Tag Archives: Exhale Dance Tribe

THE SILENCE OF FLOWERS From Exhale Dance Tribe on April 20

EDT_The Silence of FlowersTHE SILENCE OF FLOWERS
Exhale Dance Tribe
April 20
Aronoff Center for the Arts Jarson-Kaplan Theatre

“Only when we remember to cultivate our inner gardens do we return to the rest and beauty of being, feeling the earth breathe with us.” – Andrew Hubbard, Exhale Dance Tribe Co-Founder

The spring equinox sets us free, brings us joy, and supports our creation of the world our hearts long for. Enjoy Exhale’s spring concert celebrating new works by Founders and Artistic Directors Missy Lay Zimmer and Andrew Hubbard, as well as a premiere by up-and-coming choreographer and Exhale Dance Tribe dancer Maddy Cundiff.

A resident company of the Aronoff Center, Exhale Dance Tribe is a contemporary dance company comprised of adult professional dance artists and dance educators. Founded in 2005 by Broadway veterans Andrew Hubbard and Missy Lay Zimmer, Exhale celebrates the full range of modern and rhythm-based dance and features diverse and versatile performers. Their programs, performances, and original choreographies speak to the region’s need for expressionistic and multi-lingual dance rooted in rhythmic language and storytelling.

  • Sat, April 20 at 8pm

Official page |

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Auditions Announced for Exhale Dance Tribe

EDT_logoAUDITION DATE & TIME: Sun, June 11 at 6pm

Planet Dance Cincinnati
2230 Gilbert Ave, Cincinnati 45206

’25 to watch’ by Dance Magazine and voted Top 3 Dance Troups by Cincinnati City Beat (2016). Exhale Dance Tribe offers a year round contract starting August 2017- mid Summer 2018 with paid performances. A proud resident dance company of the Aronoff center for the Arts.

Applicants should be committed artists who will participate in 2-4 shows including numerous rehearsals throughout the season. EDT is paid per performance/project.

EDT is looking for dance artists who possess a strong commitment to the rehearsal process. MEN ARE STRONGLY ENCOURAGED TO APPLY.

EDT has senior soloist or core member positions available. Minimum age requirement is 17 years of age

Guest Artist and Dance extra positions are also available.
*Apprenticeships available for dancers 15-17 years of age

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Exhale Dance Tribe Resurrects DEAD CAN DANCE Using Aerial Silks in Collaboration with Physical Productions

edt_dead-can-dance(CINCINNATI) =DEAD CAN DANCE, Exhale Dance Tribe’s popular annual Halloween-themed show, returns to haunt the 2016-17 season with brand-new choreography by Founding Artistic Directors Missy Lay Zimmer and Andrew Hubbard. Performances will take place at the Aronoff Center for the Arts’ Jarson-Kaplan Theater on Saturday, Oct. 29, at 3:00 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.

Zimmer and Hubbard (who are joined this season by resident choreographers Katie Farry and Jennifer Porteous-Rutherford) deliver eclectic, exciting choreography, melding elements of contemporary dance with their own idiosyncratic style. Aerial silks acrobatics performed while suspended from fabric hanging from the ceiling will play a role in the production, as aerialist Holly Price performs alongside the all-female Tribe to take DEAD CAN DANCE up to the rafters.

Conjuring the spirit of longing, the show begins with Price falling from the land of the living into land of the dead, a purgatory populated by mesmerizing ghosts who dance through their days. We follow her as she experiences the movement of the underworld, a place forever trapped in the stages of grief.

“DEAD CAN DANCE trails a lonely soul, an anchor for the audience to follow throughout the production,” says Co-Founding Artistic Director Andrew Hubbard. “She descends through the five stages of grief as she mourns her old life and discovers the complexities of her afterlife. The ghosts she encounters in this purgatory are perpetually searching for acceptance and eternal rest. Hanging from the thread of life and unable to release the red that once flowed through her veins, this lonely soul battles her innate longing to be born again and again and again.”

Discover this mesmerizing new version of a Cincinnati favorite this Halloween. Tickets are $32.25 and can be purchased now at www.cincinnatiarts.org/events/detail/dead-can-dance. Feel free to come in costume!

This production is supported in part by a grant from the Greater CincinnatiFoundation Aronoff Center Rental Subsidy Fund.

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Auditions Announced for 2015-2016 Resident Dance Company at Exhale Dance Tribe

May 29 from 7:30-9:30pm

Planet Dance Cincinnati
2230 Gilbert Avenue
Cincinnati, OH 45206

Exhale Dance Tribe is rooted in rhythmic storytelling, existing to leave an emotional imprint on our audiences. Exhale is currently seeking dancers for the 2015-2016 season. Auditions are being held for Ballet, Jazz, Hip Hop, Free Form/Authentic Movement, Modern and Contemporary style dancers. Male dancers encouraged.

EDT_Auditions

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Cincinnati CityBeat Best of Cincinnati Performing Arts-ish Winners

MISC_2015 Citybeat Best of CincinnatiHey Gang

Cincinnati CityBeat announced their 2015 Best of Cincinnati Winners. I’ve scanned through the list and pull the ones I thought would be of interest to you. -Rob

Click here for the complete list of 2015 Arts and Nightlight Staff Picks.

Performing arts-related winners include:

BEST ONE-MAN SHOW
You might think you know Bruce Cromer through his many years at the Cincinnati Playhouse as Ebenezer Scrooge. But he demonstrated his versatility and range in AN ILLIAD at Ensemble Theatre, a one-man retelling of Homer’s great epic of the Trojan War. Like a timeless reincarnation of the poet, Cromer bemoaned the devastation and futility of warfare, painting lurid pictures with words and dynamic physicality and bringing the story to life playing heroic Achilles, conscientious Hector, coy Helen of Troy and ambitious Patroclus. Cromer had a great script to work from, but he made it memorable with a stellar performance. Ensemble Theatre Cincinnati, 1127 Vine St., Over-the-Rhine, 513-421-3555, ensemblecincinnati.org.

