2008 Dance Magazine awards.Each year Dance Magazine gives awards to leading members of the dance field. Each awardee chooses the person from whom they Would like to receive the award. This year, on December 8 at New York's Florence Gould Hall, Harvey Lichtenstein Harvey Lichtenstein (born 1929) is a retired American dancer and arts administrator, best known for his 32-year tenure (1967-99) as executive director of the Brooklyn Academy of Music. will present the award to Pina Bausch Philippine "Pina" Bausch (born July 27, 1940 in Solingen, Germany) is a modern dance choreographer and a leading influence in the development of the Tanztheater style of dance. ; Damian Woetzel Damian Woetzel (born May 17, 1967) is the senior male principal dancer for the New York City Ballet. In 2007, he earned a Master of Public Administration degree at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government. will introduce Ethan Stiefel Ethan Stiefel (born 1973 in Tyrone, Pennsylvania) is a principal dancer with American Ballet Theatre (ABT) .[1] Biography An only son of a Lutheran minister who became a prison warden in New York, Stiefel began ballet training in Madison, Wisconsin at age eight. ; Judith Jamison will honor Sylvia Waters; and Deborah Jowitt Deborah Jowitt is an American dance critic, author, and choreographer. Her career in dance began as a performer and choreographer. Beginning in 1967, she has written a weekly dance column for the Village Voice, providing frequent reviews of dance performances in New York City. will speak about Lawrence Rhodes. In addition, each awardee will be feted with a brief performance or film. For ticket information, turn to page 43. And if you want to see video clips from last year's event, see www.dancemagazine.com. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Pina Bausch Pina Bausch is a diminutive, soft-spoken woman, as if to balance the monumental landscapes she creates onstage. Trained in German Expressionist ex·pres·sion·ism n. A movement in the arts during the early part of the 20th century that emphasized subjective expression of the artist's inner experiences. ex·pres Ausdruckstanz, she pioneered the form of Tanztheater in the 1970s and went on to create more than 40 utterly amazing evening-length pieces for Tanztheater Wuppertal Pina Bausch. She juxtaposes visceral dancing with witty vignettes, human suffer ing with giddy playfulness. Her work has had profound reverberations throughout the art world. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Born in Germany in 1940, Bausch studied under Kurt Jooss Kurt Jooss (12 January 1901, Wasseralfingen, Germany – 22 May 1979, Heilbronn, West Germany) was a German modern dancer and choreographer mixing classical ballet with theatre; he is also widely regarded as the founder of Dance Theatre or Tanztheater. at Essen's Folkwang School, a rare post-World War II link to Ausdruckstanz. At 19, she received a scholarship to the Juilliard School Juilliard School Internationally renowned school of the performing arts in New York, New York, U.S. It has its roots in the Institute of Musical Art (founded 1905) and a graduate school (1924) founded through an endowment from the financier Augustus D. , where her teachers included Jose Limon, Antony Tudor Noun 1. Antony Tudor - United States dancer and choreographer (born in England) (1909-1987) Tudor , Alfredo Corvino, and Louis Horst Louis Horst, born Jan. 12, 1884, Kansas City, Mo., U.S. died Jan. 23, 1964, New York City. U.S., composer and pianist, was the musical director for the Denishawn company (1916 to 1925) before working as musical director and dance composition teacher for Martha Grahams school and . She briefly performed with Paul Taylor
It's a mark of Bausch's imaginative power that her performances initially generated shock waves. True to her multidisciplinary Folkwang roots, she combines dance with spoken text, song, and massive, stunning sets--a stage blanketed in peat (The Rite of Spring, 1975) or featuring life-sized redwood trunks (Nur Du, 1996). (The distinctive look of a Bausch production was originally forged with her partner, stage designer Rolf Borzik, who died in 1980; since then, she's worked with Peter Pabst.) Her dance-as-spectacle aesthetic sparked controversy, as did the sexual violence of her early pieces, in which alienated men seemed able to connect to women (wearing signature evening gowns and stiletto heels) only through acts of cruelty. Yet her passionate fans applauded the work's courage, visual genius, and life force. For choreographer Yolande Snaith, who caught the first London appearance by Bausch's company as a student, "What I saw happening onstage--the whole creative process that was displayed--gave me a new sense of purpose." Other dance artists influenced by Bausch include Belgium's Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker (born 1960 in Mechelen, Belgium, grew up in Wemmel) studied from 1978 to 1980 at MUDRA in Brussels, the school linked to La Monnaie and to Maurice