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VEGETARIAN ELITE
Actress, Vocalist & Choreographer Trina Parks: Vegan is Forever - P1/2
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Welcome lively viewers
to Vegetarian Elite.
On today’s program,
we are honored to feature
the elegant and
multi-talented American
performing artist
Ms. Trina Parks.
An actress, vocalist,
choreographer, dancer,
and dance lecturer,
Ms. Parks has mastered
all these arts to perfection
using her God-given gifts
and extraordinary
perseverance.
My name is Trina Parks
and I was the first
African American
bond girl/villain,
my character was Thumper.
And I am a strict
vegetarian, strict vegan,
and I just love that
you have
Supreme Master Television,
because I am definitely
going to watch it,
because I agree with that.
As a vivacious actress
with a unique presence,
Ms. Parks has appeared
in TV specials with
the famous American
actors Dean Martin
and Sammy Davis Jr.
She is perhaps most
praised and remembered
until today for making
cinematic history
as the first
African-American
woman featured
in a James Bond film -
“Diamonds Are Forever”
starring Scottish actor
Sean Connery.
Born to dance,
Ms. Parks has mastered
multiple dance styles and
traveled the world as
the lead performer with
a number of prestigious
dance companies.
Equally at ease
as a creator of dances,
she choreographed
the 1975 Tony
Award-winning musical
“The Wiz,” starring
American superstar
singers Michael Jackson
and Diana Ross.
On top of it all, Ms. Parks
has been a vegetarian,
and now a vegan,
for over 34 years!
Although having passed on
when Ms. Parks had just
been born, her mother, an interior decorator,
had somehow intuitively
known that her unborn
daughter would become
a performing artist.
Ms. Parks’ father was a
great jazz musician who
was constantly on tour,
yet made the time
to instill in Ms. Parks
knowledge that
would bring to life
her mother’s words.
You’re a multi-talented
artist sensation,
an actress, vocalist,
choreographer,
principal dancer
and dance instructor.
You grew up with
a famous saxophonist
father, and graduated
from the New York
High School of
Performing Arts, with a
major in Modern Dance
with the Martha Graham
Technique.
Do you consider yourself
born to be a performer?
Because you’re
certainly talented.
Well, actually it was
so funny because I was
told by my aunt that
my mother said that I was
going to be a performer.
Really?
And I actually found this
out in my adult life,
it had to be maybe
25 years ago,
she told me this.
Wow.
You’ve worked with
a lot of different
dance companies
as a principal dancer.
How do you describe
your evolution as
a dancer through
these many experiences?
Oh my gosh,
it was so many – starting
out at the High School
of Performing Arts.
I did my audition for
the High School of
Performing in New York.
But I wasn’t sure if
I really wanted to do
this dance or not,
because ironically, I also
applied for the Bronx
High School of Science.
Just two completely
separate careers.
Completely separate.
I was very good in
getting projects together.
Terrible in math, but
I just was good in science.
I just applied for all these
three schools and all that
I was accepted in
the Bronx High School
of Science.
I obviously was accepted
in High School of
Performing Arts and then
they asked me to
come back and
do the dance again.
Anyway, that’s how it
all started, in the school.
I had the most wonderful
teachers, a
Martha Graham teacher.
One was Norman Walker,
who was in her company,
and met one of
her dancers in the ’50s.
Celebrated American
choreographer
Ms. Martha Graham
developed
a dance technique that
went beyond the tradition
of classical ballet and
pioneered the field
of modern dance.
Mr. Norman Walker is
another choreographer
with a living legacy.
Ms. Trina Parks learned
from the best of the best.
Martha Graham used to
come to the school
periodically and teach
Helen Tamaris who was
in her company, was one
of our guest teachers,
and I ended up
being a soloist
in at my senior year,
doing her.
“Negro Spiritual,”
she choreographed
way back in late ’30s.
I was chosen to do
“Swing Low
Sweet Chariot.”
And they’re on reel in
Performing Arts Library
in New York.
And it started that thing
going for me,
because from there,
I met Pearl Lang.
I used to go to the Graham
School in New York.
Sometimes after school
I would take classes at
the Graham School down
in the village in New York,
and I also started
to going to
Katherine Dunham school,
which was a completely
different technique.
Sounds like you’ve
worked very hard
in your area.
Oh then,
I was all about dance.
I was all about dance.
Ms. Parks shares some
of her memorable and
humorous moments of
performing live on stage,
tales that reveal
her winning spirit.
I was with the Chester
Whitmore Dance,
Black Ballet
Dance Company.
We were touring Europe,
this was around the ’80s.
I was wearing high heels
for the number
that I was doing.
It was my solo song and
dance number,
so I sprained my ankle.
But anyway, I came out
on stage hopping…
(Oh my goodness!)
with a cast on and
I kind of stood there.
I sat on the edge of
the stage and I did
the whole dance sitting
on edge of stage.
I was doing “What’s Love
Got To Do with It.”
And then I thought
if I go downside and I
lifted the leg up like that,
and go like that,
and the crowd was
just roaring.
The show must go on
(Oh, absolutely.)
was really true.
But Minnie had a heart
as big as a whale
I came on with
“Minnie the Moocher.”
And then all of a sudden
the music stopped.
