
15th Annual
MINNESOTA DANCE FESTIVAL
April 2-6,
2003
Fitzgerald
Theater, St Paul
Directions
to Fitzgerald Theater
Artistic Director: Andrew Rist
Festival Coordinator/Adjudicator: Paula Mann
Executive Director: Cynthia Betz
Stage Manager: Jim Arnold
Festival
Guests 2003
Biographies
MDF Curator, Coordinator Profile:
PAULA MANN: Paula moved to the Twin Cities from New York in
1987, armed with a BA & MFA in dance from New York University,
following eight years as co-director of the New York based company,
Dudek/Mann + Dancers.Building on a background of modern dance
technique and ballet, she has expanded the scope of her work
as a dancer and choreographer to include animation, text, sound
collage and physical theater to create unique performance experiences.
Mann is artistic director of TIME TRACK PRODUCTIONS whose mission
is to explore the relationship between media and humanity using
live performance as a foundation. TIME TRACK PRODUCTIONS' new
evening length piece, 'All That Is Solid Melts Into Air' will
premier in September 2003 at the O'Shaughnessy Auditorium as
part of the Women of Substance series.
Mann's work has been presented by many performance venues both
in New York - at Dance Theater Workshop, P.S 122, Danspace, Off
Broadway at Douglas Fairbanks Theater and Movement Research -
and in the Twin Cities, by the Southern Theater, the O'Shaughnessy
Dance Series, the Walker Arts Center, the MN Dance Alliance and
Hamline University. Her Solo work has been presented throughout
the US and Canada. Mann has been recognized with several awards
from the McKnight Foundation, the Jerome Foundation, Meet the
Composer, the MN State Arts Board, MRAC Arts Activities and Community
Arts, two Sage Cowles Chairs at the University of Minnesota and
a Bush Artist Fellowship. She is currently on faculty at the
University of Minnesota Department of Theater and Dance.
James Sewell
Ballet
Dance Profile:
A FEW NOTES ABOUT
'WHALING WATERS': Commercial whaling
began in the late 1700s and early 1800s, and declined starting
around 1860 due to over fishing and the 1859 discovery of oil
in Pennsylvania. In settling Maine and Nova Scotia, the British
introduced simple pipes, horns, mandolins, guitars and many songs.
First performed on a boat
anchored in the harbor, "Whaling Waters received its dry-land
premiere at an annual folk music festival at Swans Island, Maine.
The ballet follows the classical pas de deux formula (adagio
duet, female and male variations, and coda) in relating the story
of a couple wed on the eve of the husband's departure for sea.
Imagining the worst during his lengthy absence, the woman takes
advantage of the Widow,s Walk a small balcony from which wives
awaited their husbands,s returning ships. Meanwhile, the husband
is hoisting sails and hunting whales. In the coda, they wonder
how life will be when they are reunited, and the joyous finale
answers the question infectiously.
Choreographer /
Artistic Director / Founder Profile
ABOUT JAMES SEWELL
BALLET: Since 1993, Minnesota's James
Sewell Ballet has performed an average of once per week at more
than 200 venues in more than 40 Minnesota communities, 25 states,
and Bermuda. It is the company,s mission to create and perform
an engaging repertoire based in the ballet idiom in an effort
to broaden audience access to dance and to advance the art form.
The organization defines its artistic product as a valued and
meaningful experience shared between artists and audiences. The
essential elements of the product are the choreography of Artistic
Director James Sewell, performances by the dancers, the process
of education, and the engagement of audiences. The company performs
biennially in St. Paul, annually in St. Cloud and Rochester,
and on tour throughout the United States.
Minnesota
Dance Theatre
Company Profile:
MINNESOTA DANCE
THEATER
Founded in 1962, Minnesota
Dance Theatre (MDT) celebrates a deep and personal connection
to its past, and is presently flourishing by creating and commissioning
new dance repetoire. MDT is renowned as one of Minnesota's cultural
treasures with an eclectic international voice that builds upon
a 40-year tradition of delighting audiences. Its repetoire is
a tapestry of work that expresses its spirit in vividly expressive
dancing and choreographic adventures.
