Calloway Review, Count Basie, Lionel Hampton, Charlie Barnell, and Billie Eckstine.
He was staff choreographer at Motown Records from 1965-1971.
In 1988, Mr. Atkins won a Tony Award for Black and Blue.

ASSOCIATED PRESS NOTICE
By Adam Goldman
LAS VEGAS, April 21
Cholly Atkins, who choreographed the smooth moves of countless Motown artists and won a Tony Award when he was 75, has died. He was 89. Atkins died of pancreatic cancer Saturday night at a hospital, according to his family.
CHOLLY ATKINS was born Charles Atkinson on Sept. 13, 1913, in Pratt City, Ala. He found his career in 1923, after winning a Charleston dance contest in Buffalo, N.Y., and became a singing waiter and dancing bootblack. He made a name for himself as a tap dancer in the 1930s, touring small black venues before forming The Rhythm Pals with William Porter. In the 1940s, Atkins did a stint in the Army and then toured with such jazz greats as Count Basie, Louis Armstrong and Lionel Hampton.
He teamed with legendary tap dancer Charles "Honi" Coles to perform in the Broadway musical "Gentlemen Prefer Blondes," with Nat "King" Cole. He divorced his first wife, Catherine, and married dance partner Dottie Saulters. The pair toured with the likes of Cab Calloway and the Mills Brothers before she died of a brain tumor in 1962.

The Supremes

MADE MARK WITH MOTOWN
Atkins married Maye Harrison Anderson in 1963 and gained his greatest fame two years later when he became choreographer for Motown Records.
He worked with countless Motown artists over the years, including the Cadillacs, the Supremes, the Temptations, Gladys Knight and the Pips, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Aretha Franklin and Marvin Gaye. "He loved his work," said his wife, Maye Atkinson, 84. "That was his life." The couple moved to Las Vegas in 1975, where Atkins continued to work with various stars.


The Temptations
He dusted off his tap shoes in 1988 to choreograph the Broadway musical "Black and Blue." His work earned him a Tony Award. In 1993, the National Endowment for the Arts awarded him its highest honor, a three-year fellowship to record his memoirs and tour colleges to teach choreography and dance. Atkins continued to teach dance until doctors diagnosed his cancer in February.
"CLASS ACT"
The Jazz Life of Choreographer Cholly Atkins
Main Index
American Dance Legends

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Pick up Cholly's book... "CLASS ACT"
Cholly has a video message
In this video clip
Watch Cholly as he teaches The Temptations (Ron, Otis, Melvin, Ali, and Richard) how to do the *NEW* Temptations walk....from the video "The Temptations and The Four Tops", hosted by Stevie Wonder (1989)
This is a video clip of Honi Coles and Cholly Atkins, two of the greatest tap dancers of all time...showing their fancy footwork as well as their singing talents...from a video called "Variety at the Apollo Theatre" circa 1950.
REAL PLAYER***** WINDOWS MEDIA


Photos are from the "CHOLLY ATKINS COLLECTION©" from the book "Class Act"...Click on photos for larger view. Place your mouse over the photos for a description.

Pops & Aretha

