Listen On:

  • Apple Podcasts
  • Spotify
  • Apple Podcasts
  • Spotify

Join Pushkin+

Subscribe to Pushkin+ to binge the entire season early and ad-free!

“All the dancers wanted that black music. Why? Because it had a danceable backbeat.” 

Dance at Charlie’s Place wasn’t just dance; it captured the spirit of an era defined by both segregation and creativity. When white audiences arrived for the music, these moments sparked shifts that transformed Myrtle Beach and resonated far beyond its borders.

The Host

Rhym Guissé

Rhym Guissé is a Los Angeles-based director, actor and screenwriter whose work bridges the worlds of performance and filmmaking with a distinct emotional and cultural lens. A multidisciplinary storyteller, she…