Filtra per genere
- 230 - MSP 172: Mimi Garrard
The Journey of Creating Dance for Video with Mimi Garrard
Video dance work has become increasingly popular as technology has advanced, but not many dancers and choreographers have made it their primary medium of work. Today’s guest, Mimi Garrard, is the exception, having spent most of her extensive career focusing on video dance. In this episode of Movers & Shapers, we hear all about Mimi’s life, what led her to dance, her training under Alwin Nikolais, why she chose video dance, and what she loves about it. We delve into how she combines video and live dancing before Mimi expands on how technology has changed her work, the lighting system her husband designed for her, and some of her biggest influences throughout her career and life. Mimi feels that intuition has always been a driving force for her, and today, she tells us how that has served her work. We even discuss how AI might impact her work and what’s next for Mimi Garrard Dance Theatre. This is a fascinating episode filled with unique perspectives carved from Mimi’s special journey, so be sure to tune in!
Key Points From This Episode:
· An overview of Mimi’s life and what led her to dance.
· Her training and touring program with Alwin Nikolais and the pieces she did with him.
· Mimi’s move to the country, her outdoor work, and how madness is a theme of her work.
· What informed her decision to combine video with live dance and how it has been received.
· Who has influenced her work most throughout her career.
· What Alwin Nikolais was like (according to our guest!)
· How Mimi got hooked on video dance and how her work has evolved with technology.
· The lighting system her husband came up with for her dance videos.
· How Mimi’s intuition has served her throughout her career.
· The importance of learning and continuously working as a beginner.
· What’s next for Mimi and her curiosity about how AI will affect her work.
· Why she doesn’t attend screenings of her own work.
“If I don’t know what to do, it’s my intuition that tells me what to try next.” — Mimi Garrard
Mimi Garrard is an award-winning choreographer for the stage and for video.
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
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Mon, 15 Apr 2024 - 38min - 229 - MSP 171: Stefanie Nelson
Finding Your Artistry Beyond Words with Stefanie Nelson
One of the beautiful things about dance is the ability to express yourself without words. You can just dance. Joining Erin on the podcast today is Stefanie Nelson, Founder and Director of Stefanie Nelson Dancegroup (SND), a contemporary dance company based in NYC. Stefanie also established Dance Italia, an international summer dance program in Lucca, Italy. Today, she shares what kickstarted her lifelong love of dance and the influence that Alice Teirstein had on her journey. She also offers insight into her college journey and what it takes to make it as an artist in New York City. Tuning in, you’ll learn how she transitioned from dancer to choreographer and how 9/11 ultimately led her to Italy. She details her time dancing and choreographing in Italy before returning to America and shares her vision for Dance Italia. To learn more about Stefanie’s career highlights, challenges, and the different projects and initiatives that keep her busy, be sure not to miss this episode of Movers & Shapers. Thanks for listening in!
Key Points From This Episode:
· How quitting piano led Stefanie to a lifelong love of dance.
· Alice Teirstein and what led her to become a dancer.
· What it means to “make it work” as an artist in New York City.
· How Stefanie eventually transitioned into creating her own work as a choreographer.
· Running away to Italy after 9/11 and how it played out.
· Highlights from her time dancing and choreographing in Italy.
· Details about the Dance Italia festival and the vision behind it.
· How the organization and planning for Dance Italia have changed over the years.
· The different projects and initiatives that Stefanie is busy with.
· Insight into her upcoming work in 2025 and beyond.
· Highlights, challenges, and other obstacles from Stefanie’s career journey.
· Her hopes, aspirations, and dreams for the future.
“There’s something very beautiful about being able to express yourself without having to articulate words, ideas, thoughts, and sentences in a linear way.” — Stefanie Nelson
Stefanie Nelson is the Founder and Director of Stefanie Nelson Dancegroup (SND), a contemporary performance group based in NYC; DANCE ITALIA, an international summer dance festival in Lucca, Italy; and Motore 592, a bold, new, center for contemporary movement practices in Lucca, IT.
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers Follow for the latest on Facebook and Instagram
Mon, 25 Mar 2024 - 38min - 228 - MSP 170: Kathy Dunn Hamrick
Creating a Modern Dance Culture and Community with Kathy Dunn Hamrick
Establishing a modern dance company is no easy feat, but today’s guest managed to create a successful organization and build a wonderful modern dance community in Austin, Texas. Today on Movers & Shapers, we welcome Kathy Dunn Hamrick, the Artistic Director of Kathy Dunn Hamrick Dance, to discuss her work and how she helps dance grow in Austin. Kathy found a love for dance at a young age and quickly decided that she needed to dedicate her life to it. In this episode, you’ll hear all about Kathy’s life and career, her decision to teach, and how her desire to be ‘in charge’ led her to start her company. We discuss the difficulty of balancing a family and career, her gorgeous piece choreographed on platforms on a lake, and starting the Austin Dance Festival. We delve into Kathy’s recent cancer diagnosis and how her community has showed up for her, and Kathy opens up about next steps of sharing her knowledge with the next generation of dancers and choreographers. Finally, we walk through Kathy’s career highlights and struggles. To hear all this and more, press play now!
Key Points From This Episode:
· We delve into the who behind Kathy Dunn Hamrick and learn about how she got into dance.
· The wonderful mentors Kathy has had and how they shaped her career.
· Kathy tells us about her move to New York and why she decided to get her MFA.
· Transitioning into the role of dance teacher and founding namesake company; Kathy Dunn Hamrick Dance.
· How Kathy balances her family and business while keeping her career interesting for herself.
· The incredible dance piece that was choreographed by Kathy and performed on a lake.
· The modern dance culture in Austin and why Kathy started her dance festival.
· How COVID affected Kathy’s business and festival.
· Kathy’s diagnosis with stage four cancer and what’s next for her and the organization.
· Why finances have always been Kathy’s biggest business struggle.
· The highlights of Kathy’s career and the wonderful dance community she’s built.
“From a very young age I knew I wanted a family and I knew I wanted to dance and I’ve achieved both of those [things] so I’m living my best life honestly.” — Kathy Dunn Hamrick
Kathy Dunn Hamrick is the Artistic Director of Kathy Dunn Hamrick Dance Company and the Founder and Executive Producer of Austin Dance Festival.
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
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Mon, 11 Mar 2024 - 30min - 227 - MSP 169: Julie Lemberger
Enjoying the Art, Expression, and Freedom of Dance with Julie Lemberger
Welcome to the latest episode of the Movers and Shapers podcast, where today we're delighted to welcome our guest, Julie Lemberger. Julie is a multifaceted individual — she's had a life as a dancer, dance photographer, and educator. She has dedicated over 15 years to capturing the ephemeral beauty of concert dance. Her lens has encapsulated the essence of New York City's dance scene at the turn of the 21st century. Julie's stunning dance photography has graced the pages of prestigious publications like The New York Times, Dance Magazine, and numerous national and international journals and websites since 1993. Join the conversation to hear about what sparked her interest in dance, why she was initially turned off of modern dance, and how her ballet journey led her to places like The Netherlands, Germany, and New York. We delve into her diverse dance ventures and then pivot to hear about her transition to Plan B: starting college. Julie shares the fascinating intersection of her worlds; photography and dance, and articulates the emotions she experiences when capturing dance through her camera. Don't miss out on this intriguing discussion! Tune in now to hear all this and much more. Thanks for listening!
Key Points From This Episode:
· We discover how The Nutcracker sparked Julie’s interest in dance.
· Her thoughts on being more of an artist and enjoying ballet for the artistry of it.
· Why she decided to stick to the discipline of ballet while growing up.
· Julie shares a turning point, and realization, in her dance career.
· She delves into her time in Europe (The Netherlands, Germany, England).
· We are transported forward, back to New York, and her other endeavors at the Graham School, Jacob’s Pillow, and more.
· Her Plan B: starting college.
· Why starting college was the saddest day of her life.
· She recalls the time she got her first camera, at age 23.
· When the two worlds collide: dance and photography.
· What Julie enjoyed most about dance photography: her master’s degree experience.
· She expresses what taking photos of dance makes her feel.
· Julie highlights what she’s excited about, and what gives her energy, these days.
“I realized that having my photographs judged was so much easier than having my body and my dancing judged.” — Julie Lemberger
A former dancer, Julie Lemberger photographs dance in New York City for 30 years, and whose work has appeared in the New York Times, Dance Magazine and many other journals, books and digital platforms. Check out her coloring book Modern Women: 21st Century Dance.
More on this Episode: Movers & Shapers
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Mon, 26 Feb 2024 - 55min - 226 - MSP 168: Betsy Miller
Being part of the global dance community can be deeply rewarding but it also has the potential to be exceptionally challenging and toxic. Not only are you competing for highly limited resources, but you also need to contend with how your self-worth can become contingent on the opinion of others. Today’s guest, Betsy Miller, has experienced many of the highs and lows familiar to almost any dancer but ultimately counts herself blessed and deeply fortunate to have found genuine places of community within the dance world. Join us as we talk with Betsy about her early love of dance (and fashion!), her studies at Connecticut College, and how she uncovered her love of teaching while earning her MFA at The Ohio State University. She shares how establishing a collective with her former cohort allowed her to work in the collaborative models that would come to define her later approach to dance and how she earned her position as the Associate Professor of Dance at Salem State University, where she still finds herself today. We also learn about her ongoing american / woman dance project, and the circumstances that inspired it, before discussing how she chose to reorient the fundamental relationship between choreographer and dancer. For an expansive conversation on creative research, the beauty of being part of a dance community, and much more, be sure to tune in!
Key Points From This Episode:
· Betsy’s early love of ballet and fashion and her discovery of modern dance.
· The incredible faculty members and guest artists she studied under at Connecticut College
· How she co-founded the Propel-her dance collective with her former cohort and friends.
· How grad school helped her uncover her love of teaching.
· How she became a tenured professor
· The multitude of factors that led Betsy to start the american / woman project.
· How she has used the american / woman project to interrogate the title subject matter and reorient the choreographer-dancer relationship.
· Betsy shares the highs, lows, and biggest challenges of her career.
“It's always about community and the places in which I find community in the dance world. Something about the way that we bring our bodies into the spaces and that we are allowing ourselves to be vulnerable because we are embodied, makes this community really special.” — Betsy Miller
Based in Salem Massachusetts, Betsy Miller is a dance artist, educator and facilitator whose current mission is to collaborate with women-identifying dancers in every state of the country.
More on this episode: Movers & Shapers
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Mon, 12 Feb 2024 - 50min - 225 - MSP: Special Announcement from Erin Carlisle Norton
Happy Holidays from Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast! Listen to a special announcement from Host and Artistic Director of The Moving Architects, Erin Carlisle Norton.
Support this podcast with a tax-deductible donation! themovingarchitects.org/support
Find Show Notes & More: themovingarchitects.org/podcasts
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Mon, 18 Dec 2023 - 02min - 224 - MSP 167: Jeanne Ruddy
While dance is often underfunded and under-recognized, leaders in the field acknowledge the incredible talent that lives within every dancer, reminding them that they are, in fact, ‘Acrobats of God’. Today’s guest embodies the purpose of the Movers and Shapers: A Dance Podcast; to share insights from those who shape the dance field, and create an archive that preserves rich, personal experiences across generations. During this episode, Jeanne Ruddy shares what it was like to be a member of the Martha Graham Dance Company, and to work with Martha herself. You’ll also hear how she forged her own unique role in dance, how she encourages other artists to flourish, and her passion for nurturing future generations of dancers in Philadelphia. Tuning in, you’ll learn all about Jeanne’s journey as a dancer, and finding her way to creative expression thereafter. Join us to hear all about the highs and lows of our guest’s incredible career today.
Key Points From This Episode:
· Her first experiences of dance and her lifelong love of music.
· The changing dance scene of the 1960s.
· The pivotal period of time for a dancer between 16 and 21.
· Her experience at North Carolina School of the Arts and Utah Repertory Dance Theatre.
· Traveling to New York and starting a company with no capital.
· Getting a huge break with Yuriko Kikuchi after auditioning with Getting to Know You.
· Being chosen to be in the Martha Graham Dance Company and enjoying a ten-year career.
· Why Martha would sit in the second wing, stage right, in a director’s chair, during performances.
· The eventual decision to leave the company due to pain.
· The birth of the Performance Garage in Philadelphia.
