Trinidadian-born dancer, choreographer and actor Geoffrey Holder
Trinidadian-born dancer, choreographer and actor Geoffrey Holder.

News Americas, NEW YORK,  NY, Tues. Oct. 6, 2014: Trinidadian-born dancer, choreographer and actor Geoffrey Holder, danced his last dance on Sunday night in Manhattan and shimmied into eternity. He was 84. Holder, according to his son Léo, passed away on Sunday night at 9.24 pm. Writing in the Trinidad Newsday, Léo  Holder stated that his father performed his last solo to Bill Evans’ Faure’s Pavane.

Holder had been immobile for his last years, died after a prolonged period of illness. His cause of death was reported as complications from pneumonia.

He is survived by his wife, the famed dancer Carmen de Lavallade, and son Léo.
Holder was born on August 1, 1930, in Port-of-Spain. His parents were Louise de Frense and Arthur Holder, immigrants from Barbados. One of four children, he was taught painting and dancing by his older brother Boscoe Holder, whose dance troupe, the Holder Dance Company, the young Geoffrey joined when he was seven years old. Geoffrey assumed direction of the company in the late 1940s after Boscoe moved to London.

Holder moved to the US in 1954, two years after being “discovered” by Agnes de Mille, the choreographer daughter of director-producer Cecil B. DeMille, after she saw the Holder Dance Company perform in St. Thomas, Virgin Islands. Holder, a talented painter, sold a score of his paintings to raise the funds to bring the Holder Dance Company to New York City in 1954 (in 1957 Holder won a Guggenheim Fellowship to study painting). He would appear with his dance company, now titled Geoffrey Holder and Company, in New York through 1960.

Still of Jane Seymour and Geoffrey Holder in Live and Let Die (1973)
Still of Jane Seymour and Geoffrey Holder in Live and Let Die (1973) (© 1973 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved)
Still of Geoffrey Holder in Live and Let Die (1973)
Still of Geoffrey Holder in Live and Let Die (1973) (© 1973 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved.)
Still of Roger Moore, Yaphet Kotto, Jane Seymour, Julius Harris and Geoffrey Holder in Live and Let Die (1973)
Still of Roger Moore, Yaphet Kotto, Jane Seymour, Julius Harris and Geoffrey Holder in Live and Let Die (1973) (1973 Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc. All Rights Reserved)

On December 30, 1954, Holder made his Broadway debut (as did Diahann Carroll) at the Alvin Theatre in the Caribbean-themed original musical “House of Flowers”, with music by Harold Arlen, who also co-wrote the book with Truman Capote. The cast included Pearl Bailey and Alvin Ailey, and the show was directed by Peter Brook. Herbert Ross did the choreography but the “Banda Dance” was choreographed by Holder. The show ran for 165 total performances but, more importantly, Holder met and married fellow cast member ‘Carmen DeLavallade’, a dancer, and the two had a son together. From 1955 through 1956 Holder was a principal dancer with the Metropolitan Opera Ballet.

Holder played the role of Lucky in a revival of Samuel Beckett’s “Waiting for Godot” directed by Herbert Berghof on Broadway in January 1957. The all-black cast also included Geoff Searle as Vladimir, Rex Ingram as Pozzo and Mantan Moreland as Estragon. The show only lasted six performances, but it established Holder as an actor, and he made his film debut four years later in All Night Long (1962), a modern gloss on William Shakespeare’s “Othello”. His most famous role was as the heavy “Baron Samedi” in the James Bond movie Live and Let Die (1973), Roger Moore’s first turn as 007.

Holder won the 1975 Tony Award for Best Direction of a Musical for his staging of the Broadway musical “The Wiz” (1975), the all-African American retelling of “The Wizard of Oz.” He also won the Tony for best costume design (he would be nominated again for a Tony for best costume design for the original 1978 Broadway musical “Timbuktu!”, which he also directed and choreographed). As a choreographer he has created dance pieces for many companies, including the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater.

Holder wrote two books, one on folklore and one on Caribbean cuisine. In the 1970s and 1980s, he put his striking 6’6″ presence and bass voice to good use selling various products in TV commercials, including soft drinks.