Béjart's Ballet of the XXth Century. In 1981, she attended the Tisch School of the Arts in New York. and Britain's Lloyd Newson, and she's attracted devotees such as theater-opera director Robert Wilson and filmmaker Pedro Almodovar, who featured segments of her dances in Talk to Her. Beginning in the 1990s, a gentler Bausch has focused on "travelogues," beguiling sagas inspired by countries in which her company has done long residencies. Often playful, the travelogues--including the India-based Bamboo Blues (2007), coming to Brooklyn Academy of Music Brooklyn Academy of Music, performing arts center located in the borough of Brooklyn, N.Y. and popularly known as BAM. Founded in 1859 and opened in 1861, it is the oldest such institution still in operation in the United States. in December--feature her very individual dancers in solos they've developed in response to prompts like "Don't let yourself be stopped." It's a far stretch from the bleak brutality of Cafe Muller (1978) to the whimsical camera-pointing Japanese tourist in Ten Chi (2004). Bausch discussed the shift in a rare interview, given last March in San Diego, where she participated in the Kyoto Laureate Symposium. "Now, since the world has so much violence in everything, I feel shy to do something like that on the stage," she said. "So many people are full of fear, I feel like we need more strength and to believe that maybe it can be better ... to not give up." --Janice Steinberg [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Ethan Stiefel Kickboxing his way across the stage in Rabbit and Rogue, Twyla Tharp's latest piece for American Ballet Theatre American Ballet Theatre, one of the foremost international dance companies of the 20th cent. It was founded in 1937 as the Mordkin Ballet and reorganized as the Ballet Theatre in 1940 under the direction of Lucia Chase and Rich Pleasant. , Ethan Stiefel gives each move a cocky charm. His casual intensity--as though he'd walked onstage to find himself in a ballet and decided to dive in lets him take an everyday gesture like shaking a fist and make it leap out of the darkness. Nearly 20 years of performing--he joined the corps of New York City Ballet New York City Ballet, one of the foremost American dance companies of the 20th cent. It was founded by Lincoln Kirstein and George Balanchine as the Ballet Society in 1946. in 1989 at 16--have not leeched away Stiefel's enthusiasm, energy, or the limber grace with which he tackles a role. For a generation of American male dancers, he has been an icon, not only as a principal at ABT ABT About ABT Abteilung (German: Department) ABT Abbott Laboratories (stock symbol) ABT American Ballet Theatre ABT Associação Brasileira de Telemarketing ABT Abort ABT Availability Based Tariff but as the star of the cult ballet movie Center Stage, and then as the glamorous lynchpin lynch·pin n. Variant of linchpin. lynchpin Noun same as linchpin Noun 1. of Kings of the Dance, an international touring company of some of ballet's biggest male names. With his Harley-Davidson motorcycle, his pride in his Wisconsin roots, and his ballerina girlfriend Gillian Murphy, Stiefel at 35 seems the epitome of American cool, a regular guy who strolled into the spotlight and just started turning. Yet that air of offhanded off·hand adv. Without preparation or forethought; extemporaneously. adj. also off·hand·ed Performed or expressed without preparation or forethought. See Synonyms at extemporaneous. accomplishment belies years of training, from early days at Milwaukee Ballet School with Ted Kivitt and Paul Sutherland to further study at Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet, ABT's short-lived School of Classical Ballet, and the School of American Ballet The School of American Ballet is located in New York City, in Lincoln Center. It is considered one of the most prestigious and notable ballet schools in the United States and teaches some of the most talented young dancers in the country. . It also glosses over the four knee surgeries that sidelined him for nearly two years. "That was a time of reflection for me," he says, "of coming to terms with what it would mean if I didn't get back onstage. While I haven't had to water down any steps, I feel I have a new freedom now when I dance." As someone who venerates the classical tradition, Stiefel has placed dance education ever higher on his list of priorities. First he directed a popular summer intensive, Stiefel & Students on Martha's Vineyard, then sponsored a full scholarship at ABT's JKO JKO Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis JKO Joint Knowledge Online School for an American boy. Most recently he was named the incoming dean of the North Carolina School of the Arts The North Carolina School of the Arts is a well known arts conservatory in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. It was the first state-supported, residential school of its kind in the nation. dance department. He believes passionately in training American dancers