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Berlie Mae <I>Ray</I> Dixon

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Berlie Mae Ray Dixon

Birth
Badin, Stanly County, North Carolina, USA
Death
9 Feb 2019 (aged 88)
Charlotte, Mecklenburg County, North Carolina, USA
Burial
Cremated Add to Map
Memorial ID
View Source
Berlie Ray Dixon passed away February 9, 2019 in Charlotte, North Carolina. Berlie was a beautiful soul, loved deeply by many. Born in Badin, North Carolina on April 5th, 1930, and reared in New Bern, North Carolina, she graduated from West Street High School in 1948 and from what is now North Carolina Central University in 1952. During this period, she excelled academically and showed great talent in the dramatic arts. Upon graduation, as a Rockefeller Scholar, she moved to Cleveland, Ohio to study theater at Western Reserve University. As a part of her studies, Berlie was active as a performer, director and educator at the renowned Karamu House where she was instrumental in developing their Children's Theater. In 1954, she married her college sweetheart, Ivan Nathaniel Dixon, and he joined her at Karamu. In 1955, she graduated as one of the first African Americans to receive a Master of Fine Arts Degree from Western Reserve. Later, after moving to New York City, she continued her work with youth, producing shows that united at-risk teens from various boroughs. In Los Angeles, while building a family, she managed to remain active in the theater as an actor and as a director of various children's theater groups and large scale variety shows. During the late 1980s she returned to her work with at-risk youth, helping educate and employ hundreds of young people as a recruiter for L.A. Job Corps. Mrs. Dixon is preceded in death by her husband, Ivan, as well as her sons, Ivan Dixon III and N'Gai Christopher Dixon. She is survived by her son, Alan Kimara Dixon and daughter, Doris Nomathande Dixon. At her request, there are no services planned.
Berlie Ray Dixon passed away February 9, 2019 in Charlotte, North Carolina. Berlie was a beautiful soul, loved deeply by many. Born in Badin, North Carolina on April 5th, 1930, and reared in New Bern, North Carolina, she graduated from West Street High School in 1948 and from what is now North Carolina Central University in 1952. During this period, she excelled academically and showed great talent in the dramatic arts. Upon graduation, as a Rockefeller Scholar, she moved to Cleveland, Ohio to study theater at Western Reserve University. As a part of her studies, Berlie was active as a performer, director and educator at the renowned Karamu House where she was instrumental in developing their Children's Theater. In 1954, she married her college sweetheart, Ivan Nathaniel Dixon, and he joined her at Karamu. In 1955, she graduated as one of the first African Americans to receive a Master of Fine Arts Degree from Western Reserve. Later, after moving to New York City, she continued her work with youth, producing shows that united at-risk teens from various boroughs. In Los Angeles, while building a family, she managed to remain active in the theater as an actor and as a director of various children's theater groups and large scale variety shows. During the late 1980s she returned to her work with at-risk youth, helping educate and employ hundreds of young people as a recruiter for L.A. Job Corps. Mrs. Dixon is preceded in death by her husband, Ivan, as well as her sons, Ivan Dixon III and N'Gai Christopher Dixon. She is survived by her son, Alan Kimara Dixon and daughter, Doris Nomathande Dixon. At her request, there are no services planned.


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