Virginia Johnson
*This date celebrates Virginia Johnson's birth in 1950. She is a Black choreographer, former premia ballerina, journalist, and artistic director.
Virginia Johnson was born and raised in Washington, D.C. She began training in classical ballet at three under Therrell Smith, a friend of her mother's who had trained under Mathilde Kschessinska. When she was thirteen years old, she was accepted as a scholarship student at The Washington School of Ballet, where she trained under Mary Day and was the only Black student. She graduated from the school in 1968.
Johnson moved to New York City and enrolled as a dance major at New York University. While a student there, she took a class with Arthur Mitchell and was invited to help start a ballet company with him. She became a founding member of the Dance Theatre of Harlem in 1969 and was promoted to principal dancer. She danced lead roles in Agon, A Streetcar Named Desire, Creole Giselle, Concerto Barocco, Allegro Brillante, Fall River Legend, Swan Lake, Les Biches, and Glen Tetley's Voluntaries.
After a twenty-eight-year dancing career with the company, Johnson retired and enrolled as a communications student at Fordham University. She was later hired as the inaugural editor-in-chief of Pointe Magazine and served in that capacity from 2000 until she left in 2009 to become the artistic director of the Dance Theatre of Harlem until 2022.