Category Archives: Dance

Dance ’16 Offers Something for Everyone at NKU This Spring

NKU_logoHIGHLAND HEIGHTS, KY – Northern Kentucky University | School of the Arts | Program of Theatre and Dance presents DANCE ‘16 March 18 – 19, 2016. DANCE ’16 will take place in the Corbett Theatre in the Fine Arts Center.

Not to be missed, DANCE ‘16 features a company of our best young dance artists. Full of new and innovative works created by faculty, guest artists, and nationally renowned choreographers in creative expressions including theatre dance, contemporary, tap, and jazz, DANCE ‘16 features something for everyone!

FACULTY CHOREOGRAPHERS

Tracey Bonner
Dance Coordinator and Assistant Professor, NKU
BFA, Shenandoah Conservatory of Shenandoah University
MFA, University of California, Irvine

Dee Anne Bryll
Theatre and Dance Faculty, NKU, Xavier University
Director, CCM Prep Musical Theatre Program
BA, Baldwin Wallace College
MA, Kent State University

Heather Britt
Dance Faculty, NKU
Owner and Founder, DANCEFIX by Heather Britt Dance Company

Jay Goodlett
Dance Faculty, NKU
Former Senior Soloist, Cincinnati Ballet
Artistic Director of Education and Outreach, The Children’s Theatre of Cincinnati

GUEST CHOREOGRAPHERS/DANCERS

Andrew Pearson
Faculty, California State University, Channel Islands
Guest Faculty, American Musical and Dramatic Academy
BFA, University of California, Irvine

Andrew Pearson is a dancer and movement artist who has performed and studied both nationally and internationally. He is in his 5th season with the Los Angeles Contemporary Dance Company, with whom he has traveled to Palm Springs, Florida, and New York City. Most notably, Andrew performed in Julien Previeux’s Award-Winning work What Will They Do Next in Paris and Malaga, Spain. Andrew has created work and directed movement for a variety of mediums and venues, including many musical theater productions, opera, film, and countless concert dances. His original concert-dance work has been seen all over Southern California and he has been commissioned to create new work for the Collabo Youth Collective, Santa Monica College’s Synapse Dance Theatre, the Los Angeles Contemporary Dance Company, and PGK Dance Project. As a dance educator, Andrew has served on faculty at the The Wooden Floor, the Los Angeles Arts Collective, the Orange County High School of the Arts, and the Nuevo School of Contemporary Dance. He has also been hired as a guest instructor for numerous institutions including Riverside Ballet Arts, The Colburn School, The Los Angeles Contemporary Dance Company, PGK Dance Project, Malashock Dance, Parker Dance Academy, and Colorado Mesa University. Some influential choreographers Andrew has had the opportunity to work with include Ryan Heffington, Loretta Livingston, Barak Marshall, Rosanna Gamson, Ido Tadmor, and Holly Rothschild.

Kim Popa
Executive Director and Co-founder, Pones Inc.
BFA, Northern Kentucky University

Kim Popa has studied dance for 30 years and graduated summa cum laude with a BFA in theatre and dance from Northern Kentucky University. Popa is a professor at the Art Academy of Cincinnati, and also teaches dance classes at The Carnegie and SCPA, as well as multiple dance workshops around the tri-state. Popa danced at the CrisisArt Festival in Arezzo, Italy in 2014 and the Sibiu International Theatre Festival in Sibiu, Romania in 2007, and performed in multiple NKU mainstage productions and modern dance concerts. In addition to teaching and performing, Popa is the Executive Director, cofounder, and performing member of Pones Inc. Beyond Pones Inc., she has choreographed for multiple award-winning productions at NKU, New Edgecliff Theatre, and Know Theatre. She is a member of the Young Professionals Board at the Children’s Home of Cincinnati, a trustee on the board of OhioDance, serves as a “big” for Big Brothers Big Sisters, and has a passion for art and volunteerism in many forms.

