Bill T. Jones
- Byname of:
- William Tass Jones
- Also Known As:
- William Tass Jones
- Awards And Honors:
- Tony Awards
- Kennedy Center Honors (2010)
Bill T. Jones (born February 15, 1952, Bunnell, Florida, U.S.) is an American choreographer and dancer who, with Arnie Zane, created the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company.
Jones was the 10th of 12 children of migrant farmworkers. His parents moved from rural Florida when he was three years old, and he grew up in Wayland, New York, just south of Rochester. He attended the State University of New York at Binghamton, where he became interested in movement and dance. There he met Arnie Zane, who became his partner in business and in life. With Lois Welk and Jill Becker, the two men formed the American Dance Asylum in 1973 and started choreographing works that tested the boundaries of modern dance. They scandalized some audiences by partnering male dancers, and they addressed subjects such as racism and AIDS. Much of their work incorporated multimedia elements such as spoken narrative and videotape, and they examined through movement autobiographical elements of their lives.
In 1982 Jones and Zane formed Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane & Company, later called the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company. (The company’s name remained the same even after Zane’s death from AIDS in 1988.) The book Body Against Body: The Dance and Other Collaborations of Bill T. Jones and Arnie Zane (1989), which the two men cowrote, examines their work together. In the wake of Zane’s death and the death of another member of the company, Jones (who was also diagnosed as HIV-positive) created some of his most powerful works, including Last Supper at Uncle Tom’s Cabin/The Promised Land (1990) and Still/Here (1994). In 2011 the company merged with Dance Theater Workshop to form New York Live Arts, for which Jones served as executive artistic director; the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company continued to perform under its name.
In 2007 Jones earned a Tony Award for best choreography for his work in the musical Spring Awakening. Based on Frühlings Erwachen (1891), a tragedy by German dramatist Frank Wedekind, the musical dealt with adolescent sexual awakening and the damage that can be caused by a repressive and hypocritical society. Jones later cowrote the book for, choreographed, and directed the musical Fela! (2008), about the life of Nigerian musician and activist Fela Anikulapo-Kuti. For his exuberant choreography, he won a second Tony Award. Jones’s later work included Fondly Do We Hope…Fervently Do We Pray(2009), a commission for the Ravinia Festival, Highland Park, Illinois, commemorating the bicentennial of U.S. Pres. Abraham Lincoln’s birth; and Story/Time (2014), a piece inspired by both composer John Cage’s Indeterminacy (1958) and choreographer Merce Cunningham’s How To Kick, Pass, Fall, and Run (1965).
In the mid-2010s Jones embarked on a trilogy exploring trauma and memory, which comprised Analogy/Dora: Tramontane (2015), a piece about Jones’s mother-in-law, a French-Jewish nurse who resisted the Nazis and their collaborators in Vichy France; Analogy/Lance: Pretty aka the Escape Artist (2016), a work considering the downfall of Jones’s nephew as he went from a scholarship student to a life of drugs to prison and paralysis; and Analogy/Ambros: The Emigrant (2017), a dance inspired by W.G. Sebald’s novel The Emigrants. In 2021 Jones premiered Deep Blue Sea, which was inspired by both Herman Melville’s novel Moby-Dick (1851) and Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech (1963).
Jones received a number of honours throughout his career, including a MacArthur fellowship (1994), the Dorothy and Lillian Gish Prize (2003), and a Kennedy Center Honor (2010). His memoir, Last Night on Earth (1995; with Peggy Gillespie), is a compelling narrative of his life that reveals issues that animated and motivated him. Jones’s other published works included Dance (with Susan Kuklin, 1998), a children’s book introducing the basic concepts of dance, and Story/Time: The Life of an Idea (2014), wherein Jones reflected on his life and work.