Choreographer / Dancer
Profile:
STEPHANE ANDRE:
Stephane Andre is a native
of France. After completing his ballet studies at the Paris National
Conservatory under Attilio Labis and Roland Duflot he was awarded
a scholarship at the San Francisco Ballet School and the Joffrey
School.
Mr Andre has danced for many
major companies throughout North America including the Joffrey
Ballet, Les Grands Ballets Canadiens, and the Royal Winnipeg
Ballet amongst others. He has danced works of internationally
renowned choreographers such as Kylian, Duato, Van Manen, Tetley,
Morris and Kudelka. Mr Andre has danced extensively in the Twin
Cities since his arrival in 1998. He has danced leading roles
with Zenon, Minnesota Dance Theatre, James Sewell and Corning
Dances.
Stephane has been teaching
ballet for 8 years throughout the world. He is a certified Pilates
instructor and soon to be an Instructor Trainer in the Stott
Method of Pilates.
Zorongo
Flamenco Dance Theatre
Artistic Director
/ Choreographer / Founder / Dancer Profile:
SUSANA DI PALMA:
The vision for Zorongo Flamenco
Dance Theatre come from Artistic Director, Susana di Palma.
She is unparalleled as a performer and choreographer, both in
the United States and abroad. Ms di Palma receives widespread
acclaim for her daring and sumptuous choreography, imbuing jewels
of literature (from where she gets much of her inspiration) with
the freshness, candor and immediacy that only flamenco can bring.
Susana di Palma studied Spanish
dance from childhood, primarily in Madrid, with maestros Manolete,
Tomas de Madrid, Carmen Mora and Merche Esmerelda, and in Sevilla
with Enrique "El Cojo" and Manolo Marin. After living
and working in Spain with such companies as La Singla and Rafael
de Cordova among others, in "tablaos" in Madrid and
numerous festivals throughout Spain and Europe, she returned
to the United States.
Her original theater flamenco
choreographies have been awarded grants from the McKnight Foundation,
Minnesota State Arts Board, National Endowment for the Arts,
Bush Foundation, and Jerome Foundation, among others. She is
the 1999-2001 recipient of the McKnight Artist Fellowship for
Choreographers through the Minnesota Dance Alliance. She recently
performed Garcia Lorca's 'Blood Wedding' Ms di Palma resides
in Madrid and Minneapolis.
These full-length works,
along with the many smaller works, designate di Palma as an outstanding
and unique visionary force in Spanish dance in the United States.
Dancer Profile:
ANDREA J FRENZEL:
Andrea found flamenco in
1993. Her background in dance and Spanish language unite in this
art form. A Minneapolis native, Ms Frenzel has studied and worked
under the guidance of internationally recognized flamenco choreographer
Susana di Palma. She is a founding member of the Twin Cities
based flamenco ensemble 'Majas', and has performed with Susana
di Palma's Zorongo Flamenco Dance Theatre in "Kathak Flamenco:
Negra" 2000, "Soul y Flamenco" 2001, and "Gernika"
2002. She also performs regularly with renowned Flamenco guitarist
Michael Hauser and his groups Trio Flamenco, Cuadro Flamenco
and Cuadro Folklorico.
To keep up with the current
trends and techniques of her art, Ms Frenzel travels frequently
to Madrid, Spain, where she studies Flamenco dance with renowned
teachers such as Maria Magdalena, Yolanda Heredia, La China,
Antonio Reyes, Domingo Ortega and Tomas de Madrid
Since joining the teaching
staff of Zorongo Flamenco Dance Theatre and School in Minneapolis
in 1999, Ms Frenzel has taught workshops and master classes around
the Twin Cities and in Greater Minnesota. She is currently on
the faculty of the University of Minnesota Dance Department.