· The program Jeanne currently facilitates for dancers.
· What Martha Graham taught: dancers are acrobats of God.
“I walked out of Deaths and Entrances, I was definitely a child of the 60s, and I didn’t like it. Seven years later, I was playing one of the sisters in that very piece in Lincoln Centre. I loved it.” — Jeanne Ruddy
Jeanne Ruddy is a former Principal Dancer with the Martha Graham Company where she performed throughout the World, on Broadway, served on the faculties of The Juilliard School, Alvin Ailey School, colleges and universities in the US and abroad, founded Jeanne Ruddy Dance, and a center for dance – the Performance Garage, in Philadelphia.
More on the episode: Movere & Shapers
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The organization behind the podcast: The Moving Architects presents "O my soul", where fierce femininity and intergenerational dance meet. Dec 1 in Montclair, NJ. For more info: The Moving Architects
Mon, 20 Nov 2023 - 47min - 223 - MSP 166: Rukhmani Mehta
Creating a Vision for Kathak with Rukhmani Mehta
Today on Movers & Shapers, we are joined by Rukhmani Mehta (previously Rina Mehta). Rukhmani is a choreographer, dancer, educator, Artistic Director of Leela Youth Dance Company, and the Co-Artistic Director of Leela Dance Collective, which brings together leading artists from around the world to advance a collective vision for kathak, a classical North Indian dance. In this episode, Rukhmani speaks about her love for creating community through dance and her deep interest in and curiosity for collaborative projects and processes. What stands out most is Rukhmani’s resounding passion for her work and art form, despite the struggles she has had along the way, as well as the thoughtfulness with which she has built her life in dance, from co-leadership of her company to teaching to creating the first-ever endowment to support kathak dance and music in the US and more. Tune in today for an inspiring conversation about the power of collaboration, community, and preserving culture!
Key Points From This Episode:
· How Rukhmani started dancing and when she fell in love with kathak.
· What she learned about the art form from kathak master, Pt. Chitresh Das.
· The profoundly transformational experience that studying kathak afforded her.
· How she learned to follow her heart and commit to starting a professional dance company.
· Steps Rukhmani took to build a life in dance, including teaching and the Leela Foundation.
· Audience development and creating a future for kathak as an educator.
· Unpacking Rukhmani’s belief in the power of collaboration.
· Where the name Leela comes from and how it speaks to spontaneous creativity.
· Insight into Rukhmani’s love for creating communities of young women through dance.
· The process of building Leela as a collective and how it was impacted by COVID.
· Joys and challenges of a dance career and what you can look forward to from Leela!
· The heartwarming story of why Rukhmani changed her name from Rina.
“My work is about being an artist and putting the art form out in the world but – it has also become about creating the infrastructure that the artists who are carrying these traditions forward need.” — Rukhmani Mehta
Rukhmani Mehta brings a singular voice and vision to the art form of kathak, a classical dance genre from North India; she is a dancer, choreographer, educator, and Co-Founder/Co-Artistic Director of Leela Dance Collective.
More on this episode: Movers & Shapers
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Mon, 30 Oct 2023 - 34min - 222 - MSP 165: Samantha Géracht
Continuing a Modern Dance Legacy with Samantha Géracht
There are many legends in modern dance that are responsible for making the art form what it is today. But how do we continue their legacy? Today we hear from one of the people responsible for continuing the legacy of Anna Sokolow, Samantha Géracht. Samantha is the artistic director at the Sokolow Theatre/Dance Ensemble and in this episode, she tells us all about her incredible career, the multitude of amazing dance practitioners she has learned from and worked with, the difference between a Sokolow dancer and a Sokolow director, the challenges she faces in continuing Anna’s legacy, and so much more! From ballet to modern dance, Samantha has experienced it all as student, performer, and teacher. You don’t want to miss this one so tune in now!
Key Points From This Episode:
· Samantha tells us about her upbringing and what made her interested in dancing.
· What made her switch from ballet to modern dance and breaking the stigma about modern.
· Samantha shares her experience at the Nikolais/Louis Dance Lab and who taught her.
· Samantha’s early marriage and family life.
· Joining the Sokolow company and the teaching jobs she had while she was a dancer.
· Becoming a Sokolow artistic director and how it differed from being a Sokolow dancer.
· The legacy that Anna Sokolow left and Samantha’s special Sokolow choreography.
· Samantha shares the biggest struggles and challenges throughout her career.
· The support system Samantha has to help her continue Anna’s legacy.
· Some of the highlights of Samantha’s career and what she’s working on now.
· Where she sees the Sokolow Theatre/Dance Ensemble in the future.
“Being a dancer and a modernist in an era that’s not that interested in modernism is it’s own struggle…..[I’m] giving myself a voice and figuring out what it is I want to do with Anna’s legacy and what that means.” — Samantha Géracht
Samantha Géracht performed with Anna Sokolow’s Players’ Project for eleven years and is artistic director and a founding member of the Sokolow Theatre/Dance Ensemble. Catch In the Eye of a Dream, November 9-19, 2023 @ Theaterlab
Show Notes on this Episode: Movers & Shapers
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Mon, 16 Oct 2023 - 34min - 221 - MSP 164: Alyssa Alpine
Translating Vision into Action with Alyssa Alpine
Whether it’s for communication, marketing, budgeting, scheduling, or meetings (and more!), we can attest to the level of detail, creativity, and make-it-happen-attitude required in the support to make dance happen! The role of the Arts Administration is dedicated to translating vision into action, and with great appreciation and admiration we introduce today’s guest, Alyssa Alpine. Alyssa, with her accompanying drive and passion, is the Founding Director of the CUNY Dance Initiative, a residency program for NYC choreographers on City University of New York (CUNY) college campuses. In our conversation with Alyssa today, we delve into the story of how her love for dance stems from both sides of her family and what has fueled her lifelong commitment. She takes us through her academic path and recounts the story of how she fell into a career as an Arts Administrator. Alyssa elaborates on the functioning of the CUNY Dance Initiative and highlights some of the challenges and peak moments she's encountered along her career journey. Tune in to this episode to hear more from Alyssa Alpine, a true master of wearing many hats (concurrently!) and doing them all successfully!
Key Points From This Episode:
· We get to meet Alyssa and explore her passionate journey in the world of dance.
· She talks about what got her started in dance and what made her stay
· Alyssa's perspective on the Midwest and why she’d find it difficult to replicate her current life elsewhere.
· Hopping from one school program to another and figuring out the dance world.
· Alyssa recounts the dream and plan she had had coming out of undergrad.
· We hear about her time at Columbia and her academic path.
· Her sentiments about living and working in New York.
· Where she went after the Limon Foundation (and having had enough of the Arts world!)
· She tells the tale of how she wound up at CUNY, managing the CUNY Dance Initiative.
· Her dance journey amidst working and what that looked like for Alyssa.
· The strengths and skills she brings to her role as an Arts Administrator.
· She elaborates on the inner functions (and systems) of the CUNY Dance Initiative.
· She highlights some of the challenges she’s had to overcome throughout her career.
· Alyssa shares some peak moments in her career journey.
· What Alyssa is energized for and currently looking forward to.
“Dance is a special thing. I think it grabs some people and others, of course, are like, ‘I don’t want to move I just want to sit and watch!’ But I think for those of us, as you know yourself, it touches something in you and it is just very compelling and it’s something unique.” — Alyssa Alpine
Alyssa Alpine, the founding director of the CUNY Dance Initiative, has spent two decades in NYC’s performing arts world, with a career that’s spanned everything from rolling out marley to rolling down the steps of the NYC Public Library.
More on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
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Mon, 02 Oct 2023 - 31min - 220 - MSP 163: Liz Lerman
The Independent Thinker, Liz Lerman
Liz is a choreographer, performer, writer, teacher, and speaker. For the past forty years, she has infused her artistic exploration with a personal touch, humor, intellectual vibrancy, and a contemporary edge. Her choreography has delved into a wide spectrum of topics, ranging from her experiences as a go-go dancer to an exploration of the intricacies of choreography and connections with community. Today, she shares with us insights into what ignited her love for dancing and reflects on the abundant influences that have affected both her life and artistic career. She talks about the importance and complexities of our feelings and how she rode the wild waves of her 20s to discover, for herself, what dance could mean for her. We hear about the impact of her mother’s life and death on her stubbornness to figure life out for herself, why rehearsals should always matter, and the unfolding of events that surround the founding of The Dance Exchange. She expresses and reflects on how she views herself as more of an interdisciplinary artist and her eagerness to be generous about spreading her wealth of knowledge. She then details her passion for the Critical Response Process (CRP) and how that was formed over the years. Join in as we delve into the chronicles of her life and her pursuit of understanding. Tune in now!
“One of my deep interests is the way we tell stories and what stories, and whose stories, and how they come across, and who’s listening, and all those kinds of questions.” – Liz Lerman
Key Points From This Episode:
· Liz offers insight into where she comes from and what ignited her love for dancing.
· A wild ride in her 20s: riding the waves of figuring out what dance could be for her.
· The impact of her mother’s life and death on her stubbornness to figure life out for herself.
· How working intergenerationally moved and shifted her mindset.
· The response she experienced when she started making work/performances.
· Making rehearsals matter.
· More about the founding of The Dance Exchange.
· She goes into detail about how her different works unfolded uniquely.
· Her thoughts on the nomadic life and being an ethical visitor.
· How she began to extract herself from The Dance Exchange: composting Liz.
· Reflections on how she views herself as more of an interdisciplinary artist.
· She talks about the Critical Response Process (CRP).
· Liz delves further into her current projects and pursuits.
“There is so much pain and rudeness in the world of critique and what I have come to believe is that a lot of critique is just power. And if you actually want to – change the way power is absorbed and reignited in a different way in a circle then you should use CRP” — Liz Lerman
Liz Lerman uses dance to understand and change the world. Her relentless curiosity has transformed the field of contemporary dance with subject matter including aging, genetics, history, the ethics of justice, and the origins of the universe.
More on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
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Tue, 19 Sep 2023 - 49min - 219 - MSP 162: Anna Pasternak and Blair Brown with Movement Exchange
Building Community through Arts Education with Anna Pasternak and Blair Brown of Movement Exchange
Our guests today are passionate about dance, dance education, and serving communities. Join us today as we share a podcast with you featuring an interview with Anna Pasternak, the Founder of Movement Exchange, and Blair Brown, the organization's current Executive Director. During our conversation, we hear about their journeys with dance, what captivates them about the arts, and how their life paths led them to Movement Exchange. Movement Exchange is an international non-profit organization that provides accessible and sustainable dance education to youth of all ages. They share all about how it started, how it evolved, and their plans for expansion. We hear more about their university chapters and international volunteer dance exchanges and how they build leadership development, cultural awareness, and a passion for community building through arts education. To hear more about their year-round sustainable programs in underresourced communities, be sure not to miss out on today’s episode with Anna and Blair from Movement Exchange!
Key Points From This Episode:
· Anna shares her personal history and transformative journey with dance.
· She elaborates on her aspirations after high school and how getting into Harvard impacted her dance journey.
· Fly and be free; the pull to see and experience everything the world had to offer.
· Anna talks about the exciting journey of founding the Movement Exchange.
· Her biggest worry stepping down as Executive Director at Movement Exchange.
· We hear from Blair about who she is, where she’s from, and what brought her to dance!
· She elaborates on the biggest shift that altered her life as an artist: dance education.
· Meeting Anna and Movement Exchange; the second jump in her career.
· We discuss the realization of the barrier to dance, even in the USA.
· They talk about any pushback experienced with Movement Exchange (and how they counter it).
· How you can get involved in the Movement Exchange programs.
“There will be nothing in my life that will be as important or have made me as happy as running Movement Exchange.” — Anna Pasternak
Anna Pasternak founded the dance non-profit Movement Exchange in 2010 when she was 25 years old and living in Panama. She is a Fulbright Scholar, Harvard graduate, and currently supports Movement Exchange as a member of the board of directors.
“Dance is social. It’s all about community and how do we connect with that and make our communities stronger.” — Blair Brown
Blair Brown received her BA in Dance from Loyola Marymount University, her MFA in Dance from UC Irvine, and spent 10 years teaching dance in under-resourced schools and programs in California and New York before becoming the Executive Director for Movement Exchange.
Learn more about Movement Exchange!