Kamelia Smith
Balinese Dancer

Kamelia Smith began learning Balinese dance as a five year-old growing up in Jakarta, the capital city of Indonesia. Since moving to Covington in 2010, Kamellia has shared her dancing with schools and universities in the Cincinnati area. Kamellia was a reporter for Tempo, a news magazine in Indonesia, and a contributor for Enquirer Media’s Community Recorder Newspaper in Northern Kentucky. She currently works for the ELS Language Center at the University of Cincinnati and continues to write and dance in her free time.

STUDENT CHOREOGRAPHERS

Maria Broderick
Senior, BFA Dance Candidate, Graduation May 2016

Lauren Crawford
Senior, BFA Dance Graduate, December 2015

Brian Spencer
Senior, BFA Dance Candidate, Graduation May 2016

Kyle Segar
Junior, BFA Music Theatre Candidate, Graduation May 2016

Kat Wolf
Senior, BA Integrative Studies Candidate, Graduation 2016
Theatre minor, Dance minor, Art Minor

Andrew Wiemann
Senior, BFA Acting Candidate, Graduation Spring 2016

For more information call the NKU School of the Arts Box Office at 859.572.5464 or visit theatre.nku.edu

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Cincinnati Modern Dance company MamLuft&Co. Dance to Give Free Spring Concerts, DANCE AT DUSK on April 2 & 3

MamLuft&Co. Dance, Cincinnati

MamLuft&Co. Dance, Cincinnati

IN GOOD WEATHER:
Smale Riverfront Park Schmidlapp Lawn & Stage
, behind Moerlein Lagerhouse, Downtown Cincinnati, OH 45202

IN BAD WEATHER:
Thursday, April 8: Intimate studio showing and meet-the-dancers at Clifton Cultural Arts Center 3rd Floor, 3711 Clifton Ave., Cincinnati, OH 45220.
Friday, April 9: Westwood Town Hall, 3017 Harrison Ave, Cincinnati, OH 45211.

See our Facebook Page (facebook.com/mamluftcodance) for announcements by 5pm each day for location confirmation.

CINCINNATI, OHIO — Cincinnati’s Modern Dance company MamLuft&Co. Dance is partnering with Cincinnati Parks to showcase the premiere of a video-and-dance trio funded by the Cincinnati Arts Ambassador Fellowship which was awarded the dance company’s director, Jeanne Mam-Luft.

Ms. Mam-Luft is the city’s first and only dance Fellow. With the award, the interdisciplinary artist created a trio titled “Unyielding” with dancer-collaborators and MamLuft&Co. Dance Members Steven Evans, Susan Honer, and Neile Martin. Artists in their own right, the three will be preceding the main attraction trio by performing solo works.

The evening spring lawn concerts are best intended for adults as date nights or post-work “R&R” (although they do not contain material inappropriate for children). Concert-goers are encouraged to order from the Moerlein Lagerhouse carry-out window before the performance begins at 8:30pm. Concert-goers should also bring their own chairs or blankets.

MamLuft&Co. Dance was recently named “Best Dance Company Pushing the Envelope” (2012) and described as “intrepid” and “impressive” by CityBeat, whose Kathy Valin also called Jeanne Mam-Luft “a brainy director and accomplished choreographer (and filmmaker).” Seen and Heard International’s Rafael de Acha describes the company’s work as “potent stuff,” “athletic,” and “pure.”

The Cincinnati Arts Ambassador Fellowship funded trio, “Unyielding” exists both on the stage, and as a separate and self-contained film. In the live performances, it features a version of the film projected on the stage to augment the experience. At the Smale Riverfront Park Schmidlapp Stage, the projections will be cast onto the underside of stage’s uniquely curved overhanging structure. “Unyielding” was inspired by how intrinsic fears are basic and common amongst most people, and yet, creates conflict, in which we can take unyielding stances.