Dancer Profile:
DEBORAH ELIAS MORSE:
Debra
has studied Flamenco dance since 1994 under the guidance of Susana
di Palma. She has also studied in Spain, taking classes with
Flamenco masters Merche Esmeralda, La Tati, Ciro and Antonio
Reyes. She is a founding member of Majas and has danced with
Zorongo Flamenco Dance Theatre in Garden of Names, Kathak Flamenco:
United Rhythm-Passion, First I Dream, La Virtud Negra, and Soul
y Flamenco. Besides these theatre works, Ms Morse performs traditional
Flamenco in a variety of venues in and around the Twin Cities,
as well as in K-12 schools as part of the St Paul Chamber Orchestra
Cultural Partners Program.
Zenon
Dance Company
Company Profile:
ABOUT ZENON DANCE
COMPANY: Since its first performance in 1983,
Zenon Dance Company has grown to be one of the nation's premiere
repertory dance companies. It is one of only a few United States
companies to commission and perform both modern and jazz works
often created by emerging Twin Cities choreographers as well
as internationally renowned masters. Zenon's unique, eclectic
repertory has allowed it to reach a broad range of audiences
- from dedicated Twin Cities' dance enthusiasts to elder care
residents in Greater Minnesota. Often times these diverse audiences
are reached through the company's Educational Outreach Program
which allows Zenon's Artistic Director, Linda Z. Andrews, and
the company members to work creatively with students of all ages
and abilities. In the past five years the company has participated
in over fifty residencies working with school and communities
including the deaf and hard of hearing community and at-risk
youth programs
Choreographer Profile:
COLLEEN
THOMAS, choreographer,
has danced with the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company, Bebe
Miller Company, Nina Weiner Dance Company, Donald Byrd/The Group,
the Kevin Wynn Collection, Sung Su Ahn and Miami Ballet, among
others. She currently performs with Bill Young and Dancers and
has collaborated with Mr. Young as co-choreographer on numerous
projects. Her work has been seen in Slovakia, Hong Kong, Estonia,
Taiwan, Brazil, Venezuela as well as in New York City, Raleigh,
California State Long Beach, and the University of Wisconsin
Milwaukee. She is an Associate Professor at Long Island
University.
Choreographer Profile:
BILL
YOUNG winner of a 1997
Guggenheim Fellowship, discovered dance through contact improvisation
while studying music at Oberlin College. He showed early work
in San Francisco, while dancing with Margaret Jenkins, and later
moved to New York where he danced with Douglas Dunn, Randy Warshaw,
Merce Cunningham (on video). In 1988 he established Bill Young
& Dancers, which has been presented in NYC at the Joyce Theater,
The Kitchen, Danspace Project, PS 122, and DTW, as well as on
repeated international tours, including performances in Austria,
Estonia, Germany, Hungary, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Russia, Finland,
Mexico, Brazil, Peru, and Venezuela. Combining a deep musicality
and sense of structure with a wide range of movement techniques
(from Classical to Contact), Young has created over 50 works,
noted for their virtuosity as well as emotional range and power;
his commissions include new works for the Estonian National Opera
Ballet, Pennsylvania Dance Theater, DanceArt Hong Kong, the Wildspace
Dance Company (Milwaukee), Teoria de Gravedad (Mexico), Bratislava
Dance Theater (Slovakia), and the Madach Theater Dancers (Budapest).
Composer Profile
MIO
MORALES has worked extensively
as a composer for dance. He has created scores for the Alvin
Ailey American Dance Theater, Nieuwe Dans Group of Holland, Dallas
Black Dance Theater, Dance Theater of Harlem, Concordanse Compaigne
International de Danse de Paris, Oregon Ballet Theater, Dayton
Contemporary Dance Company, and the Nashville Ballet among others.
His collaborations with Bill Young and Dancers began in 1988,
and since they have created over 20 works together. He has also
worked with choreographers Donald Byrd, Gus Solomons, Jane Comfort,
Doug Elkins, Milton Meyers, and Renee Wadleigh. Mr. Morales leads
NYCUSA, a new music ensemble, and is a teacher of Alexander Technique.