More on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
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Mon, 04 Sep 2023 - 1h 05min - 218 - MSP 161: Mark Morris
Around the World with Mark Morris
From the age of seven, Mark Morris was enamored with dance. Immersing himself in everything from flamenco to Israeli folk to ballet to modern, Mark has lived, trained, and worked in many different parts of the world. In this episode, Mark takes us on a journey from the audition that signaled the start of his career to the Mark Morris Dance Company’s first show in 1980 to his years in Brussels, where he did his “grandest work.” We also take a look at the work that Mark devotes his time to these days, which involves choreographing “dances of the future” that are only intended to be seen by the public after his death. His life has been eventful, to say the least, and this episode will give you a taste of the passion and flair that epitomize Mark Morris!
Key Points From This Episode:
Where Mark’s love for dance originated. Different dance forms that he has been drawn to during his life. How his life changed when he was just 11 years old. Mark’s experience training and working overseas. Why he moved to New York and the various companies he danced for while there. The driving force for the founding of the Mark Morris Dance Group. Mark Morris Dance Group’s first show and how the company evolved from there. Some of Mark’s career highlights. The contradictory attitudes that he dealt with during his time in Brussels. How the Mark Morris Dance Center came to be. Where Mark finds inspiration to continue to choreograph. Insight into his “dance of the future” concept. The profound role that music plays in his life.“I like excellence and I like surprise. I’m very interested in work that engages me and that’s not necessarily what everybody else agrees with.” — Mark Morris
Mark Morris is the founder and Artistic Director of the Mark Morris Dance Group for which he has choreographed more than 150 works since its founding in 1980, and has received numerous awards and honorary degrees for his achievements in the performing arts as choreographer, conductor, and director.
More on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
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Mon, 31 Jul 2023 - 56min - 217 - MSP 160: Melissa M. Young
Take Up Your Space with Confidence with Artistic Director Melissa M. Young
Often, as dancers, we have a choice to take up space with confidence or feel defeated and hold back. Our guest on today’s episode is one that continuously chose to take up space and inspired others to follow their intuitions, pursue what they love, and embrace their curiosity. This is an inspiring interview with the Artistic Director of Dallas Black Dance Theatre (DBDT), Melissa M. Young. Our conversation with Melissa is incredibly touching as she talks about why she loved the exploration of dance and remembers certain key impressions that impacted her greatly throughout the years. She tells us why she always chose to dance to the beat of her own drum and why she pursues uncovering herself in the most authentic ways before sharing about her time spent in New York City and how she ultimately ended up dancing at the Dallas Black Dance Theatre. She’s an amazing individual with a passion for dance and holds the responsibility of being an artistic director with such fervor. Tune in now to hear about the pure joy derived from Melissa’s life in dance. Enjoy.
Key Points From This Episode:
· Melissa talks excitedly about who she is and where her love for dance ignited from.
· She talks about the impact of The Stack-Up by Talley Beatty (Alvin Ailey) on her life’s journey.
· Melissa remembers taking a class from Donald McKayle and the impression it left on her.
· Why Melissa never put a timeline on her career and allowed the journey to flow.
· Navigating the shoulds, the coulds, and the woulds, and why she chooses to dance to the beat of her own drum.
· How the culture shock of moving to New York City made her feel more alive.
· How she came upon the DBDT audition notice and took a chance.
· What it was like to move to Dallas: another culture shift.
· She shares information regarding the current dance and art scene in Dallas.
· Looking back at her career, she reflects on some challenges she’s faced and overcame.
· Things that are sparking excitement in Melissa for the future.
· Why she looks for great human beings first when looking at prospective dancers.
“What I love about dance is I look at it like professional problem-solving. The choreography is the problem and the equation of how you get there working with everyone else, that’s how you get to the “answer”.” — Melissa M. Young
Melissa M. Young is the Artistic Director of Dallas Black Dance Theatre, celebrating her 29th season with the company.
More on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
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Mon, 03 Jul 2023 - 45min - 216 - MSP 159: Susan Klein
Creating a Technique that Honors the Individual with Susan Klein
Today’s guest Susan Klein is a true luminary, having shaped the modern dance landscape with her groundbreaking theories as creator of the renowned Klein Technique. In this episode, we explore her transformative journey as a movement pioneer, uncovering her dance background, the hurdles she overcame following a series of debilitating knee injuries, and her return to the world of movement. We discover how her experience ignited her passion for understanding the body and teaching others about movement, and how this ultimately led to the development of the Klein Technique. Susan recounts the pivotal moment she realized the limitations of imitation-based teaching and explains why she believes in nurturing individuality within dance. She opens up about her quest to safeguard her unique contributions, and why she decided to concede, despite her concern about the potential harm of her work being taught incorrectly. Join us as Susan shares her unique journey to quietly becoming one of the most valuable and influential players in the modern dance field.
Key Points From This Episode:
· Susan's dance background and training.
· Why she believes teaching through imitation to be ineffective.
· Her influences and how they shaped her journey.
· The series of knee injuries that temporarily derailed her dancing career and her return to dance, post-injury.
· How Susan’s experience ultimately led to the development of the Klein Technique.
· The importance of individuality in dance and Susan’s continued fascination with movement and teaching.
· Why she finds the widespread adoption of her work both gratifying and concerning.
· Challenges she’s faced in her dancing career and the various career paths she’s explored.
· Susan shares her plan to share her knowledge in book form.
“When I work with people, that's always exciting because their potential and what's going on in their lives or in their body is infinitely interesting.” — Susan Klein
Working and teaching in New York City, Susan Klein is the renowned creator of Klein Technique™ and a practitioner of Worsley style 5-element acupuncture and Zero Balancing.
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Mon, 19 Jun 2023 - 43min - 215 - MSP 158: Hope Mohr
Activism, Dance, and Co-Leadership with Hope Mohr
Dance, movement, performance, and art-making can play many roles in one’s life. And how they are expressed can change shape over the course of a career. Our guest today, Hope Mohr, has woven together a life of art and activism as a choreographer, curator, and advocate. She has had a fascinating career journey, dedicating herself to both dance and activism and finding new and innovative ways to integrate the two. We talk with Hope about the inexorable pull that dance has exerted on her throughout her life and how her feminist awakening in college inspired her activism. She tells us about the leave of absence she took from studying law (on more than one occasion) to pursue unmissable dance opportunities with legends like Lucinda Childs and Trisha Brown, and shares how she finally completed her law degree before founding a presenting platform called The Bridge Project. Hope goes on to describe the project’s transition to co-ownership, changing their name to Bridge Live Arts, why she chose to leave after 15 years, and what it’s been like returning to work as an independent artist after so many collaborative projects. Our conversation today covers urgent and meaningful topics, from dismantling existing power structures and redistributing power within dance to returning to yourself and learning how to listen to your inner voice as an artist. To learn more about Hope’s fascinating journey and bigger questions about dance and power, be sure to tune in today!
Key Points From This Episode:
· Hope’s dedication to dance and activism throughout her career.
· Learn about The Bridge Project, a presenting platform Hope started in 2010.
· How the project transitioned to a model of co-leadership and was renamed Bridge Live Arts.
· Her feminist awakening and how it led to her activism and work as a lawyer.
· The focus of Hope’s work as a choreographer: motherhood and navigating the world as someone who identifies as female.
· An overview of the curation and collaborative work Hope has done for Bridge Live Arts.
· What informed Hope’s decision to move away from Bridge Live Arts; tending to herself as an artist and making space for a more equitable distribution of power.
· Hope’s return to being an independent artist and her latest new work.
“I think I've always had a very hungry mind and a real passion for social justice work. So that has been a throughline. But dancing has always been my first love. So yeah, it's been a real calling for me. It still is.” — Hope Mohr
Hope Mohr (she/her) is an artist and advocate.
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Mon, 05 Jun 2023 - 35min - 214 - MSP 157: Rosalynde LeBlanc
Building a Dancer with Rosalynde LeBlanc
Rosalynde LeBlanc built her career dancing for some of the biggest names in dance. Today, she is Professor and Chair of Dance at Loyola Marymount University. Social justice awareness has always underpinned her work as a choreographer, which is why she creates pieces that are related to the world and not the mirror. During today’s conversation, she shares her perspective on what it truly means to build a dancer beyond just the physical. Tune in to hear the highlights of her incredible journey as the daughter of an accomplished dancer with Paul Taylor, applying to college early and completing her high school diploma alongside her studies, and her time dancing with Bill T. Jones that skyrocketed her career. She shares the story of being invited to dance with Baryshnikov, before burning out just three years later. Rosalynde offers her insights on doing the necessary inner work to succeed as a dancer before telling listeners all about her transition into the world of education. Tune in today to hear all this and more!
Key Points From This Episode:
· Rosalynde LeBlanc’s first experiences with dance and when she really fell in love with it.
· Her mom’s hands-off approach to managing her relationship with dance.
· Why she declined an invitation to dance with Paul Taylor.
· Her memory of Alvin Ailey’s death and the first World AIDS Day in 1989.
· Her experience at Purchase College and the social change that occurred while she was there.
· The duet she performed with Bill T. Jones which launched her career.
· Her experience of being in the work and touring with Still/Here.
· Being invited to dance with Baryshnikov.
· Her transition into education and sanctuary of the studio.
· The piece she is working on at the moment; Tomboy.
· The less talked about shadow of success.
“The other 50% of being a dancer is your psychological state of being and that shapes your body as much as all the other technique classes. So you have to deal with that.” — Rosalynde LeBlanc
Rosalynde LeBlanc is a Bessie-nominated dancer and the co-director of Can You Bring It: Bill T. Jones and D-Man in the Waters. A former dancer with the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company (1993 - 1999) and with Mikhail Baryshnikov’s White Oak Dance Project (1999 – 2002), LeBlanc is now a professor and Chair of Dance at Loyola Marymount University.
Can You Bring It: Bill T. Jones and D-Man in the Waters is streaming now as part of season 15 AfroPoP: The Ultimate Cultural Exchange. Audiences can stream it for free at worldchannel.org and on the YouTube Channels of WORLD (@worldchannel) and Black Public Media (@blackpublicmedia).
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Mon, 22 May 2023 - 54min - 213 - MSP 156: Remembering Agnes De Mille with Elizabeth Ferrell and Jenna Rae Herrera
Remembering Agnes De Mille with Elizabeth Ferrell and Jenna Rae Herrera
Today’s episode is a special one, where we look back and remember world-renowned dancer, choreographer, writer, lecturer, and director, Agnes De Mille. Agnes had a successful, yet tempestuous, career that spanned almost 70 years through the world of 20th-century American theater and ballet. We take a look at her through the eyes of Elizabeth Ferrell, formerly a member of the American Ballet Theater, and Jenna Rae Herrera, a principal artist with Ballet West. We hear their recollections of working with De Mille in the studio and performing her work, and we listen to their insights about how the course of American dance was forever changed by her. Stay tuned for a lively conversation about Agnes De Mille and her long-lasting impact; creating strong-willed American female roles. Enjoy!
Key Points From This Episode:
· Beth shares a short (but detailed) biography of Agnes De Mille; Agnes in a nutshell.
· More about Beth, her background, and how she became part of De Mille’s work.
· Beth tells listeners about De Mille’s personality (both in the studio and on stage).
· Jenna talks about her background in dance and career at Ballet West.
· Jenna tells us about learning her role in Rodeo and how it helped her grow as an artist.
· The process of learning the Rodeo material (and hearing the narrative from Agnes herself).
· Jenna shares her experience learning work that was made decades ago (and translating it to her body and the company).
· We hear Beth’s experience doing De Mille’s work, both the physical experience and the learning process.
· Jenna and Beth reminisce about their time performing The Cow Girl in the Rodeo ballet.
· Why Rodeo was set on ballet companies (as opposed to other genres of dance).
· Their thoughts on why De Mille’s work has become timeless and why it’s still being performed today.
“She was really ahead of her time, there’s still a real push to nurture and push female choreographers and women’s voices [today] — and here she is in the 1940s choosing her own music, dancers, costumes, set designs, and was calling the shots.” — Elizabeth Ferrell
Former member of American Ballet Theatre, Elizabeth Ferrell emerged as a major interpreter of the works of Agnes de Mille, having performed leading roles in De Mille’s Rodeo, 3 Virgins and a Devil, The Informer, and Brigadoon.