Steven Evans will perform his solo, “Succession,” which addresses how successive and constant change allows us to move forward. Neile Martin will perform a new solo titled, “Loss: Anonymous and Specific,” in which she explores what is worth saving after a loss. Susan Honer will perform “Home” by Northwest Florida Ballet’s Sharon Honer and “fine fine” by Bessie Award-winning Karinne Keithley Syers, two pieces inspired by very different music.

The concerts are free to the public, thanks to the Cincinnati Arts Ambassador Fellowship Program and Cincinnati Parks. The performances take place Thursday, April 2 and Friday, April 3, 2015 at 8:30pm at Smale Riverfront Park’s Schmidlapp Lawn and Stage, located downtown behind Moerlein Lagerhouse. The nearest street intersection to the stage is located at the end of Walnut and Theodore M. Berry Way. Concert-goers may find parking near the Banks, or may visit MLCo.org/dusk for a map of the area. (In case of inclement weather, the concerts may be postponed to April 9 and 10, and such a decision will be posted on the organization’s website and Facebook page.)

Other opportunities to see “Unyielding” include a free preview and process lecture on Saturday, March 7, 2015 at the Art Academy (1212 Jackson Street, Cincinnati, OH 45202) from 12-1pm as part of the Macy’s ArtsWave Sampler. A performance and process lecture will also be given Saturday, April 4, 2015 from 1-2pm at Cincinnati Art Museum Fath Auditorium (953 Eden Park Dr, Cincinnati, OH 45202).

Having just completed a successful fall touring season (during which the Company of eight dancers performed in Chicago and Roanoke, Virginia), as well as their home season kick-off at the Aronoff Center in January with a repertory concert, MamLuft&Co. Dance will be premiering their next mainstage and full-evening length work, Memoriam (In Memory of Memory), May 22 and 23.

MamLuft&Co. Dance gratefully acknowledges the operating support of the Ohio Arts Council, which helped fund this organization with state tax dollars to encourage economic growth, educational excellence, and cultural enrichment for all Ohioans. “Unyielding” was funded by an award to Director Jeanne Mam-Luft from the Cincinnati Arts Ambassador Fellowship Program, and the film location was sponsored by Rhinegeist. Dance at Dusk is sponsored by Cincinnati Parks.

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ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER | March 3-4, 2015 | Aronoff Center

ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER
Featuring the American Masterpiece Revelations along with a Variety of Premieres and Classics

 Presidential Medal of Freedom Acknowledges Powerful Legacy of Alvin Ailey that Continues to Thrive
Under Leadership of Artistic Director Robert Battle with Inspiring Performances

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater’s Glenn Allen Sims. Photo by Andrew Eccles.

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater’s Glenn Allen Sims. Photo by Andrew Eccles.

(Cincinnati, OH) – Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, beloved as one of the world’s most popular dance companies, will share its inspiring artistry with Tri-state audiences at the Aronoff Center’s Procter & Gamble Hall for two nights only, March 3-4, 2015 at 7:30pm. The much-anticipated dance event is part of the Cincinnati Arts Association’s 2014-15 Season.

Prior to the launch of Ailey’s exciting new season, Artistic Director Robert Battle visited the White House to accept the Presidential Medal of Freedom – the nation’s highest civilian honor – on behalf of Alvin Ailey. Bestowed 25 years after the passing of the Company’s legendary founder, President Obama proclaimed that “through him, African-American history was told in a way that it had never been told before – with passionate, virtuoso dance performances that transfixed audiences worldwide.”

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater carries on Alvin Ailey’s pioneering legacy of uplifting, uniting, and celebrating the human spirit as Ailey’s extraordinary dancers bring life to a wide variety of premieres, new productions, and classic works. The Cincinnati engagement will include six unique dance works split between the two performance dates, resulting in a different program for each performance. Both performance dates will include Ailey’s popular classic masterpiece, Revelations. (Program selections subject to change.)


