Among the other contestants with Berkeley ties were the California Golden Overtones, an all-female, student a cappella group who sang and danced to the attitude-filled "Just Because I'm a Woman" — and earned a place in the January 31 finals. The Cal Jazz Choir will make a special appearance to open the show.
Many Bay Area residents were on hand as well, including 7-year-old Shanelle Silas from Sacramento, who sang "The Greatest Love of All" in a decidedly dress-up gown of gold lamé and black velvet. "I did good!" she bragged afterward.
Chicago-to-Oakland transplant Lamont "Rabbean" Lumpkins had seen the Apollo announcement while searching for activities for the youth he mentors through a nonprofit. It was only his fourth time on stage. Clutching some handwritten pages of looseleaf notepaper, he performed an intense spoken-word piece called "Manhood," about black men's masculinity and a murdered best friend.
"Can you memorize that?" asked Brown while Lumpkins' last ringing words still hung in the air.
"Yes — I would have, but I just wrote it this morning," he answered shakily.
"Good. That was very nice. You'll get a phone call if you're chosen."
That was more feedback than most received. Sitting impassively at a folding table at the front of the stage for hours with barely a bathroom break, Brown stopped some contestants — the off-key and the overly derivative — in mid-performance with a gracious "Thank you for coming." In defiance of her grueling schedule, with ten cities behind her and 22 to go for a total of almost 4,000 performers, Brown takes her responsibility very, very seriously. "I have to keep my attention sharp," she said. "Even though I get tired, I have to give them the same respect that I would want someone to give me."
She stays sharp, all right. When a young Asian man prefaced his R&B song with the observation that the Apollo almost never features Asian singers, Brown corrected him with the names and dates of three such acts in recent months. And when a group that had auditioned previously in Riverside took the stage, she sent them packing before they even started singing. "They thought I wouldn't recognize them!" she scoffed. "They were so disappointed, but they'd had their chance already."
Apollo producer Vanessa Brown snacks on cookies to keep her energy up for the endless procession of performers
It's hard to imagine how Brown could keep all of the acts straight, given the number of surly rap duos, sultry R&B crooners and gospel soloists. But she had no trouble listing the several unusual acts that had stuck in her mind that day, from the "gentleman who did a mind-reading thing where he had us all pick cards and guessed them — I've never seen anything like him before" — to a robot impersonator and two Caucasian hip-hop artists: "They rocked, and they showed that they weren't afraid to interpret a form that didn't originate with them."
She also singled out the Baby Dollz, an act comprising two fresh-faced Oakland 17-year-olds in cowboy hats and their puppets, because they "added a little twist to their act, and I liked that." Toya Willock and Alexis Johnson let Tay-Tay and Cha-Cha, dolls they'd bought in Fisherman's Wharf, take the lead crooning Whitney Houston's "When You Believe"; the girls have been singing together since they were 10, and have appeared at the special Olympics, Stop the Violence marches and Great America.
"We perform a lot for kids with special needs, and they really like the puppets," said Willock, who has been accepted to UC Berkeley but hasn't yet decided whether she'll enroll.
Be a part of the show
"There's great talent throughout the Bay Area, and this has been a tougher process than usual," said Brown, indicating the pile of contestant folders in her "maybe" pile. "I've got a stack of more talent than I need to do a good show."
The 14 finalists were announced Wednesday, December 18: vocalist Mackenzie Marshall (Concord); spoken-word artist Yejide Najee-Ullah (Berkeley); Harihareswara; gospel rapper Ashlei Williams (Oakland); vocalist Cherelle Fortiér (San Francisco); breakdancing crew Hound Dawg Truckers (San Francisco); the Baby Dollz and their puppets; acoustic guitarist and vocalist Dawn Thomas (Northridge); experimental percussionist Derique, the Electric Body Drummer (Oakland); vocalist Jessica Johnson (San Jose); hip-hop dancers Triple X Rated (Oakland); New Faces—vocalists Nyere da Silva, Tanya Stone and Carmen Traylor (San Leandro); the Golden Overtones; and tap-dancing troupe Katie’s Dancers (Martinez).