Jenna Rae Herrera is a Principal Artist with Ballet West in Salt Lake City and made her debut last year as The Cowgirl in Agnes de Mille’s Rodeo.
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Tue, 09 May 2023 - 34min - 212 - MSP 155: Remembering Jennifer Muller
Remembering Jennifer Muller (1944-2023)
Today’s podcast is a re-airing of an interview with Jennifer Muller on Movers & Shapers from September 2019. Jennifer was the Artistic Director/Founder of Jennifer Muller/The Works, and was an influence in the dance world for over 50 years. Jennifer passed away March 29 peacefully in her home.
A maverick in the dance field, in this episode you will hear from the determined, tenacious, and passionate Jennifer Muller of Jennifer Muller/The Works. From her early days dancing with Jose Limón, Pearl Lang, and Louis Falko, to touring the world and always pushing against the dance norms of the time to follow her own vision, hear how Jennifer made a life in dance. An influencer in the dance field for over 50 years, hear about her love for collaboration and how she made work in response to the world.
“This is what I do. I create work that is meaningful to me, no matter what anyone has to say about it. That’s just how stubborn I am.” - Jennifer Muller
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Mon, 24 Apr 2023 - 56min - 211 - MSP 154: Miguel Gutierrez
Fierce, Fragile, Empathetic, Political, and Poetic Art with Miguel Gutierrez
Our guest today, Miguel Gutierrez, is irrevocably passionate about making works of art and creates empathetic and irreverent spaces outside of traditional discourse. Our conversation starts with Miguel sharing more about his upbringing as the child of two immigrants, how he came to love the arts and dancing, and what he wanted to be when he grew up. He tells us about his time at Brown, Queer Activism, working with Paula Hunter, and later going full circle back to Brown. He also talks about his epic time in California in the 90s, what it was like to work with Joe Goode and John Jasperse, and what sparked his shift back to New York. This is a jam-packed episode so stay tuned for this candid, introspective, and inspiring interview.
Key Points From This Episode:
· Miguel gives us a short introduction of who he is and where he is from.
· How Miguel came to love dancing.
· What he wanted to be when he grew up.
· What happened when he showed up for school at Brown.
· He shares about his time doing Queer activism.
· He tells us about his time dancing with Paula Hunter.
· What compelled him to go back to Brown and finish his degree.
· He shares his Californian experience in the 90s.
· What sparked the shift back to New York (and why Europe didn’t work out).
· What it was like working with John Jasperse.
· Miguel tells us about his own choreography journey.
· The kinds of day jobs Miguel has had to support himself over the years.
· His experience of when things started to take off, his work, and what life looked like.
· Why he hates when propriety supplants honesty and when professionalism is used to maintain the status quo.
· Projects he is working on now and what life looks like.
“When you are younger, as a dancer, you think that if you aren’t dancing professionally by the age of nothing, you’re never going to make it. It’s like this BS idea of what dance is, and it’s fed to you from when you are little.” — Miguel Gutierrez
Miguel Gutierrez is a choreographer, music artist, writer, visual artist, educator, podcaster, and Feldenkrais Method practitioner based in Lenapehoking/Brooklyn, NY and Tovaangar/Los Angeles. His work creates empathetic and irreverent spaces outside of traditional discourse.
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Mon, 10 Apr 2023 - 46min - 210 - MSP 153: Margaret Beals
The Art of Improvisation with Margaret Beals
For today’s guest, dancing without inhibitions is what has fed her soul for more than 8 decades. Joining us on Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast is the incredible dance improvisation innovator Margaret Beals to tell us all about her years of dancing and her new documentary, Dancing Without Steps. Tuning in, you’ll hear all about our guest’s privileged upbringing, her longing to be free, dancing in her home and the streets of New York City, and why she always stood out as a dancer. She walks us through her early adulthood, dance classes, club and cabaret days, and teaching before explaining how she dealt with being so different. With an amazing ability to perform improvised solo concerts that combined dance, text, music, and humor, she tells us how she realized she was so unlike others in her generation. Finally, Margaret shares her experience of creating her film with us. So to hear all about improvisation and to be inspired to embrace your authentic self, tune in now!
Key Points From This Episode:
· Margaret tells us about her upbringing and how she started dancing.
· How she knew her lifestyle was different and why she wanted to be free.
· Her experience of dancing in her front hall, moving to New York, and dancing in the streets.
· She tells us her opinion of the definition of ‘talent’ and why she always stood out.
· What Margaret wanted to do when she was in her 20s and her time doing cabarets and clubs.
· Margaret tells us about how she got started with teaching.
· She shares the secret to moving and talking at the same time.
· How she navigated the challenge of feeling like she doesn’t belong.
· Getting the rights to Sylvia Plath’s works and performing poetry in an original play.
· How Margaret shares her methodologies with dancers.
· Margaret shares what she is working on in her field now.
· How her movie, Dancing Without Steps, became a reality.
· The importance of accepting your unapologetically unique self.
“I don’t think I danced to please. I danced the way I danced and hoped everybody would see it.” — Margaret Beals
During her 50 year career, Margaret Beals pioneered the use of improvisation in dance performance, often using her speaking voice. In her new film, Dancing Without Steps: The Art of Improvisation with Margaret Beals, audiences are offered glimpses of Ms. Beals’ work along with insights into her philosophies on improvisation across artistic genres.
Learn more about Margaret Beals HERE and the film Dancing Without Steps
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Mon, 27 Mar 2023 - 42min - 209 - MSP 152: Renée Jaworski
The Magic of Creativity with Renée Jaworski
Being a successful dance performer requires a combination of technical skills, artistry, professionalism, dedication, and networking. In today’s episode, we sit down with Renée Jaworski, the Executive Director and Co-Artistic Director of the rebellious dance company, Pilobolus, as she shares her experience working there throughout her illustrious 20+ year career and unpacks the magic of creativity, risk, collaboration, artistic expression, and the value of hard work. Hear why she began pursuing dance and being a performer, the lessons she learned working for a company, the emotional struggles of learning the business end of dance, and how she forged ahead in her dance career while also a mother. We discuss how she integrates her various passions into dance, how Pilobolus acts as a gateway to the art form, why you should not take dance too seriously, her upcoming projects, and much more. Tune in, and discover industry insights and the value of pursuing your dreams with Renée Jaworski.
Key Points From This Episode:
· Background about Renée and how she became interested in dance.
· The influence attending the University of the Arts had on her.
· Why she chose to be a performer as opposed to continuing in academia.
· Her experience transitioning from being a student to working for a company.
· How she juggled pursuing a career with raising a family.
· The motivation behind joining the Pilobolus team.
· Find out why she has chosen to stay at Pilobolus for most of her career.
· We discuss Pilobolus’s reputation and the collaboration with the rock band OKGo.
· What it takes to make collaborations work and complete projects.
· The biggest challenges and highlights of her career.
· Learn about her past, current, and exciting upcoming projects.
“As I am getting older I am realizing that the more we can have those role models in place who have [raised a family while working] and want to support people who want to [have a family] the more the art form is going to thrive.” — Renée Jaworski
Renee Jaworski, Executive Director and Co-Artistic Director has had an extensive creative career with Pilobolus since 2000, and along with creative partner and Artistic Director Matt Kent, was chosen in 2011 by the founding Artistic Directors to lead the company.
Upcoming: Pilobolus at NJPAC (Newark, NJ) March 12, 2023, info HERE
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Fri, 10 Mar 2023 - 46min - 208 - MSP 151: Lynn Peterson and Kate Sutter
Sharing the Power of Dance with Lynn Peterson and Kate Sutter
The power of dance can be harnessed and shared with people from all walks of life. The connection facilitated by the art form is undeniable when witnessing the fortuitous friendship between Lynn Peterson and Kate Sutter. The two visionary leaders behind SYREN Modern Dance join us today to share their respective dance journeys, and the process of starting, sustaining, and now celebrating 20 years of SYREN. We learn about their roles in the organization and their principal source of inspiration, as well as their intention to share the value of modern dance as widely as they can. Lynn and Kate always have been and always will be dedicated to dance and, in this episode, we are reminded of the importance of placing creativity at the center of any art form, despite the distraction of building a business around it. Tune in for this inspirational conversation with two women who didn’t idly wait for opportunities to come their way, but rather seized the reins and did it their way!
Key Points From This Episode:
· Kate and Lynn’s respective dance backgrounds, and what initially drew them to dance.
· The process of starting SYREN Modern Dance together.
· The various jobs they’ve done along the way to support their dance careers.
· SYREN’s development over the years.
· How Kate and Lynn connected and how it transferred to their work.
· What caused them to make the intentional shift to stop auditioning and start SYREN.
· Their intention to share the value of modern dance.
· The story behind the name, SYREN.
· Their growth strategies for the organization and the challenges they’ve encountered.
· How they’ve merged dance and science.
· SYREN’s current projects and plans for the future.
· The power of dance and the source of Lynn and Kate’s inspiration.
“The past five years have really started to feel like we have this organization that is being supported by many different prongs of programming, and the cycles of inspiration and work continue to feed each other and grow.” — Kate Sutter
SYREN Modern Dance is a New York City based company co-founded by Lynn Peterson and Kate Sutter now celebrating its 20th year as a dance sharing organization. SYREN's artists are United States Cultural Ambassadors who share dance where people gather in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Maine, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Indiana, Illinois, Maryland, North Carolina, Washington D.C., Texas, Rhode Island, Ohio, France, and the United Arab Emirates.
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Mon, 27 Feb 2023 - 38min - 207 - MSP 150: Alessandra Corona
A Legacy of Dance with Alessandra Corona
Today’s episode is sure to inspire you! Joining us in conversation today, we have a joyful spirit, Alessandra Corona. Tuning in, you’ll hear about her time as a principal dancer for Ballet Hispánico, overcoming a language barrier, and falling in love with modern dance. Alessandra shares how Ann Reinking was a revolutionary influence on her, and invited her to join the international Fosse tour. Alessandra’s life took an unexpected twist when she started her own dance company, Alessandra Corona Performing Works; hear the story of what motivated her to take the plunge, how her dancers made it possible, and so much more during this motivational episode. Thanks for listening!
“Fosse was something I never expected would happen in my career. All I wanted to be was a concert dancer, that’s it! In the modern company I was obsessed with contemporary work and modern work, but I was not thinking about Broadway!”
Key Points From This Episode:
The story of how Alessandra first became interested in dance. Going to Rome alone to pursue her dream after attempting to study to be a dance teacher. Why modern dance is her number one favorite way to perform. Auditioning for Ballet Hispánico. Moving to New York, learning English, and how dance saved Alessandra. Why Ballet Hispánico was so challenging and why she loved it. The influence that Ann Reinking had on Alessandra and joining the international Fosse Tour. What motivated Alessandra to start a company. Dancing at the age of 60 and the many different ways you can be on stage.Alessandra Corona, native of Italy, is a dancer, choreographer and artistic director/founder of Alessandra Corona Performing Works - a dance theater Company based in New York City, founded in 2012. Alessandra was a principal dancer with Ballet Hispánico for 15 years and was a principal dancer in the international tour company of the musical Fosse.
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Mon, 06 Feb 2023 - 39min - 206 - MSP 149: Dante Puleio and Michelle Preston
Sustaining the Legacy of the Limón Dance Company with Dante Puleio and Michelle Preston
The Limón Dance Company is approaching its 75th anniversary and in today’s episode, we are joined by its Artistic Director, Dante Puleio, and Executive Director, Michelle Preston. Dante and Michelle’s passion for their work is palpable and over the next few years they plan to inject new energy into Limón while also preserving the company’s rich heritage. Tune in today to hear how dance changed the lives of these two guests, the journeys that led them to their current positions at Limón, and how, through marrying their different skill sets, they hope to enhance and empower the legacy of this institution.
“I wasn’t really taking good care of myself emotionally or physically and when I started dancing, that’s when I woke up and started to find that I had a purpose.” – Dante Puleio, MSP 149
Key Points From This Episode:
Dante shares an overview of his journey to becoming a professional dancer. Factors that make the Limón technique unique. How Dante became part of the Limón Dance Company. Michelle’s introduction to dancing. The realization that Michelle came to after four years of intensive artistic study. Why Michelle moved to New York, and the jobs she held subsequently. Dante’s approach to fulfilling his role as Artistic Director of the Limón Dance Company. How Michelle wants to see the non-profit space evolve.A former Company member for more than a decade, Dante Puleio was appointed Artistic Director in 2020, his work focuses on celebrating José Limón's historical legacy and reimagining his intention and vision to reflect the 21st century contemporary landscape. Michelle Preston, a NYC artist manager and leader with over 15 years experience, began as the Executive Director of the José Limón Dance Foundation in November 2022.