Costume Designer Profile
MARY
HANSMEYER
has designed for JAZZDANCE
by Danny Buraczeski, Zenon Dance Company, Chuck Davis, Ballet
Memphis, Shapiro & Smith, James Sewell Ballet, Ragamala Music
and Dance Theater, ARENA Dances by Mathew Janczewski, Paula Mann
Dance, and the University of Minnesota Theater/Dance Department.
While working with UrepCo (University of Minnesota Repertory
Company), she designed costumes for works by Bebe Miller, Neil
Greenberg, Merce Cunningham, Mark Morris, Billy Siegenfeld, and
Dan Wagoner.
Ragamala
Music and Dance Theater
Choreographer /
Artistic Director / Founder Profile
RANEE RAMASWAMY (Artistic Director/Choreographer),
a native of India, has been teaching and performing Bharatanatyam
in the Twin Cities since 1978. She has had the good fortune to
train under Alarmel Valli, a leading exponent of the Pandanallur
style of Bharatanatyam, which requires grace and subtlety of
expression. Ranee has received many grants and fellowships in
the recognition of her dancing, choreography, and tireless work
with Bharatanatyam in the Minnesota area, including 12 McKnight
Artist Fellowships for Choreographers, two McKnight Artist Fellowships
for Interdisciplinary Artists, a two-year National Endowment
for the Arts Choreographer Fellowship in 1994, a Bush Fellowship
for Choreography in 1996, a 1998 LIN (Leadership Initiative Neighborhood)
Grant from the St Paul Companies, and a 2000 Minnesota State
Arts Board Choreography Fellowship. Throughout her career, Ranee
has collaborated with celebrated artists of diverse backgrounds
and disciplines, such as poet Robert Bly, Jazz musician Howard
Levy, Milwaukee-based African dance troupeKo-Thi Dance Company,
and Deaf actress Nicole Zapko.
Dance Profile
'AAVYA' The choreography for 'Aavya' reflects
the rhythmic aspect of Bharatanatyam, the classical dance of
southern India, in which music is interpreted through abstract
movement. The varied hand gestures are used ornamentally, as
the dancers express the mood of the music
Composers / Musical
Ensemble Profile
SPEAKING IN TONGUES: draws on the wisdom of ancestors
and the resonating voices of timeless traditions to speak directly
to the new millennium. Four astonishing musicians from four countries
with four native tongues combine for one common purpose - to
actualize the vitality of diversity and the the grace of respect.
Speaking in Tongues features Ghanaian Drummer Sowah Mensah, Mexican
virtuoso bassist Enrique Toussaint, multi-percussionist Marc
Anderson, and world renowned Chinese pipa player Gao Hong.
Ballet
Minnesota
MDF:
April 4, 10:00am , April 5, 8:00pm
Director Profile
CHERYL RIST: Cheryl,
a graduate of the Cornish School of Arts in Seattle, was the
recipient of (7) Arts Scholarships. Her teachers include Robert
Joffrey, Loyce Houlton, Hanya Holm, Flemming Halby and Frank
Bourman. She began dancing with Sacramento Ballet under the direction
of Jean-Paul Comelin (formerly Paris Opera Ballet). She danced
as a principal with the Banff Festival, the Minnesota Dance Theater
(under the direction of Loyce Houlton) and Ballet Minnesota.
Cheryl has restaged the classic ballets for Ballet Minnesota
including "Swan Lake", "Giselle", "Sleeping
Beauty", "Les Sylphides","La Bayadere",
"Coppelia", "Pas de Quatre" and "Flower
Festival pas de deux". Cheryl is director of the Classical
Ballet Academy of Minnesota (St Paul)
Dancer Profile
MELANIE HUGHES: Melanie
joined the company in November 2000. She has trained at the Royal
Ballet in England and the Australian Ballet in Australia. Melanie
has danced with the Australian Ballet, Ballet West,Milwaukee
Ballet and James Sewell Ballet. Since joining Ballet Minnesota,
Melanie has danced the Rose in the Nutcracker, the lead in Paquita,
Swanhilda in Coppelia, among many other roles.