BEST OLD & NEW OPERATIC STORYTELLING
For its 2014 summer season, Cincinnati Opera showed how singing and storytelling have evolved across four centuries. At the School for Creative and Performing Arts, audiences had the chance to see a bawdy, laugh-out-loud piece of Baroque entertainment, Francesco Cavalli’s La Calisto (1651). Back at Music Hall, audiences were transported to the First World War’s “Christmas Truce” with a moving production of Silent Night, the winner of the 2012 Pulitzer Prize for music. America’s second-oldest opera company has the formula for giving operagoers a memorable sampling of the art form. Cincinnati Opera, ensemblecincinnati.org.

BEST THEATRICAL HANDOFF
After a half-dozen years of artistic leadership at Know Theatre, Eric Vosmeier handed the keys over to Andrew Hungerford, a CCM master’s grad who has been designing sets for the Jackson Street company since 2007. Vosmeier was an energetic force there, especially pushing the annual Fringe Festival in creative directions and to new heights. The transition was announced late in 2013 and occurred seamlessly during the 2014 summer. Hungerford has brought a new kick of creativity with some new directors, staff and free performances on Wednesday evenings. Know Theatre of Cincinnati, 1120 Jackson St., Over-the-Rhine, 513-300-5669, knowtheatre.com.

BEST VENUE FOR GETTING A MODERN DANCE FIX
If you’re looking to see modern dance in Cincinnati, you can count on the Aronoff Center’s Jarson-Kaplan Theater to deliver the goods. Several times a year, the mid-sized theater of the Aronoff’s trio of venues hosts performances from myriad companies across a broad range of contemporary styles. From local ensembles, such as the Jazz-tinged Exhale Dance Tribe and postmodern MamLuft&Co. Dance, to Contemporary Dance Theater’s Guest Artist Series (featuring national and international companies) and its annual Area Choreographers Festival, the 437-seat venue offers a rather intimate, no-bad-seat-in-the-house space to catch contemporary dance. Aronoff Center for the Arts, Jarson-Kaplan Theater, 650 Walnut St., Downtown, 513-721-3344, cincinnatiarts.org/aronoff-center.

BEST CHANCE TO SEE BALLET DANCERS PUSH THE ENVELOPE
Catch Cincinnati Ballet at its most modern in the annual New Works season opener each September. As its name suggests, this program is designed to move dance forward, thanks to a broad range of big-name innovative choreographers, many of whom represent the cutting edge of the international dance scene. Of course, such boundary-pushing choreography demands top talent — enter Cincinnati Ballet dancers’ versatile terpsichorean prowess, which makes it all come alive. Audiences also enjoy the intimacy of these shows in a close-up space. (Until last year, New Works shows had been held in the Ballet’s home studios; now they’re in the Aronoff Center’s Jarson-Kaplan Theater.) Cincinnati Ballet, 1555 Central Parkway, Downtown, 513-621-5219, cballet.org.

BEST REASON FOR INDIE ROCK FANS TO GO TO THE SYMPHONY
It seems like only affluent old people attend the symphony, and one reason is because young people either can’t afford it or have no interest in listening to music that is 200 years old. But for the MusicNOW fest the past two years, Cincinnati-bred/Brooklyn-based group The National played an evening with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra at Music Hall. Yes, your fave Indie band appeared at the symphony — National member Bryce Dessner heads up MusicNOW — so suddenly it was cool to be seen among the olds, and tickets were as cheap as $25. MusicNOW,musicnowfestival.org.

BEST FLASH FROM THE PAST
Although Rosemary Clooney’s nephew George is the one making headlines today, the girl singer who grew up in Maysville, Ky., and Cincinnati made her own name back in the ’40s and ’50s. Her rise, fall and comeback were neatly documented in TENDERLY: The Rosemary Clooney Musical at the Playhouse. It was like a trip back in time at the Cincinnati Playhouse’s intimate Shelterhouse, where performer Susan Haefner wonderfully captured the essence of Rosie’s singing career. Local audiences flocked to see her through the holidays in a twice-extended run to the middle of January. Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, 962 Mt. Adams Circle, Mount Adams, 513-421-3888, cincyplay.com.

BEST EXTENDED THEATRICAL MONOLOGUE 
The one-person theatrical adaptation of Joan Didion’s acclaimed memoir THE YEAR OF MAGICAL THINKING, an anguished but poetic rumination of the death of her husband and extended (and ultimately fatal) illness of her daughter, is a tough, cathartic project to pull off. But Cate White, who starred in it in December as part of the Cincy One Act Festival of plays at College Hill Town Hall, was magnificent at portraying Didion as she addressed the audience in a small, intimate setting. She was assisted by director Lyle Benjamin, lighting designer Chris Carter and projection designer by Doug Borntrager. It deserved the revival it got this year. cincyoneact.com.

Click here for the complete list of 2015 Arts and Nightlight Readers Picks.

Performing arts-related winners include:

Local Theater Company 

  1. Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park
  2. Know Theatre of Cincinnati
  3. Cincinnati Shakespeare Company
Local Actor/Actress 
  1. Annie Fitzpatrick
  2. Erin Ward
  3. Miranda McGee
Local Dance Group 
  1. Cincinnati Ballet
  2. Cin City Burlesque
  3. Exhale Dance Tribe
Local Vocal Arts Group 
  1. Cincinnati Children’s Choir
  2. MUSE Cincinnati Women’s Choir
  3. May Festival Chorus

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