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Mon, 23 Jan 2023 - 46min - 205 - MSP 148: Davalois Fearon
Stepping Out into the World with Davalois Fearon
Today we bring you a beautiful and inspiring conversation with Davalois Fearon, whose work as a dancer, teacher, and choreographer brings together her family history, early years in Jamaica, and a dedication to moving the art form and community forward. Expect to come away with some fascinating insight into her process of connecting the different parts of her life and experience into a unified artistic voice. Make sure to join us for this great episode, with the one and only Davalois Fearon!
“From birth, I was surrounded by movement and music.” – Davalois Fearon, MSP 148
Key Points From This Episode:
Davalois' early years in Jamaica and initial attraction to dance and performance. Moving to the Bronx and the playground training that started Davalois' learning. Joining the Stephen Petronio Dance Company, touring, parties, and the excitement of the early years. Davalois' internship at Pentacle and the entrepreneurial lessons she learned. The period of research that enabled Davalois to truly realize her artistic identity. Why the grassroots approach that Davalois employed served her so well in the long run.Davalois Fearon is a critically acclaimed choreographer, dancer, and educator. The recipient of numerous awards and grants, her work has been presented nationally and internationally, including at prestigious New York City venues such as the Joyce Theater. In addition, she has been commissioned by renowned institutions and is visiting lecturer at Princeton University.
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Mon, 09 Jan 2023 - 45min - 204 - MSP 147: Annie Rigney
Dancing Across Continents, Finding Your Body, and Discovering the Ilan Lev Method with Annie Rigney
Who you are as an artist is undoubtedly influenced by the teachers you encounter along the way. Similarly, being exposed to different artistic practices can have a significant impact on your development. Today’s guest, Annie Rigney, started dancing at the tender age of three and hasn’t looked back since. In our conversation, Annie recounts how she was first introduced to new techniques (like Graham and Gaga), the teachers that took the time to work with her one on one, and how these experiences gave her the tools to begin to move beyond the limitations of ballet. We hear about her time in Israel, her discovery of the Ilan Lev method, and why becoming an Ilan Lev practitioner was one of the best decisions she ever made. Annie's love for dance is evident throughout this conversation, and the knowledge she has accumulated is nuanced, profound, and thought-provoking. Be sure to tune in to hear all this along with her wonderful insights on a range of fascinating topics, from healing through dance to the art of repetition!
Key Points From This Episode:
Get to know today’s guest, Annie Rigney, and how she first fell in love with dance. The rigor, discipline, pain, and emotional abuse that characterized Annie’s early dance training. The Gaga dance course that Annie took with Bobbi Jene Smith and how it altered her trajectory. Annie’s move to Israel and the time she spent training in Tel Aviv. An overview of the Ilan Lev method and how it transformed Annie’s mobility and movement and how Annie became an Ilan Lev practitioner. Annie’s experience playing Lady Macbeth for three years in Sleep No More How the COVID-19 pandemic gave her the freedom to experiment with choreography.“This whole journey with my body, from very young has been one of stripping away what's not needed. So I learned so many things in that short time, which were keys for me to unlock new physical possibilities.” – Annie Rigney, MSP 147
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Mon, 26 Dec 2022 - 53min - 203 - MSP 146: Elizabeth Yilmaz-Dobrow, Mara Driscoll, and César Abreu
Performers are always looking for fulfilling artistic endeavors and creative communities. In this episode, we hear from three incredible people, Elizabeth Yilmaz-Dobrow, Mara Driscoll, and César Abreu, who have come together to form an exciting new project with a shared vision for performance. Art Bath is an immersive performance salon series that fosters community, exploration, and exchange within the community. Our guests share how they met while dancing at the Metropolitan Opera Ballet and why they decided to join forces to create Art Bath. We start by learning about each of their journeys to becoming the performers they are today, what they enjoy most about dance, and the unique way in which they have come together. Learn about the power of the Art Bath platform, how art can help people connect and understand one another, and how they found the formula that works. We also find out how the various ways they support the salon, the challenges of building a solid support base, the ultimate goal of Art Bath, and what the future holds for this exciting creative production. Tune in to hear more about the power of art and community with today's inspirational guests, Art Bath founders Elizabeth Yilmaz-Dobrow and Mara Driscoll, and Associate Producer César Abreu!
“My life is surrounded with dance, movement, and beauty.” — Elizabeth Yilmaz-Dobrow
Key Points From This Episode:
How each of our guests first became interested in dance. The experience of performing on stage at the Met. The sense of community amongst the dancers at the Met. How our guests first met and decided to start Art Bath. The concept and vision behind Art Bath. What to expect from Art Bath and our guests in the future.Elizabeth Yilmaz-Dobrow is a former company member with Ballet Hispanico, Mara Driscoll grew up dancing at the Boulder Ballet and is currently the Program and Advancement Lead at ISPA (International Society for Performing Artists), and Puerto Rican dancer/producer Cesar Abreu began his career with the Grammy-nominated Latin group Menudo. The three met while dancing with the Metropolitan Opera Ballet. As an antidote to the pandemic’s months of social and creative isolation, they joined forces to create Art Bath, a new recurring artist salon series for some of today’s leading performers.
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Mon, 12 Dec 2022 - 55min - 202 - MSP 145: Carmen Caceres
Dance artist Carmen Caceres – passionate, driven, and inspiring! Hear what it was like for Carmen to:
- Move to NYC from Buenos Aires, Argentina and her deeply personal immigrant experience as a dancer and choreographer pulled between two cultures. How a childhood dream came true with an encounter with world-renowned dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov. What it’s like to follow your artistic voice and create important immersive creative work today.
“When I'm dancing, I get to be this person that's free from all those organized structures and enjoy the moment and be present.”
Carmen Caceres is a dance artist originally from Buenos Aires, Argentina. Caceres has been creating and presenting dance works in Argentina and NY since 2009. In 2012, she founded DanceAction, a creative platform composed of artists from multiple disciplines to produce performing artworks in collaboration and provide educational opportunities. Her works have been presented in several venues, such as Dixon Place, Green Space Studio, Triskelion Arts Center, Teatro Sea, The Mark Morris Dance Center, the Center at West Park, and the Center for Performance Research. As a performer and collaborator, she has worked with Ines Armas, Jillian Peña, Lisa Parra, Elia Mrak, Jody Oberfelder, among other artists. Carmen also works as a dance educator and program director for different art education programs in New York City, Brooklyn, and the Bronx.
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Mon, 28 Nov 2022 - 1h 04min - 201 - MSP 144: Amanda Selwyn
Choreographer, dance educator, arts leader Amanda Selwyn - resilient, hard-working, and inspiring! Hear what it was like for Amanda to:
- Grow up wanting to be a performer, and then eventually finding her niche as a choreographer and arts leader. How her college experience at Northwestern University shaped her as an artist as well as connecting with her Jewish roots and spending a year living in Israel. What it was like for her to create and develop a thriving dance organization with an active dance company and an education arm that reaches into dozens of NYC public schools.
“There was never a doubt, I never thought about doing anything else, but every step of the way has been hard.”
Amanda Selwyn (Artistic Director/Choreographer) founded Amanda Selwyn Dance Theatre/Notes in Motion in 2000 and in 23 seasons, has directed over 85 productions, developed a network of artists, and created the curriculum for Notes in Motion’s dance education programs.
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More on this Episode: themovingarchitects.org/podcast
Mon, 14 Nov 2022 - 1h 08min - 200 - MSP 143: McClaine Timmerman
"I'm grateful for the whole journey" - McClaine Timmerman, Founder and Artistic Director of the Contemporary Dance Choreography Festival (CDCFest)
Today's guest is McClaine Timmerman. McClaine is the Founder and Artistic Director of the Contemporary Dance Choreography Festival (CDCFest) in Orlando, Florida. She is an awarded choreographer, Nationally Certified Pilates instructor, business owner, and dance educator.
Applications for CDCFest are open now, and due January 25th! For guidelines and more info: CDCFest.com
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
For mroe on the dance company behind the podcast: The Moving Architects
Mon, 31 Oct 2022 - 56min - 199 - MSP 142: Austin Hartel
"Dancers dance because we have to, I don't know how else to explain it." - Austin Hartel, MSP 142
Today's guest is Austin Hartel. Austin is a former longtime member of Pilobolus Dance Theater, and has been connected with the University of Central Oklahoma in Edmond for almost 20 years as teacher and founder/artistic director of the University's School of Dance.
As Artistic Director of Dalton-Hartel Dance and Hartel Dance Group, he toured nationally and internationally to critical acclaim. His choreography has been presented on five continents and at prestigious festivals, including in Italy at The Vignale Dance Festival, The Florence Dance Festival, and the Versiliana Festival. He was presented in Brazil at the 5th Festival de Danca de Mercosul and the VI International Seminar de Danca. New York performances were produced at numerous popular dance venues, including The Kaye Playhouse, DTW, St. Mark's Church, Clark Studio Theater at Lincoln Center, and more.
Austin's honors include the U.S. Department of State naming him as a Cultural Specialist touring throughout Central and South American for ten years, and a 2009 Fulbright Scholar's Grant. Austin started the Oklahoma International Dance Festival in 2019.
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
For more on the dance company behind the podcast: The Moving Architects
Mon, 03 Oct 2022 - 1h 24min - 198 - MSP 141: Adele Myers
"I've always chased that thrill." - Adele Myers on her lifetime in dance
Today's guest is Adele Myers. Adele is a Miami based dance maker and Artistic Director of Adele Myers and Dancers (AMD), a national touring contemporary dance theater company made up of female athletes of the heart.
For over a decade, AMD has been presented throughout the U.S with funding from the New England Foundation of the Arts, National Dance Project, and National Performance Network. Since relocating to Miami, she received commissions from Miami Light Project, Live Arts Miami and South Miami Dance Cultural Arts Center. She was an Assistant Professor of Dance at Tulane University and Connecticut College and has taught on faculty at New World School of the Arts in Miami.
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
To learn more about The Moving Architects upcoming performances and events: The Moving Architects
Mon, 19 Sep 2022 - 57min - 197 - MSP 140: Ranee and Aparna Ramaswamy
"We are the carriers of the culture." - Ranee Ramaswamy
Today's guests are Ranee and Aparna Ramaswamy, the Artistic Directors of Ragamala Dance Company, a pioneering company rooted in the South Indian dance form of Bharatanatyam. Over the last four decades, Ranee and Aparna have forged a path for culturally rooted performing arts organizations and made Ragamala a standard-bearer within the American dance landscape. The New York Times says, “Ragamala shows how Indian forms can be some of the most transcendent experiences that dance has to offer.”
Ranee and Aparna’s choreographic work has been commissioned and presented extensively throughout the U.S., India, and abroad, highlighted by the Kennedy Center (Washington, D.C.), Joyce Theater (New York), Lincoln Center (New York), Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival (MA), Walker Art Center (Minneapolis), American Dance Festival (Durham, NC), Arts Center at NYU Abu Dhabi (United Arab Emirates), Just Festival (Edinburgh, U.K.), Bali Arts Festival (Indonesia), Sri Krishna Gana Sabha (Chennai, India), and National Centre for Performing Arts (Mumbai, India), and others. Among their many individual honors, Ranee serves on the National Council on the Arts, appointed by President Barack Obama.
For more on the artists and this podcast episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
To learn more about The Moving Architects upcoming performances and events: The Moving Architects
Mon, 05 Sep 2022 - 58min - 196 - MSP 139: Gloria McLean
"This is who I am. I am a dancer and this is what I have to offer the world." - Gloria McLean
Today's guest is Gloria McLean. Gloria is artistic director of LIFEDANCE/Gloria McLean and Dancers. LIFEDANCE is dedicated to the integration of body, mind and spirit through the creative process. Gloria's dances often collaborate with new music, art, language and the environment. Her choreography has been presented in NYC and internationally, including the American Dance Festival, festivals in Ireland, Paris, Montreal, Germany, Switzerland, Japan, Korea, and China. She first received acclaim as a leading member of the Erick Hawkins Dance Company from 1982-1993, performing major female roles in the repertory, teaching at the Hawkins School, and touring the U.S. and internationally. Currently McLean is President of the American Dance Guild producing festivals live and online. She teaches and performs from her base in New York City and Andes, NY.