Dancer Profile
GIARY ATALY: Forthcoming
Dancer Profile
TAYLOR DREYLING: Forthcoming
Dancer Profile
ERIN WARN: Forthcoming
Artistic Director
/ Choreographer Profile
ANDREW RIST: Andrew's
interests have always been in the areas of teaching, directing
& choreography. After dancing professionally for 14 years,
Loyce Houlton encouraged Andrew to become Avocational Director
of the Minnesota Dance Theater school (1986-87). In 1987 Andrew
co-founded the Classical Ballet Academy of Minnesota and in 1990
he co-founded and became artistic director of Ballet Minnesota.
Under his direction, Ballet Minnesota has developed a strong
season which includes the Nutcracker, The Youth Concert Series,
The Minnesota Dance Festival and the Summer River Tour. As a
choreographer, Anderw prefers working with original compositions.
He has created works in collaboration with Robert E Hindel, Charlie
Maguire (National Park Service "Singing Ranger") and
the rock group Mock Duck. His choreographic works include "Pachelbel",
"At the Museum", "Nutcraker", "The Egg",
"Oleon" and "Italian Symphony"
Ballet Profile Notes
from Corpus Cristi Baller at http://www.tamu.edu/ccballet/coppelia.html
'COPPELIA': ACT I: The scene is a village square in a small town in
southern Poland. On one side of the square is the house where
Swanilda, the heroine, lives. On the other is the mysterious
workshop of Dr. Coppélius, a toymaker suspected of possessing
magical gifts. In the upstairs window of the toymaker's house
sit's Coppélia, a doll, with a book in her hands. Swanilda
enters, sees the doll, and bows to it, not knowing it is a doll.
Her friendly bows, gestures, and greetings make no impression
and she stamps her foot in irritation.
Hearing the arrival of Franz, her
sweetheart, she hides, suspicious of his interest in the remote
Coppélia. Her thoughts are justified, for the young man
flirts with Coppélia until the old doctor moves the doll
away. Swanilda appears from her hiding place, where she has been
able to observe her swain's interest in the mysterious girl,
and pretends to chase a butterfly. Franz joins her and pins the
butterfly to his jacket. Swanilda cries out as if her own heart
had been pricked. The two lovers are interrupted by the villagers,
who dance a lively Mazurka. The burgermeister arrives to announce
a special festival to be held in honor of a new bell given by
the local lord for the church. Dowries will also be presented
to girls about to be married. The burgermeister gives Swanilda
a stalk of wheat to test her love. Traditionally, if the wheat
rattles when shaken, her love will be true. Swanilda and Franz
dance with the wheat, but, when she shakes the stalk, she and
her friends hear nothing. Although Franz says he hears it, she
refuses to believe him. The marriage appears to be off.
ACT II: Dusk
begins to settle and the celebrants depart. Dr. Coppélius
emerges from his house, carefully locking the door and placing
the key in his pocket. But some of the town bullies push him
around and the key falls to the ground. Swanilda and her girl
friends appear, find the key, and, under Swanilda's urging, sneak
into the house of the toymaker. Then Franz appears carrying a
ladder that he pushes against the balcony of Dr. Coppélius's
house. As the curtain closes, Franz starts to climb up.
Placed around the room are
several life-sized automated dolls: a harlequin doll, a Spanish
doll, a Scottish doll, a Russian doll, a Chinese doll, and an
astrologer. Nervously, Swanilda and her companions enter the
dimly lighted room. Then, Swanilda is dared by her companions
to approach the curtained alcove to search for Coppélia.
They soon discover that the object of Franz's admiration is no
more than a mechanical doll. All fear is gone now and the girls
dance merrily, setting all the life-sized dolls in motion.