TUESDAY, MARCH 3, 7:30 PM  

Grace (1999)
Choreography by Ronald K. Brown
Music: Duke Ellington, Roy Davis Jr., Paul Johnson, and Fela Anikulapo Kuti

This landmark creation for Ailey returned to the Ailey repertory in a rapturous, spiritually-charged new production for the 2012-13 season.  Infused with Brown’s signature blend of modern dance and West African idioms, this moving journey acknowledging the grace that surrounds us all is set to Duke Ellington’s classic “Come Sunday,” Roy Davis’ hit “Gabriel,” and the powerful rhythms of Fela Kuti’s Afro-Pop.

Episodes (1989)
Choreography:  Ulysses Dove
Music: Robert Ruggieri

Ulysses Dove, former Ailey Company member, created this explosive choreographic masterpiece – a passionate interpretation of expressing feelings and power struggles involved in human relationships – set to a percussive score by Robert Ruggieri.

Revelations (1960)
Choreography by Alvin Ailey
Music: Traditional Spirituals

An American classic acclaimed as a must‐see for all, Alvin Ailey’s signature masterpiece is a tribute to his heritage and a testament to his genius. Using African-American religious music – spirituals – this suite fervently explores the places of deepest grief and holiest joy in the soul.


WEDNESDAY, MARCH 4, 7:30 PM 

Polish Pieces (1995)
Choreography by Hans van Manen
Music:  Henryk Mikolaj Górecki

In Polish Pieces, Dutch choreographer van Manen displays his mastery for building dazzling creations from simple motifs and geometric patterns. Driven by the rhythms of Henryk Górecki’s score, the 12 dancers in this colorful ensemble work to create a brilliant kaleidoscope through endlessly shifting formations that contrasts with two sensual pas de deux. Hans van Manen began his ballet career in 1951 as a member of Sonia Gaskell’s Ballet Recital. He created his first ballet for the Nederlandse Opera Ballet in 1957 and created over 50 ballets for the Nederlands Dans Theater, where he was also the artistic director and a dancer. He has created over 120 ballets and his works have been staged by companies all over the world including the Stuttgart Ballet, Berlin Opera, the National Ballet of Canada, Pennsylvania Ballet, the Royal Ballet, the Royal Danish Ballet, and the State Opera in Vienna.  In 1992, the year of his 35th anniversary as a choreographer, he was given a Knighthood in the Order of Orange Nassau by the Queen of The Netherlands. He has been honored for his work many times, including the prestigious German Dance Prize for his influence on German dance, the much-heralded Erasmus Prize for his outstanding achievements in Dutch dance, and the Benois de la Danse for Lifetime Achievement.  At the occasion of his 75th birthday at the gala premiere of the Hans van Manen festival, Amsterdam’s mayor honored him with the Commandeur in de Orde van de Nederlandse Leeuw. Robert Battle comments: “Hans van Manen’s work has a great sense of humor and mischief in it. He’s a master of creating grand, kaleidoscopic works from very simple motifs. Polish Pieces has allusions to folk dance, which give it a timeless feeling that’s a wonderful complement to our repertory.”

Awassa Astrige/Ostrich (1932)
Choreography by Asadata Dafora
Music: Carl Riley

Sierra Leone-born choreographer Asadata Dafora blended his vision of a traditional African dance with Western staging in Awassa Astrige/Ostrich – a groundbreaking 1932 solo set to Carl Riley’s score of African drumming and flute. With arms flapping like wings, torso rippling, and head held high, a warrior is transformed into the proud, powerful ostrich ­– the king of birds. Dafora is recognized as one of the first to present African dance on the concert stage, influencing many future artists like Pearl Primus and Katherine Dunham. Asadata Dafora, a native of free town Sierra Leone, West Africa, was 40 years old when he came to New York in 1929. Earlier, he had been in Europe teaching African dance while studying music, and for a time, sang at La Scala. However, his true interest was always the rich heritage of African art and culture. Not only did he study the folklore of his own country, but he traveled extensively throughout Africa seeking additional knowledge as well. His unique talents burst upon the New York entertainment scene with a short run of the Opera Kykunkor, subtitled The Witch Woman. Kykunkor not only shattered many myths concerning the potential of Black ethnic materials as themes for concert dance, but proved that black dancers could be successful on the American concert stage. His company, Shologa Oloba, was made up of 25 Africans and African Americans whose dancing was acclaimed by critics and audiences. Robert Battle comments:  “I’ve always loved the mystery of this piece by Asadata Dafora; it’s one of the first fusions of African and Western styles of dance. Preservation is very important, and I wanted to give audiences a chance to see some of the early, historic works that shaped what we know as modern dance.”