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
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Mon, 22 Aug 2022 - 1h 07min - 195 - MSP 138: Joan Myers Brown and Kim Bears-Bailey
Today’s guest on Movers & Shapers are Joan Myers Brown and Kim Bears-Bailey of Philadanco.
Joan is the founder of Philadanco which was created in 1970 out of a need to provide performance opportunities and training for Black dancers. PHILADANCO! has since grown into a professional dance company that is recognized around the world for its artistic integrity, superbly trained dancers, and captivating performances. Of her many honors, she is the honorary chairperson for the International Association of Blacks in Dance (IABD), an organization she established in 1991, and she received the prestigious National Medal of Arts Award and 2019 Bessie Award for Lifetime Achievement in Dance for her choreographic influence on black dance in America.
Kim joined Philadanco in 1981 and its current Artistic Director. She is a Bessie's award recipient and Associate Professor of Dance at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia. Kim is one of few artists granted permission to remount the works of many world-renowned choreographers including Talley Beatty, Pearl Primus and Gene Hill Sagan.
For more in this episode of Movers & Shapers: themovingarchitects.org/podcasts
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Mon, 08 Aug 2022 - 1h 05min - 194 - MSP 43: Theresa Ruth Howard
An interview with Theresa Ruth Howard. Theresa is a writer, dance educator, and former dancer for companies including Dance Theatre of Harlem, Armitage Gone! Dance, and works by Donald Byrd. In 2015 she launched MoBBallet (Memoirs of Blacks in Ballet) that reinstates and preserves the contributions and stories of Black artists in the field of ballet through a digital platform.
Tue, 20 Jun 2017 - 1h 11min - 193 - MSP 42: Xan BurleyTue, 06 Jun 2017 - 1h 04min
- 192 - MSP 41: Tami Stronach
An interview with Tami Stronach, a NYC-based choreographer, actor, teacher, and public speaker dedicated to unlocking the power of imagination. Tami formed her dance company Tami Stronach Dance in 2000 and recently co-founded Paper Canoe Company to create family programming that utilizes movement, theater, puppetry, and object manipulation.
Tue, 23 May 2017 - 58min - 191 - MSP 40: Hilary EastonTue, 09 May 2017 - 43min
- 190 - MSP: Spring Break AnnouncementTue, 14 Mar 2017 - 01min
- 189 - MSP 39: Teresa FellionTue, 28 Feb 2017 - 54min
- 188 - MSP 38: Sara Wookey
An interview with Sara Wookey, a dancer, choreographer, and creative professional currently based in London a Tier 1 Visa endorsed by Arts Council England. With a career that has spanned from the USA, to Amsterdam, to Los Angeles, and now London, Sara is also a certified transmitter of Yvonne Rainer's iconic work "Trio A" and currently interested in the potential for dance in its return to museum spaces.
Tue, 14 Feb 2017 - 1h 02min - 187 - MSP 37: Tomer HeymannTue, 31 Jan 2017 - 58min
- 186 - MSP: Special December AnnouncementTue, 06 Dec 2016
- 185 - MSP 36: Diane GrumetTue, 22 Nov 2016 - 50min
- 184 - MSP 35: Eva Yaa AsantewaaTue, 08 Nov 2016 - 1h 08min
- 183 - MSP 34: Shannon HummelTue, 25 Oct 2016 - 57min
- 182 - MSP 33: Your Move Dance Festival and Heather Warfel Sandler
Today is a special 2-part podcast episode which begins by featuring the founders and producers of the Your Move Modern Dance Festival in Jersey City, NJ: Morgan Hille Refakis and Meagan Woods. Your Move is presented by Art House Productions in partnership with DeBaun Performing Arts Center, and is the 2016 recipient of the Dance New Jersey Jete Award. Today's podcast guest is Heather Warfel Sandler. Heather is a dancer, performance artist, and visual artist who currently runs the award winning dance program at County Prep High School in Jersey City, NJ.
Tue, 11 Oct 2016 - 56min - 181 - MSP 32: Christian von HowardTue, 27 Sep 2016 - 57min
- 180 - MSP 31: Joanna Kotze
An interview with Joanna Kotz, a Brooklyn-based dancer, choreographer, and teacher who is also recipient of the 2013 New York Dance and Performance "Bessie" Award for Outstanding Emerging Choreographer. A former long-time dancer with Wally Cardona, her choreographic work has been shown in such NY theaters as Baryshnikov Arts Center and Danspace Project, with residencies around the globe including at The Bogliasco Foundation in Italy and The Carmargo Foundation in France.
Tue, 13 Sep 2016 - 48min - 179 - MSP 30: Christine Jowers
An interview with Christine Jowers, the Founder and Editor-in-Chief of The Dance Enthusiast, a vibrant, engaging digital news site, arts service organization, and extension of the non-profit company Moving Arts Projects based in NYC. Prior to this position Christine worked as a professional dancer, teacher, and producer, performing solo works and principal roles by the early masters of modern dance and in work created by contemporary choreographers and performance artists.
Tue, 30 Aug 2016 - 1h 04min - 178 - MSP 29: Crystal Michelle PerkinsTue, 02 Aug 2016 - 59min
- 177 - MSP 28: Mitchell Rose
An interview with Mitchell Rose, a professor of dance-filmmaking at The Ohio State University whose films have been viewed online over 5 million times. Prior to becoming a filmmaker, Mitchell was a NYC-based choreographer who toured internationally for over 15 years. His most recent dance film "Exquisite Corps" features 42 American contemporary choreographers linked together through a chain love letter to dance.
Tue, 19 Jul 2016 - 1h 06min - 176 - MSP 27: Amy Miller
An interview with Amy Miller, dancer, choreographer, educator, advocate, and Associate Artistic Director and Company Co-Director of Gibney Dance Company based in New York City. Prior to her positions at Gibney Dance, Amy spent a decade performing masterworks as a principal with Ohio Ballet and was a founding member and Associate Director of Cleveland's GroundWorks DanceTheater.
Tue, 05 Jul 2016 - 48min - 175 - MSP 26: Tiffany Rea-Fisher
An interview with Tiffany Rea-Fisher, the newly appointed Artistic Director of the NYC-based dance company Elisa Monte Dance. Starting as a principal dancer with the company in 2004, Tiffany is also founder/director of Inception to Exhibition (ITE), which supports NYC-based artists in the fields of Dance, Theater, Music and Film.
Tue, 21 Jun 2016 - 1h 11min - 174 - MSP 25: Dorian Wallace
An interview with Dorian Wallace, a composer, improviser and pianist of contemporary classical music, new music, radical avant-garde, spontaneous improvisation, and music for dance. He is Co-Founder and Artistic Director of Tenth Intervention, a contemporary classical presenter in NYC. Dorian is staff musician and composer for dance at Barnard College of Columbia University, NYU Tisch School of the Arts, Martha Graham Dance Company, The Julliard School, Ballet Hispanico, Kat Wildish, and Doug Varone and Dancers. Dorian has received commissions and performed and recorded for such dance artists as RIOULT Dance NY, 10 Hairy Legs, and Alison Cook Beatty Dance.
Tue, 07 Jun 2016 - 1h 12min - 173 - MSP: Special AnnouncementTue, 31 May 2016 - 01min
- 172 - MSP 24: Kat Wildish
An interview with Kat Wildish, a multi-level ballet and pointe technique teacher of teachers, mentor, and coach for professionals and students of all ages and levels, based in NYC. Kat is one of those rare ballerinas who appeared with both New York City Ballet (under Balanchine) and American Ballet Theatre (under Baryshnikov), as well as with such companies as Zurich Ballet, Metropolitan Opera Ballet and The Eglevsky Ballet (under Edward Villella).
Mon, 16 May 2016 - 1h 05min - 171 - MSP 23: Tiffany MillsTue, 03 May 2016 - 55min
- 170 - MSP 22: Wendy Osserman
An interview with Wendy Osserman. Wendy is the Artistic Director of Wendy Osserman Dance Company which celebrates its 40th anniversary season this year. Before forming the company in 1976, Wendy performed with Kei Takei, Frances Alenikoff, and Valerie Bettis. For four decades the company has toured and performed in New York City and internationally, creating performances and workshops for all ages and collaborating with a wide range of artists and utilizing alternative spaces for performance. The company celebrates its 40th Anniversary season with performances at Theater for the New City April 20-23, 2016.
Tue, 19 Apr 2016 - 53min - 169 - MSP 21: Samuel Pott
An interview with Samuel Pott. Samuel Founded Nimbus Dance Works and the School of Nimbus Dance Works based in Jersey City, outside of NYC. He has toured internationally as a soloist for the Martha Graham Dance Company and has performed as a lead dancer in many ballet and jazz dance companies. This interview is part of the special 5-part series "Starring New Jersey" that features interviews with prominent "shapers" in the dance field who call NJ home. The series is made possible by a grant from New Jersey Council for the Humanities, a state partner of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Tue, 05 Apr 2016 - 56min - 168 - MSP 20: Sharron Miller
An interview with Sharron Miller. Sharron is a former Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater principal dancer and veteran of seven Broadway shows who is currently the Founder/Director of Sharron Miller's Academy of the Performing Arts (SMAPA) in Montclair, NJ located 15-miles outside of NYC. This interview is part of the special 5-part series "Starring New Jersey" that features interviews by prominent dance "shapers" in the dance field who call NJ home. The series is made possible by a grant from New Jersey Council for the Humanities, a state partner of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Tue, 22 Mar 2016 - 1h 01min - 167 - MSP 19: Maxine Lyle
An interview with Maxine Lyle, a choreographer, teaching artist, dancer, and producer, specializing in African-American step dance. Maxine founded the step company Soul Steps in 2005 in NJ/NY, with the mission to expand the presence of stepping throughout the world while creating avenues for cultural exchange and awareness among diverse communities. Soul Steps brings step everywhere - from school workshops in Brooklyn, to partnerships with U.S. Embassies throughout the world, to Paris Fashion Week, they embrace every opportunity to expose diverse communities to the magnetism and dynamic power of step.
Wed, 09 Mar 2016 - 52min - 166 - MSP 18: Jeff Friedman
An interview with Jeff Friedman. Jeff is a dancer, choreographer, and scholar at the Dance Department at Rutgers University-New Brunswick as Associate Professor of Dance Studies, and as Graduate Director will launch the new MFA in Dance program this coming academic year. Jeff danced in NYC with Twyla Tharp, as well as for nearly a decade with Oberlin Dance Collective (ODC), touring nationally and internationally. Jeff created Legacy, an oral history project for the San Francisco Bay Area performing arts communities in response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic and launched his doctoral research into the theories, methods and practices of oral history interviews as they intersect with dance and other embodied practices. Jeff has a Ph.D in Dance History and Theater and publishes his works regularly.
Wed, 24 Feb 2016 - 1h 15min - 165 - MSP 17: Doug Post
An interview with Doug Post, Gallery Artist Representative and Office Manager at Pentacle, an artist service organization based in New York. He has served as president of Beyondance Inc.'s Board of Directors, was founding member of Freespace Dance's Board, and is on the Advisory Board of ACF Dance, Reverb Dance, and the Brooklyn Dance Festival. Doug curates Dixon Places's (NYC) Under Exposed and Moving Men series. He publishes a weekly newsletter of performances, auditions, and other items of interest to the dance community. This interview is part of the special 5-part series "Starring New Jersey" that features interviews by prominent dance "shapers" in the dance field who call NJ home. The series is made possible from a grant from New Jersey Council for the Humanities, a state partner of the National Endowment for the Humanities.
Tue, 09 Feb 2016 - 42min - 164 - MSP: Special AnnouncementTue, 02 Feb 2016 - 01min
- 163 - MSP 16: Helen Simoneau
A native of Québec, Canada, today's guest Helen Simoneau is director of Helen Simoneau Danse, a North Carolina based dance company with strong New York City ties and acclaimed international presence. Her work has been presented at notable venues such as Dance Place (DC), New York Live Arts, Joyce Soho (NYC), Tangente (Montréal), The Aayama Round Theatre (Tokyo), Jacob's Pillow Inside/Out Stage (MA), the L.I.G Art Hall Busan (South Korea), and Athens International Dance Festival (Greece).
