Elka Samuels Smith on Tap Dance, Culture, and Arts Advocacy episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 11, 2026 · 21 MIN

Elka Samuels Smith on Tap Dance, Culture, and Arts Advocacy

from American Spectacle · host Thomas King Flagg

Elka Samuels Smith joins Thomas King Flagg for a conversation about dance as family legacy, cultural language, and public responsibility.The episode explores tap history, dance management, arts funding, and what it takes to rebuild dance ecosystems in local communities. For artists, educators, and presenters, it offers a practical view of how dance sustains itself: intergenerational mentorship, credible business support, and long-term advocacy.Smith is a producer, manager, and dance advocate raised in a multigenerational dance family. She grew up at JoJo Smith Dance Factory, where movement was part of daily life and dance functioned as a shared language across generations.A central theme is dance as more than performance. Smith describes it as cultural memory and communication, reinforced through family gatherings rooted in rhythm, music, and collaboration. The idea is simple: movement is innate, not niche.The episode also highlights tap dance as both an artistic discipline and a business ecosystem. Smith emphasizes its technical and historical depth, while advocating for greater recognition alongside mainstream performance industries. She also points to connections between tap, step, and other percussive forms as an opportunity to expand audiences.Her path into management came through necessity, supporting tap artist Jason Samuels Smith. What followed was a hands-on process of learning contracts, navigating industry standards, and building an artist-first approach grounded in trust and long-term sustainability.Mentorship remains a key through-line. Smith describes how knowledge in tap is passed through direct relationships with elders, archival material, and lived experience, reinforcing the need for active preservation and institutional support.The conversation also addresses how communities can rebuild dance access. Smith notes that talent and ideas already exist; the challenge is aligning resources, venues, and leadership to support growth.For arts leaders and educators, this episode offers clear insights:Dance is core cultural infrastructureStrong management supports artistic longevityPercussive forms create crossover potentialFunding must support entire ecosystemsWatch the full interview---Featured Book: The Dressing DrinkWhat if the truth you were hiding was the very thing that could set you free?The Dressing Drink is a deeply personal memoir from Thomas King Flagg, tracing a life shaped by performance, legacy, and long-buried truths. From old Hollywood to backstage dressing rooms, it reveals the forces that shaped both the artist and the man behind the work.📘 The Dressing Drink — Available on Amazon, Kindle, Audible, & TheDressingDrink.net---💃 FlaggDance — Programs, media, and more at FlaggDance.com✨ Follow Us: LinkedIn | Instagram | YouTube | Facebook🔗 All links & updates: FlaggDance.com/links

Elka Samuels Smith joins Thomas King Flagg for a conversation about dance as family legacy, cultural language, and public responsibility. The episode explores tap history, dance management, arts funding, and what it takes to rebuild dance ecosystems in local communities. For artists, educators, and presenters, it offers a practical view of how dance sustains itself: intergenerational mentorship, credible business support, and long-term advocacy. Smith is a producer, manager, and dance advocat...

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Elka Samuels Smith on Tap Dance, Culture, and Arts Advocacy

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Powering the Middle TJ Wilde The podcast that celebrates the backbone of America, our middle class and small businesses. We dive into the challenges that harm consumers. Threaten businesses and undermine our economy. How do we blend timeless values and traditions with modern technology to secure a brighter future? Come explore how middle class values and small businesses can keep driving the economy, creating jobs, and offering the American dream Et Merdre ! Martin Poirot Et Merdre ! Votre émission vivante consacrée aux spectacles du même genre !Découverte des coulisses de toute les formes de créations artistiques du spectacle vivant : mise en scène, scénographie, jeu, écriture, expositions... Dans chaque émission retrouvez un artiste, un spectacle, un lieu, ou un festival. Aussi disponible en vidéo sur YouTubeUne émission animée par Martin PoirotRéalisée par Zachary GuerenneurIllustrée par Carole MarietHébergé par Ausha. Visitez ausha.co/fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations. SPADE: The Podcast Paul Anthony Henderson Jr SPADE: The Podcast stands as a beacon of hope and understanding, addressing critical mental health challenges within the African American community. SPADE (Suicide, Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder, Anxiety, Depression, and Epilepsy) seeks to shine a light on topics often stigmatized and misunderstood. Our mission is to break the silence surrounding these issues, encouraging open dialogue and fostering a culture of support and education. By providing meaningful resources and sharing powerful stories, we aim to empower individuals to confront these challenges head-on and build pathways toward healing. Mental health is a crucial but often overlooked subject in the African American community. It’s time to dismantle the barriers of shame and stigma, ensuring everyone feels safe to speak their truth and seek the help they need. This podcast is more than just a platform—it’s a movement to spark change, spread awareness, and inspire action within families, friendships, and communities. Generally American (A Journey in American English) Christopher M. Chandler, Kris Schauer Hello, Hola, Guten Tag, Bonjour, こんにちは !Welcome everyone, this is a podcast for those wanting to learn about U.S. culture through Standard American English, also known as General American. We talk about various different topics related to the U.S. and the U.S.'s relations with other countries. My co-host and I would like to think of this as more of a journey because you never know where it’ll take us. Plus, since the journey’s more important than the end or the start, we hope that you’ll be willing to join us! Let’s see where it takes us!

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This episode is 21 minutes long.

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This episode was published on April 11, 2026.

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Elka Samuels Smith joins Thomas King Flagg for a conversation about dance as family legacy, cultural language, and public responsibility.The episode explores tap history, dance management, arts funding, and what it takes to rebuild dance ecosystems...

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