I kept going, now you’re
talking about 3,000
or more people.
Now they know backstage
that something was
going on with the music
and they’re like
“Oh my gosh.”
I kept singing
louder and louder.
The man in the booth,
and the whole audience,
I mean they were
just clapping,
I mean I didn’t do,
I just kept going.
I mean, what are you
going do, stand, “Okay,
where’s the music?”
No, there an audience
there.
So I was just kept
going and going and
louder and louder and
I got to the right very end
section of the song and
the music came back on
and I was right on
on to the music;
I surprised myself.
But, I was, “Oh God,
I thank you God,” and
I got a standing ovation.
I was so happy, I just
almost clapped myself,
you know
when I was leaving.
That’s amazing!
I always feel that
the true singer really
doesn’t need music,
because your voice is
the music itself, isn’t?
Yeah, that’s right,
that’s so true.
And I’ve done live
Broadway, and
the theatre and all, and
you project because
you know how to
breathe anyway from
my dancing experience,
in the beginning
of dancing.
We’re breathing from
your abdomen, stomach
here, all through and
it helps in your singing,
and so this is what
I have been trained to do
for years before.
So you project to the last
person in the audience,
so that’s what I did.
Ms. Parks accredits a part
of her natural abilities
to her talented father,
Mr. Charles Frazier,
a jazz musician
who performed with the
legendary Duke Ellington
and also played lead sax
for the famous
Cab Calloway Orchestra.
When her father took
young Trina to her
first piano lesson when
she was nine years old,
little Trina jumped up
from the bench and
started to dance instead
of staying seated
to practice the piano!
Needless to say,
dancing came
very naturally to her
from the very beginning.
My father was
in Chicago with Cab’s
band when I was born.
He taught me so
very much about loving,
and he’s a musician.
And he was, I mean he’s
been around everything –
he played with
Cab Calloway, Jimmy
Lunsford before that,
Chris Calloway back
in the ’30s and ’40s.
But he knows all these
people, you know, singers,
Don Washington,
played at
the Apollo several times.
And he taught me
to be very humble.
Daddy didn’t smoke.
And he taught me
those values – the values
of being honest,
being straight-forward
with people.
I knew all kinds of music,
because he taught music.
He taught classical music,
because he played
the flute, he played
all the wind instruments.
He ate healthy. He did.
And he was so much
an influence to me,
character-wise.
He loved children,
and he loved animals.
Ms. Parks is indeed “like
father like daughter”
in more than a few ways.
Absolutely. I love animals.
I’ve always had cats,
a lot of cats.
I love all animals.
I get along with them
really well.
I think that they’re like
children, they are
innocent creatures, and
they’re loving unless
they have a master
that makes them not.
I think that they are
in most cases, they are,
and they could be
wonderful, wonderful
companions.
Especially like
those people in hospitals
and all, you can see how
they even have animals
come to hospitals, and
do that, and befriend
the people in the hospital,
just the senior citizens
and all.
When did you become
a vegetarian and why?
I’ve been a vegetarian
since ‘76.
I met someone that was
really way before his time.
He was into the raw,
whole thing,
back in the ’70s.
And he started to educate
me about meats,
and would give me
a book to read: when
they do kill the animals,
what animal’s poisons
get into each one
and diseases of other fish.
So I would say in ’76,
I weaned off of all meats,
and then last was fish.
And what change
have you noticed
becoming a vegetarian?
I feel lighter.
It’s a whole
other body feeling –
you don’t feel sluggish.
I didn’t really eat that
much meat even before,
fortunately.
And I remember
when I was doing this
at Broadway, I was
eating a hamburger.
And that hamburger
did something, it just
messed my stomach up.
I was thinking about it,
“Oh, you know, this stuff,
I don’t need this.”
My breakfast,
I have all organic foods,
but I’ll have organic
cereal and I drink soy milk
because
I don’t drink dairy.
No dairy And,
I’ll have blueberries and
cranberries and peaches
in my cereal
in the morning.
At 5, after teaching,
I’ll eat, maybe at 6,
maybe 7 something.
And I have veggie burger,
some greens,
I love collard greens.
I don’t eat any fried foods.
Veggie franks, I get them
at the health food store.
Veggie chili.
Everything
that’s to me are natural,
coming from the earth,
coming from nature
all round,
is the most healthy
for you as a human.
Delightful viewers,
this concludes today’s
edition of
Vegetarian Elite.
Please join us again next
Saturday, February 26
to find out more about
the vibrant life and
dazzling career highlights
of the gorgeous vegan
performance artist
Ms. Trina Parks.
She’ll share more about
her thoughts
on her plant-strong diet,
what it was like being
in a James Bond film,
her spiritual outlook,
and her work to inspire
the next generation
of performers.
What goes in, always
shows on your face.
A lot of people that have
problems with their skin
and all.
It’s what they eat, you know,
a lot of what they eat,
most of the time.
If you’re in line
in your life with
good spirit and
God-like qualities,
you’ll bring that to you
and it will show
through your body,
through your face and
through your actions
and all that.
And that’s the way I,
I like to be.
Thank you for your
pleasant company today.
Coming up next is
Between Master
and Disciples,
here on
Supreme Master Television.
May your inner beauty
and grace shine forward
to illuminate the world.
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