Mon, 18 Jan 2016 - 50min - 162 - MSP 15: Julie Mayo
An interview with Brooklyn-based choreographer, performer, and director Julie Mayo. Julie has had her work presented on both coasts and in the Midwest, and was a 2014-2015 New York Live Arts Fresh Tracks Artist in Residence. She has recently been commissioned by Gibney Dance in NYC to create an evening-length work for their Fall 2016 season. Originally from Richmond, VA, Julie has lived and been a part of the dance communities in Seattle, San Francisco, Richmond, Chicago, and NYC.
Tue, 15 Dec 2015 - 55min - 161 - MSP 14: Nel Shelby
An interview with a woman who is all things dance video, Nel Shelby. Nel preserves and promotes dance by filming performances and creating marketing videos and original films. Her company Nel Shelby Productions, based in NYC, boasts a diverse list of dance clients in New York and beyond. Nel serves as Festival Videographer for Jacob's Pillow Dance and is Resident Videographer at the Vail International Dance Festival (VIDF). Her documentary about choreographer Nejla Y. Yatkin was screened at a PillowTalk at Jacob's Pillow's 2015 festival, and past films include The Altitude of Dance, a documentary on VIDF, which debuted on Rocky Mountain PBS; four short films for Wendy Whelan's Restless Creature; and a short created with Adam Barruch that screened at NYC's Dance on Camera Festival and San Francisco Dance Film Festival.
Tue, 01 Dec 2015 - 53min - 160 - MSP 13: Pat Graney
An interview with Seattle-based choreographer Pat Graney. Pat has received numerous honors throughout her career as a choreographer including fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts for 11 consecutive years, the Alpert Award, US Artists Award in Dance, and was one of 20 Americans to receive a Doris Duke Performing Artist Award in 2013. Pat also founded Keeping the Faith/The Prison Project, the longest running prison-arts program in the United States.
Mon, 16 Nov 2015 - 59min - 159 - MSP 12: Leslie Anderson-Braswell
An interview with Pittsburgh-based ballet instructor Leslie Anderson-Braswell, a former dancer with Pittsburgh Ballet Theater, Stuttgart Ballet, and Dance Theatre of Harlem. Leslie has taught for over 35 years in the Pittsburgh area, and is currently on faculty at the Pittsburgh High School for the Creative and Performing Arts. Leslie is the namesake of the "Brazzy Award", an honor awarded annually to promising young artists in the Pittsburgh area in honor of Leslie's lifetime spent in dance education and mentorship.
Tue, 03 Nov 2015 - 1h 10min - 158 - MSP 11: Heidi Latsky
An interview with NYC-based choreographer and performer Heidi Latsky. Heidi is a former dancer with the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company. In 2001, she launched her own contemporary dance company, Heidi Latsky Dance, which promotes Heidi's definition of a dancer as all-inclusive through the use of disabled and non-disabled performers.
Tue, 20 Oct 2015 - 58min - 157 - MSP 10: Elizabeth McPherson
Interview with Dr. Elizabeth McPherson, a New York City-based writer, dance historian, dance notator, dance educator, and Associate Professor at Montclair State University in Montclair, New Jersey. Beth is the author of two dance history books, regularly contributes to multiple dance publications, and has staged numerous 20th century works from Labanotion.
Tue, 06 Oct 2015 - 54min - 156 - MSP 9: Karen Love
Interview with Karen Love, a New Jersey-based choreographer and dance educator. Karen is the Founder/Artistic Director of Umoja Dance Company and Usaama Dance Company, Coordinator for Wofabe African Dance & Drum Festival, Director of the Dance Department at Hillside High School, and owner of Umoja Dance studio located in Vaux Hall, NJ.
Tue, 22 Sep 2015 - 1h 01min - 155 - MSP 8: Caitlin Trainor
An interview with NYC-based dance artist Caitlin Trainor. Caitlin has danced for the Metropolitan Opera Ballet, Sean Curran, and Amy Marshall, and was assistant to Mr. Curran and site-specific choreographer Stephen Koplowitz. She is currently Artistic Director of Trainor Dance and on the dance faculty at Barnard/Columbia University.
Tue, 08 Sep 2015 - 55min - 154 - MSP 7: Paula Kellinger
An interview with Paula Kellinger, choreographer and Professor of Dance at Wilson College located in Chambersburg, PA. Prior to teaching at Wilson College, Paula danced for such choreographers as Meredith Monk, Laura Dean, Susan Rethorst, Wendy Perron, and as apprentice for Trisha Brown, alongside creating her own body of choreographic work.
Tue, 11 Aug 2015 - 53min - 153 - MSP 6: Anabella LenzuMon, 27 Jul 2015 - 1h 02min
- 152 - MSP 5: Rachel NevilleTue, 14 Jul 2015 - 1h 05min
- 151 - MSP 4: Carolyn Dorfman
An interview with NJ/NYC-based Carolyn Dorfman, Artistic Director of the contemporary dance company Carolyn Dorfman Dance. She is a master teacher, mentor, and guest artist/choreographer/lecturer at major universities and pre-professional programs across the U.S. and internationally, while also a leader in many community dance initiatives throughout the state of New Jersey.
Tue, 30 Jun 2015 - 1h 02min - 150 - MSP 3: Alexandra BellerTue, 16 Jun 2015 - 1h 07min
- 149 - MSP 2: Tracie StanfieldTue, 02 Jun 2015 - 49min
- 148 - MSP 1: Sidra BellFri, 29 May 2015 - 52min
- 147 - MSP 137: Lar Lubovitch
Today's guest is Lar Lubovitch. Lar is one of America’s most versatile and widely seen choreographers. He founded the Lar Lubovitch Dance Company in 1968. Over the course of 54 years, it has gained an international reputation as one of America’s top dance companies, produced more than 120 dances and performed before millions across the U.S. and over 40 countries. Many other major companies throughout the world have performed the company’s dances, including American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, San Francisco Ballet, Paris Opera Ballet, Royal Danish Ballet, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, the Joffrey Ballet, Martha Graham Dance Company, and more.
Recent awards: 2011 designated a Ford Fellow by United States Artists and received the Dance/USA Honors Award; 2012 his dance “Crisis Variations” awarded the Prix Benois de la Danse for outstanding choreography at the Bolshoi Theatre; 2013 honored for lifetime achievement by the American Dance Guild; 2014 awarded an honorary doctorate by The Juilliard School; 2016 received the Scripps/American Dance Festival Award for lifetime achievement and the Dance Magazine Award, named one of America’s Irreplaceable Dance Treasures by the Dance Heritage Coalition and appointed a Distinguished Professor at UC/Irvine. In honor of his company’s 50th anniversary, in 2018 he was presented with the Martha Graham Award for lifetime achievement.
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Mon, 20 Jun 2022 - 1h 08min - 146 - MSP 136: Nadia Adame
Today's guest is Nadia Adame. Nadia is a Spanish multidisciplinary award-winning artist with a spinal cord injury and the Artistic Director at AXIS Dance Company. She was a company member with AXIS (2001-2003) and Candoco Dance Company (2007-2008). In 2004, she co-founded and was the Co-Artistic Director of Compañía Y in Spain, a multimedia and performance collective. Nadia’s credits include dance, theatre, commercial, and independent film projects in the UK, Spain, US, and Canada. As a performer, she has been featured in works by Stephen Petronio, Bill T. Jones, Arthur Pita, Rafael Bonachela, Davis Robertson, Sonya Delwaide, Marc Brew, Chevi Muraday and Asun Noales, among others.
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Mon, 06 Jun 2022 - 42min - 145 - MSP 135: Erica Hornthal
Today's guest is Erica Hornthal. Erica, a licensed clinical professional counselor and board-certified dance/movement therapist, is the CEO and founder of Chicago Dance Therapy. Since graduating with her MA in dance/movement therapy and counseling, Erica has worked with thousands of patients from age 3 to 107. Known as “The Therapist Who Moves You,” Erica has truly changed the way people see movement with regard to mental health: moving people toward unlimited potential, greater awareness, and purpose by tapping into their innate body wisdom. In addition to her passion for working with cognitive and movement disorders, neurologic conditions, anxiety, depression, and trauma, she is an advocate for the field of dance/movement therapy. Erica created the Dance Therapy Advocates Summit in 2020 in order to spread awareness and inspire and connect individuals and practitioners from all over the world.
For more on Erica and this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Mon, 23 May 2022 - 59min - 144 - MSP 134: Shamel Pitts
Today's guest is Shamel Pitts. Shamel is a dancer, choreographer, teacher, as well as performance, conceptual, and spoken word artist. Since 2019, he is the artistic director/founder of TRIBE, a New York-based multidisciplinary arts collective which was a 2020-21 Artist-In-Residence at 92Y Harkness Dance Center.
Born in Brooklyn, New York, he started his professional dance career with Mikhail Baryshnikov’s Hell’s Kitchen Dance and BJM_Danse Montreal. Between 2009-2016, he was a company member of the Batsheva Dance Company, led by Ohad Naharin where he studied Gaga movement language, of which he is now a certified teacher. Since 2015, Shamel has created a triptych of award-winning multidisciplinary works known as “BLACK Series,” which has been performed and toured extensively to many festivals around the world. He is the recipient of a 2018 Princess Grace Award in Choreography, a 2019 NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship Award winner in Choreography, and a 2020 Jacob’s Pillow artist in residence, a 2020 Guggenheim Fellow, and the cast member of the 2021 Bessie Award-winning production of “The Motherboard Suite” at New York Live Arts.
For more on Shamel and this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Mon, 09 May 2022 - 57min - 143 - MSP 133: Cara Hagan
Today's guest is Cara Hagan. Cara is a mover, maker, writer, curator, champion of just communities, and a dreamer. Cara's adventures take place as live performance, on screen, as installation, on the page, and in collaboration with others in a multitude of contexts.
In recent years, Cara and her work have traveled to such gatherings as the Performática Festival in Cholula, Mexico, the Conference on Geopoetics in Edinburgh, Scotland, the Loikka Dance Film Festival in Helsinki, Finland, the Taos Poetry Festival in Taos, New Mexico, and to the Dance on Camera Festival in New York City. Extended residencies have taken place at Thirak India in Jaipur, India, Playa Summer Lake in the dynamic outback of Oregon, Roehampton University in London, the University of Colorado at Boulder, and the University of North Carolina, School of the Arts.
Since becoming a parent and navigating a global pandemic, Hagan’s work takes place a bit closer to home these days. She is working on a new book titled, Ritual is Both Balm and Resistance.
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Mon, 25 Apr 2022 - 39min - 142 - MSP 132: Peggy Baker
Today's guest is Peggy Baker. Peggy Baker has been a vivid presence in contemporary dance since 1973, performing internationally in the work of Lar Lubovitch, Mark Morris (with Mikhail Baryshnikov’s White Oak Dance Project), Doug Varone, Tere O’Connor, Molissa Fenley, and Charles Moulton (NYC); with Fortier Danse-Creation (Montreal); and Dancemakers, Toronto Dance Theatre, and James Kudelka, (Toronto). She established Peggy Baker Dance Projects in 1990, and for the first 20 years she dedicated herself to solo performance, winning rapturous praise for the eloquence and depth of her dancing, and accolades for her collaborative partnerships with extraordinary choreographers, directors, musicians, and designers. Since 2010 her choreography has focused on works for small ensemble. Over its 32-year history Peggy Baker Dance Projects has been presented at major festivals and dance centres in North America, Asia and Europe, including Danspace, The Kitchen, Symphony Space, and the Harkness Festival in New York; the Luckman Center in Los Angeles; Jacob’s Pillow; the Copenhagen International Dance Festival; the Time Festival in Ghent, Belgium; The Holland Dance Festival; the Cervantino Festival in Guanajuato, Mexico; MoDaFe in Seoul, Korea; Landmark Tower in Yokohama, Japan; the Canada Dance Festival in Ottawa, the High Performance Rodeo in Calgary, Tangente, L’Agora de la danse, and Danse Danse in Montreal, and Canadian Stage and Fall for Dance North in Toronto. Her evening-length multi-disciplinary work who we are the dark, created with composer/performers Sarah Neufeld and Jeremy Gara of Arcade Fire, toured across Canada and internationally from winter 2019 to early in 2020.