Suddenly, they are interrupted
by the return of a furious Dr. Coppélius. They all escape,
except Swanilda, who, unseen by Dr. Coppélius, hides behind
the curtain that conceals Coppélia. There Swanilda exchanges
places with the doll Coppélia.
Having, as he thinks, rid
his house of intruders, Dr. Coppélius sees Franz entering
through the half-open window at the back of the room. Dr. Coppélius
allows Franz to enter and then seizes him as he creeps towards
Coppélia's alcove. Franz tries to make his way back to
the window, but the old man bars his way and demands an explanation.
Franz admits that he is in love with Coppélia and had
entered the house to find her.
Dr. Coppélius invites Franz
to take wine with him. After slipping a sleeping powder into
oneglass, Dr. Coppélius pours out two glasses. He offers
one to Franz, and then, unobserved, throws away the contents
of the other on the floor. Franz slumps over on the table in
a stupor. Dr. Coppélius consults the Book of Magic and
then wheels Coppélia in from the alcove. He tries to draw
the life force from Franz and then to transfer it to the doll.
The doll, who is actually Swanilda, seems to come to life to
the intense joy of Dr. Coppélius.
Finally, Swanilda reveals her identity;
and she and the revived Franz flee the workshop.
Realizing that he has been tricked, Dr. Coppélius collapses
at the feet of his precious Coppélia doll.
ACT III:The final preparations for the village festival
are in progress, a pageant to celebrate a new bell for the church.
The Burgermeister arrives to preside over the blessing of the
bell and to bless the betrothed couples in the village by giving
them their promised bags of gold. Dr. Coppélius storms
into the square, accusing the lovers of having destroyed his
workshop. Swanilda offers to pay for the damage with her dowry,
thus placating Dr. Coppélius, who then remains to enjoy
the celebrations. The reconciled Swanilda and Franz lead their
friends in the entertainment of a celebration of village life.
Hijack TBA
Website:
Aparna
Ramaswamy
Dancer Profile
APARNA RAMASWAMY: Aparna has performed Bharatanatyam
in the Twin Cities from a young age and has been studying with
Ms Alarmel Valli, the world's leading exponent of the Pandanallur
style of Bharatanatyam, since the age of eight. She has been
awarded several honors, including a McKnight Artist Fellowship
for Dancers, a Jerome Foundation Travel Study Grant, and a McKnight
Artist Fellowship for Choreography. She was named the "Best
Dancer" in the City Pages "Best of the Twin Cities
1999," and was named one of "One Hundred People to
Watch" by Mpls/St Paul Magazine (February 2000). Most recently,
in 2002, she received an Arts and Religion in the Twin Cities
grant, a Neighborhood Arts Project Grant from the City of St
Minneapolis, and a two-year Choreography Fellowship from the
Bush Foundation. Aparna is a 1997 graduate of Carleton College,
with a degree in International Relations and Political Science.
Dancer Profile:
TONI
PIERCE-SANDS: Tonie trained
under Loyce Houlton at the Minnesota Dance Theater and School,
and began her professional career with the company. She went
on to a distinguished career with Alvin Ailey American Dance
Theater, where she was a soloist and principal dancer. She also
danced with the Company Rick Odums in Paris and TanzForum in
Germany. Toni's continuing commitment to the vision of Mr Ailey,
now carried on by Judith Jamison, and her command of the Horton
technique have led to teaching posts throughout Europe and the
United States. She currently holds a position as a dance instructor
and rehearsal director for UDT (University Dance Theater) at
the University of Minnesota. Toni remains committed to her desire
to grow as a performer, and to continue the steps that have been
taken by her mentors before her.
Catalyst,
dances by emily johnson
Company Profile
ABOUT
CATALYST, DANCES BY EMILY JOHNSON Catalyst,
dances by emily Johnson has performed regularly since 1998 with
support from the Minnesota State Arts Board and Jerome Foundation.
The six member company works to examine physical and emotional
extremes, taking a fierce and emphatic look at the most pervasive
and often unnerving realities of everyday life.
