20 Years Since Katrina
The "Resurrection" of the Baby Dolls tradition
20 years ago, our city faced unimaginable loss during Hurricane Katrina. We carry in our hearts those we lost and those who still feel the weight of that storm.
Yet through it all — we made it through that water.
Today, we honor the resilience of New Orleans.
Today, we celebrate the spirit of our people.
Today, we remember. 💐
Twenty years ago, our organization conceived and coined the New Orleans “resurrection” of a once-dormant doll-masking tradition. With the blessings and guidance of our elder Doll pioneers and practitioners, we have dedicated our lives and mission to restoring, preserving, cultivating, educating, entertaining, and inspiring through this legacy. We do it for the culture. We do it for our people. We are proud to be your #NewOrleansMardiGrasBabyDolls—also known as the #NewOrleansBabyDollLadies.
Click the image to visit our Instagram page, where you can view an edit showing the New Orleans Baby Dolls throughout the years!
RESURRECTION OVERVIEW:
Established in March 2005 by New Orleans native and choreographer Millisia White, the New Orleans Society of Dance Baby Doll Ladies provides girls and women between the ages of seventeen and sixty plus a fun, productive place to get physically active, enrich their lives, and make connections with their peers.
In the aftermath (August 2005) of Hurricane Katrina’s subsequent record flooding, OUR dance company poured its time and talents into the collaborative mission members coined “New Orleans Resurrection,” advocating for cultural arts renewal in OUR hometown. THE New Orleans Baby Doll Ladies represents a significant paradigm shift in the Baby Dolls tradition. By this time, there weren’t any baby doll groups left on Mardi Gras to see…the tradition had been dormant for decades prior to the short-lived Rally of the Kdoe dolls in 2004.
We hosted a floorshow in 2007, aimed at restoring the doll-masking tradition and other elements of New Orleans culture..out of that production came the inspiration to continue the baby doll tradition …keeping dance at the forefront…
Jazz dance and street dance is the common thread of the doll-masking tradition throughout all of the eras. As the main chosen successors, our dance company works to protect and preserve its legacy and its namesake as we are the official and only New Orleans Baby Dolls, cultivating our traditions with a high sense of aesthetics and new purpose
We’re renowned for our choreographic works, modern costumes, and trademark porcelain doll-like painted faces.
In 2009, in a customary show of solidarity and support, the Ernie K-Doe Baby Dolls co-founders Geannie Thomas, Tee Eva Perry, and the Original Baby Doll, Elder Miriam Batiste-Reed, or Aunt Miriam as the Baby Doll Ladies revere her, along with her late brother and musician, “Uncle” Lionel Batiste, dedicated their blessings, passed down precious heirlooms, and collectively shared their untold legacies with Millisia White’s New Orleans Baby Doll Ladies, thus passing the torch to the ensemble as premier culture bearer of New Orleans’ doll-masking and dancing birthright.
Within almost fifteen years of the dance company’s journey, the Baby Doll Ladies has grown to become an endearing Carnival staple in New Orleans, striving to inspire others in the process. By highlighting the essential role of dance at the cultural forefront, the New Orleans Baby Doll Ladies’ annual Mardi Gras Day Dance-Parade helps present this masking tradition in its proper historical perspective and correct place in history.
Therefore, another essential goal of the New Orleans Society of Dance Baby Doll Ladies is to rescue the doll-masking tradition from stereotyping, invisibility, and obscurity. The resurgence you witness today is buoyed by the New Orleans Baby Doll Ladies Resurrection and restoration and making thetradition relevant again
More than anything else, the New Orleans Baby Doll Ladies is an authentic sisterhood of lively, talented women from different walks of life with a common ground in the dance arts. The organization’s dedicated mission is making a difference in engaging communities and bringing joy into the hearts of people through dance, dance education, and the dance company’s performance art endeavors. The Baby Doll Ladies offers increased knowledge and a better way to think about the once-dormant Baby Dolls tradition of New Orleans, preserving, cultivating, and sharing it in ways never done before.