For more on Peggy and this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Mon, 11 Apr 2022 - 1h 10min - 141 - MSP 131: Moses Pendleton
Today's guest is Moses Pendleton. Moses has been one of America’s most innovative and widely performed choreographers and directors for over 40 years. A co-founder of the ground-breaking Pilobolus Dance Theater in 1971, he formed his own company, MOMIX, in 1980. Mr. Pendleton has also worked extensively in film, TV, and opera and as a choreographer for ballet companies and special events. Moses is an avid photographer with works presented in Rome, Milan, Florence, and Aspen. Images of his sunflower plantings at his home in northwestern Connecticut have been featured in numerous books and articles on gardening. Momix at Staller Center for the Arts, Stony Brook, NY on April 2, 2022
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Sun, 27 Mar 2022 - 53min - 140 - MSP 130: Netta Yerushalmy
Today's guest is Netta Yerushalmy. Netta is an award winning choreographer and performer originally from Galilee, Israel. Based in New York City since 2000, her work aims to engage with audiences by imparting the sensation of things as they are perceived, not as they are known, and to challenge how meaning is attributed and constructed.
Most recently recognized with a 2022 United States Artists Fellowship, Netta has also been awarded a Guggenheim Fellowship, Princeton Arts Fellowship, Research Fellowship from New York Public Library for the Performing Arts, Toulmin Fellowship for Women Leaders in Dance at the Center for Ballet and the Arts at New York University, New York City Center Choreography Fellowship, Jerome Robbins Bogliasco Fellowship, Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grants-to-Artists Award, National Dance Project Grant, LMCC’s Extended Life, Six Points Fellowship, and a New York Foundation for the Arts Fellowship.
For more on Netta and this episode including her upcoming work with Peak Performances at Montclair State University: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast.
Sun, 13 Mar 2022 - 18min - 139 - MSP 129: Hannah Kahn
Today's guest is Hannah Kahn, founder and artistic director of the Hannah Kahn Dance Company. Hannah is a master teacher with fifty-two years of experience creating over one hundred and forty dances. Some of the strongest influences on her choreography were her childhood classes in Ithaca, New York with Iris Barbura, her studies of the techniques of Jose Limon and Martha Graham, and her performance of dances by Doris Humphrey and Anna Sokolow. The practice of Tai Chi has also influenced her movement style.
After graduating from the Juilliard School in 1972, Kahn founded the Company in New York, and directed it there for twelve years before moving to Colorado in 1988, where she has directed the company ever since. In addition to her own company, her works have been in the repertories of over a dozen other dance companies.
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Catch The Moving Architects at Green Space, NYC March 18-19, for premieres of new work. For more info: The Moving Architects
Mon, 21 Feb 2022 - 52min - 138 - MSP 128: Lisa La Touche
Today's guest is Lisa La Touche. As a proud Canadian and former New Yorker, Lisa’s credits are world renowned. She was an original cast member in Broadway’s Shuffle Along, choreographed by Savion Glover and Directed by George C. Wolfe, where she received both the Fred Astaire Award and the Actor’s Equity Award for Outstanding Broadway Chorus. Her TV credits include the 70th Annual Tony Awards and Amazon’s Original “Z, The beginning of everything”. Previous highlights have also included touring with the Savion Glover production, Stepz, and also performing with both New York's Off-Broadway and the North American touring casts of STOMP. Since 2010 she has run her own performance company Tap Phonics and has been commissioned to present for organizations such as The Brooklyn Museum, 92Y, Gibney Dance and Fall For Dance North. As an educator and Professor she has taught for PACE University, NYU, The School of Jacob’s Pillow, University of Calgary, Decidedly Jazz Danceworks, Rosie’s Theater Kids and member of the creative council for the American Tap Dance Foundation. Her recent endeavor includes co-curating the Tap Dance Legacy Series along with Travis Knights in partnership with Dance Immersion providing the local black community free access to their cultural history. She also has written and directed her debut film TRAX encompassing her journey back to Alberta while discovering important local black history. Above all, her proudest achievement greatest inspiration, is the gift of being a mom. For more on Lisa and this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcastt
Sun, 23 Jan 2022 - 1h 02min - 137 - MSP 127: JoAnna Mendl Shaw
Today's guest is veteran choreographer and dance educator, JoAnna Mendl Shaw.
JoAnna has been devising performance works for stage, rural and urban landscapes since the 1980’s. Her body of interspecies work initiates visceral engagement with the natural and cultural environment. Redefining the possibilities for dance-making, Shaw’s research into the human-equine dialogue began in 1998. Her company, The Equus Projects, tours throughout the States and Europe creating site-specific works through immersive collaboration with local equine and arts communities. An internationally recognized dance educator, Shaw has taught on faculty at NYU, The Juilliard School, Alvin Ailey, Princeton, Mount Holyoke, and Montclair State. Shaw is the recipient of NEA Choreographic Fellowships and multiple NEA grants for Interdisciplinary Performance. She has brought her somatic practice of Physical Listening into elementary schools and academic think tanks, into the Strategic Studies group at the Naval War College and NYU Medical school. She is a certified Laban Movement Analyst. She is the author of the 2021 book, Physical Listening, A Dancer’s Interspecies Journey.
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Sun, 09 Jan 2022 - 1h 14min - 136 - MSP 126: Remembering Nai-Ni Chen
Today’s podcast is a re-airing of an interview with Nai-Ni Chen on Movers & Shapers from February 2018. Nai-Ni passed away unexpectedly on December 12, 2021 in a swimming accident in Hawaii.
Since starting her dance company Nai-Ni Chen Dance in 1998, her choreography has brought the dynamic freedom of American modern dance together with the elegant splendor of Asian art. Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company has been one of the most visible Asian American dance companies in America, touring nationally and internationally over the last 30+ years. Her signature technique, Kinetic Spiral, is a fusion the dynamism of contemporary dance with the essence of Chinese traditional art. As a beloved member of the New Jersey and NYC dance communities, she will be deeply missed and her work and spirit will continue to resonate with everyone she touched.
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Sun, 26 Dec 2021 - 1h 03min - 135 - MSP 125: Loni Landon
Today's guest is Loni Landon. Loni is a Dancer, Choreographer, and Movement Consultant based in New York City. In addition to creating dances for her own collective Loni Landon Dance Project, her work is commissioned by dance companies and film directors across the country. Born and raised in New York City, Loni performed with Aszure Barton and Artists, Ballet Theater Munich, Tanz Munich Theater, and The Metropolitan Opera, and is a Princess Grace Choreography Fellowship Winner.
As a sought after choreographer, her work has been commissioned by such institutions as The Joyce Theater, Keigwin and Company, BODYTRAFFIC, The Juilliard School, American Dance Institute, Northwest Dance Project, and Groundworks Dance Company. Her company has performed at The Joyce Theater, Pulse Art Fair, Jacob’s Pillow, Insitu Dance Festival, Bryant Park, Beach Sessions in Rockaway Beach and Guggenheim Works and Process Series.
Loni has won numerous choreography awards, with residencies at New Movement Residency at USC Glorya Kaufman School of Dance, Alvin Ailey Dance Foundation New Directions Choreography Lab, ITE, NYU, CUNY Dance Initiative, Kaatsbaan, and Stephen Petronio’s new residency center. She has been adjunct faculty at NYU, Barnard, SUNY Purchase, and Princeton University.
Loni is passionate about Entrepreneurship in the Arts and has co-founded THE PLAYGROUND, an initiative designed to give emerging choreographers a place to experiment, while allowing professional dancers to participate affordably. The Playground was recognized by Dance Magazine as a 25 To Watch. As well as four/four presents, a platform that commissions and presents collaborations betweens dancers and musicians.
For more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Sun, 12 Dec 2021 - 57min - 134 - MSP 124: Margaret Jenkins
Today's guest is Margaret Jenkins. Margaret Jenkins, founder and artistic director of the Margaret Jenkins Dance Company, celebrating the 50th anniversary of her Company in 2022, is a choreographer and mentor to many artists as well as a designer of unique community-based dance projects.
In the 1960's, Margaret moved to New York to study at Juilliard, continued her training at UCLA and returned to New York to dance in the companies of Jack Moore, Viola Farber, Judy Dunn, James Cunningham, Gus Solomons, Jr. and Twyla Tharp’s original company with Sara Rudner. In addition, Jenkins was a member of the faculty of the Merce Cunningham Studio and restaged his works for companies in Europe and the United States for over 12 years.
In 1970, Jenkins returned to San Francisco, and in 1973, formed the MJDC. She opened one of the West Coast's first studio-performing spaces and a school for the training of professional modern dancers. In the last five decades, she has created an impressive body of work, with over 85 works created on her Company, as well as resident companies in the United States, Asia and Europe.
For her unique artistic vision, Margaret has received numerous awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, an Irvine Fellowship in Dance, the San Francisco Arts Commission Award of Honor, three Isadora Duncan Awards (Izzies), and the Bernard Osher Cultural Award for her outstanding contributions to the arts community in San Francisco and the Bay Area.
Fore more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast and The Moving Architects
Sun, 14 Nov 2021 - 1h 06min - 133 - MSP 123: Rosie Herrera
Today’s guest is Rosie Herrera. Rosie is a Cuban-American dancer and choreographer working within the fields of modern dance, opera, cabaret, theater and film. She is the artistic director of Rosie Herrera Dance Theater in Miami. Rosie has been commissioned by such groups as The Miami Light Project, The Adrienne Arsht Center for the Performing Arts, Ballet Hispanico, Jose Limon Dance Company, and the American Dance Festival (ADF) in 2010, 2011, 2013, 2016 and 2018. Her company, Rosie Herrera Dance Theatre, has been presented by the Northrop Dance Series, New World Symphony, Baryshnicov Arts Center, Texas A & M University, Maui Arts and Cultural Center, Dance Place, Contemporary Arts Center New Orleans, The Yard at Marthas Vineyard, Gotham Dance at Skirball and Focus Dance at The Joyce as well as by The American Dance Festival at the Joyce NYC in 2016 and 2018, among others.
Rosie is a 2016 USArtist Sarah Arison Choreographic Fellow, a 2010 and 2018 MANCC choreographic fellow, a 2014 Bates Dance Festival Artist in residence, a 2016 Bessie Schoenberg Fellow and a 2011 and 2016 Miami Dance Fellow. She was awarded a Princess Grace Choreographic Fellowship for her work with Ballet Hispanico in 2013.
For more on Rosie and the podcast: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Sun, 17 Oct 2021 - 1h 00min - 132 - MSP 122: Ali Kenner Brodsky
Today's guest is Ali Kenner Brodsky. Ali makes gesturally rich and emotionally driven dance-theater works that ask the viewer to indulge in a world of reflection, remembering, and connection. Her dance company, ali kenner brodsky & co., produces, presents, and tours original works of choreography and dance films. Ali was recently accepted into NEFA’S New England Regional Dance Development Initiative, was a 2019 artist-in-residence at the Croft: Ground for Art, a 2018-19 Catalysts artist at the Dance Complex, 2016 Emerging Choreographer in Residence at Bates Dance Festival, and 2014 recipient of the Rhode Island State Council on the Arts Choreography Fellowship. Alongside David Henry, Lila Hurwitz and Andy Russ, Ali co-founded Motion State Arts which presents innovative dance-films and live performances from local, national and international artists.
For more on this podcast episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Sun, 03 Oct 2021 - 1h 04min - 131 - MSP 121: Colleen Thomas
Today's guest is Colleen Thomas. Colleen is a New York-based choreographer, scholar, teacher, and performing artist. She is the director of Colleen Thomas Dance, co-director of Bill Young/Colleen Thomas Co., and co-curator for LIT (loft into theater). She began her professional career with the Miami Ballet and went on to work with renowned contemporary choreographers such as The Kevin Wynn Collection, Nina Wiener Dance Company, Donald Byrd/The Group, Bebe Miller Dance Company, and Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, among others. Her work has been seen throughout the United States as well as in Europe, Asia, and South America and has been presented in NYC at Danspace Project, Movement Research at Judson Memorial Church, Dance Theatre Workshop/New York Live Arts, and La MaMa MOVES! Dance Festival, to name just a few. She is currently a Professor of Professional Practice at Barnard College of Columbia University.
For more on this podcast: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast
Sat, 18 Sep 2021 - 48min
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