Matt
Jenson's New & Slightly Used Dance
Company / Choreographer
/ Artistic Director / Founder Profile
ABOUT
MATT JENSON'S NEW AND SLIGHTLY USED DANCE Matt Jenson (artistic director of New and Slightly
Used Dance) has presented work many places locally including
MN Dance Alliance Studio 6A, the Red Eye Theater, the Walker
Art Center and the Southern Theater and in New York at Dance
Theatre Workshop's "Fresh Tracks Series", HERE and
in Dance Space's "In the Company of Men" Series. Recent
projects have included two collaborations: "The Road to
Compostela" with early music ensemble The Rose Ensemble
and "Travel Home" with visual artist Diane Katsiaficas
and students from the Dance Program and Visual Arts Department
at the University of Minnesota. Matt has served as choreographer
for four main-stage productions at the Children's Theater. His
work has been supported by the McKnight Foundation, the MN State
Arts Board and the Jerome Foundation. Matt is currently on the
faculty of the University of Minnesota Dance Program and the
Children's Theater Company. Since 1999, Matt has performed with
Sturat Pimsler Dance & Theater.
Dance Profile"
"BURY ME LONESOME" is a new sextet set to the dizzying finger-pickin'
and melancholy musings of Bluegrass music. The dancers' journey
through the musical highs and lows with gently angular movement,
wicked text, fast footwork and unadorned moments of stillness
suggest an attempt to interact with a loved one who suffers from
manic depression
Deborah
Jinza Thayer
Dancer / Choreographer
Profile"
DEBORAH JINZA THAYER
Deborah Jinza Thayer has
been performing and choreographing in multidisciplinary work
for over ten years in New York City, Washington DC metro region,
and Minneapolis. A native New Yorker, she graduated from John
Hopkins University and received an MFA in Dance from George Mason
University in Fairfax, Virginia. Since relocating to Minneapolis
in 1997, she has been presenting her Movement Architecture which
constructs imagery by blending dance and theater in strutured
enviorments. She has twice been a semi-finalist for France's
Renocntres choreographies internationales de Seine-Sait-Denis
(Bagnolet). She currently teaches technique and composition at
Zenon Dance Company and School in Minneapolis.
Uri
Sands
Dance Profile
'WORK XIII'
Work XIII is an excerpt from
a piece entitled "Brothers and Keepers". Whether we
realize it or not, we are intimately and untimately related through
existence. Whether our relations are good or indifferent we are
connected as "brothers or what I refer to in fishing terms
as a friend, a "Keeper".
Choreographer Profile
'URI SANDS'
Uri Sands is currently a principal
dancer and choreographer with the North Carolina Dance Theatre
in Charlotte, NC. He has also been a principal dancer and resident
choreographer with the Minnesota Dance Theatre in Minneapolis,
MN. He continues to choreograph and appear as a guest artist
with "Complexions" under the direction of Dwight Roden
and Desmond Richardson. He was a principal dancer with the Alvin
Ailey American Dance Theatre for five years. As a principal dancer
with that company his repertoire included works by Alvin Ailey,
Talley Beatty, Donald McKayle, Ulysess Dove, John Butler, George
Faison, and Judith Jamison among others. He previously danced
for two years with Philadanco in Philadelphia, and with Miami's
Fredrick Bratcher Contemporary Dance Theater. In addition to
several film and television credits, Uri has taught dance and
performed extensively throughout the United States and Europe.
Penelope
Freeh
Dancer / Choreographer Profile
PENNY
FREEH
Penny has lived in the twin
cities since 1994 when she relocated from New York City to join
the James Sewell Ballet where she continues to dance. Her choreography
has been presented by James Sewell Ballet, Ballet Builders (NYC),
and Danny Buraczeski at the Illusion Theater. She has received
commissions from the MN Orchestra and 3 Legged Race's Blizzards
2001 & 2002. Her newest work will be performed by the James
Sewell Ballet for their Spring Season.
Dancer Profile
CHRISTINE
MAGINNIS
TBA
The
Dancer's Studio