Four Corners (2013)
Choreography: Ronald K. Brown
Music: Carl Hancock Rux, Rahsaan Roland Kirk, and Yacoub

Four Corners is celebrated choreographer Ronald K. Brown’s fifth work for Ailey’s extraordinary dancers, who have become known as inspiring interpreters of his phenomenal dance storytelling. Set to the music of Carl Hancock Rux and various artists, the 11 dancers on a spiritual journey bring to life the vision of four angels standing on the four corners of the earth holding the four winds.

Revelations (1960) – see above (Tuesday, March 3)


Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater grew from a now-fabled performance in March 1958 at the 92nd Street Y in New York City. Led by Alvin Ailey and a group of young African-American modern dancers, that performance changed forever the perception of American dance. The Ailey company has gone on to perform for an estimated 25 million people at theaters in 48 states and 71 countries on six continents — as well as millions more through television broadcasts.

In 2008, a U.S. Congressional resolution designated the Company as “a vital American cultural ambassador to the world” that celebrates the uniqueness of the African-American cultural experience and the preservation and enrichment of the American modern dance heritage. When Mr. Ailey began creating dances, he drew upon his “blood memories” of Texas, the blues, spirituals, and gospel as inspiration, which resulted in the creation of his most popular and critically acclaimed work, Revelations. Although he created 79 ballets over his lifetime, Mr. Ailey maintained that his company was not exclusively a repository for his own work.

Today, the Company continues Mr. Ailey’s mission by presenting important works of the past and commissioning new ones. In all, more than 235 works by over 90 choreographers have been part of the Ailey company’s repertory. Before his untimely death in 1989, Alvin Ailey named Judith Jamison as his successor, and over the next 21 years, she brought the Company to unprecedented success. Ms. Jamison, in turn, personally selected Robert Battle to succeed her in 2011, and The New York Times declared he “has injected the company with new life.”

Audience members are also invited to join in the dance during their next New York City visit with a complimentary class at The Ailey Extension for first-time visitors by using a ticket stub from any Ailey performance.  The Ailey Extension’s popular program of 80 weekly “real classes for real people” has been enjoyed by over 85,000 at Ailey’s ‘The Joan Weill Center for Dance’, New York’s largest building dedicated to dance.  Each “Ticket to Dance” special offer is good for one year from the performance date for first-time students, and when purchasing a 10-class card for classes for returning students.

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater inspires all in a universal celebration of the human spirit using the African-American cultural experience and the American modern dance tradition.  For further information, visit www.alvinailey.org.

CINCINNATI ARTS ASSOCIATION SPONSORS

SEASON SPONSORS:  AMERITAS (Founding Season Sponsor), FIFTH THIRD BANK (Lifetime Endowment Partner),FURNITURE FAIR, LOCAL12 WKRC, The P&G FUND of The Greater Cincinnati Foundation

SEASON PRESENTING SPONSORS:  21C Museum Hotel, Cincinnati Herald, CityBeat, Garfield Suites Hotel, Heidelberg Distributing, Hilton Cincinnati Netherland Plaza, Pepsi, Skyline Chili

ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER PRESENTING SPONSOR:  Macy’s

ALVIN AILEY AMERICAN DANCE THEATER MEDIA PARTNERS:  Cincinnati Herald, 1230 The Buzz, Old School 100.3

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