in a solid foundation free of mannerisms. "We need to be progressive and relevant to the times we live in," he says. "At the same time, we need to maintain the tradition, the etiquette, of the classical." [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] That could just as easily sum up the range of Stiefel's own technique. While he cites his debut as Albrecht in Giselle in 1998 as one of the performances that meant most to him, Stiefel has been indelibly associated with works by choreographers like Lar Lubovitch and Twyla Tharp. Both have made roles on him at ABT. "Ethan is a dancer extraordinaire ex·tra·or·di·naire adj. Extraordinary: a jazz singer extraordinaire. [French, from Old French, from Latin extra ," says Tharp. "He is a real artist who hits his groove and is unbeatable." Nowhere does this seem more evident than in the final moments of Tharp's In the Upper Room as Philip Glass' score hammers to its climax and the dancers fling themselves over and over across the stage. When Stiefel performs it, a wild energy seems to possess him. "To translate it into Wisconsin terms, at the end it's all Vince Lombardi," says Stiefel, referring to the legendary Green Bay Packers football coach. "It's about leaving the field knowing, whatever's happened, that you've put it all out there 100 percent. That piece is one of the hardest physically to get through and by the finale, it's simply about willpower. I owe that to the audience, I owe that to my colleagues, I owe that to myself, and I owe that to the art form." --Hanna Rubin [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Sylvia Waters Once, while on tour, Alvin Ailey noticed a young company member gazing wistfully out of the bus window. "She must be thinking about her son," he said to himself. And Sylvia Waters was. It was 1974, and preparations were underway for Ailey Celebrates Ellington. While the company and its artistic director were on the road, someone was needed to rehearse the young dancers back in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of . Ailey tapped Waters for the job. Necessity and motherhood began the fruitful partnership, as that young group became Ailey II with Waters as their director. So the story goes. Sylvia Waters grew up in Harlem. At 13, she followed her best friend to the New Dance Group on a whim to take class with Carmen Carmen throws over lover for another. [Fr. Lit.: Carmen; Fr. Opera: Bizet, Carmen, Westerman, 189–190] See : Faithlessness Carmen the cards repeatedly spell her death. [Fr. deLavallade and Alvin Ailey. She later attended Juilliard, studying with Martha Graham and Antony Tudor. After a stint in Europe, where she danced with Donald McKayle and Maurice Bejart, she returned to NYC NYC abbr. New York City NYC New York City in 1968 and joined Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater is a modern dance company based in New York, New York. It was founded in 1958 by choreographer and dancer Alvin Ailey. It is made up of 30 dancers as well as artistic director Judith Jamison and associate artistic director Masazumi Chaya. . "When I first saw her onstage I thought she was oddly gorgeous and had so much integrity," says Judith Jamison, artistic director of AAADT AAADT Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater . Integrity is just one of the qualities that describe her; honesty (in word and action) and passion (for life, knowledge, and dance) are others. It's no wonder Ailey entrusted the chrysalis chrysalis (krĭs`əlĭs): see pupa. of young dancers to her. For years this woman, whose youthfulness matches her wisdom, kept his intimate council; she now acts as the bridge between school and company. Since 1974 Waters has been preserving Ailey's legacy by instilling his spirit in the youth of Ailey II. Currently the company often stages 12 works up to 42 weeks a year and has performed throughout the United States and internationally in Havana, Berlin, and the Caribbean Islands. "Sylvia had the ability to listen to Alvin and just take it all in," says Jamison. "When you see a dancer who was coached by her, you can see Sylvia coming through. She has retained the essence of it. Embedded in her is the sense of Alvin." Rachael McLaren is one of the most recent progeny to be accepted into the first company. While in Ailey II she did many of Waters' roles. "When she shows you, there is a clear intention in the movement. But she wants you to find it on your own. She taught me that I'm never done, that there is always something to explore." Overwhelmed upon receiving her contract with AAADT, McLaren realized, "I have been prepared." And not merely as a dancer but as a person. "Sylvia makes life lessons out of rehearsals," says McLaren. "It's not just about being a dancer, but who you are, who you want to be." Waters chooses repertory with an eye to the growth of each group. Ulysses Dove and Donald Byrd have set work on the company as have up-and-comers Shen Wei, Christopher Huggins, and Camille A. Brown. The cultivation of choreographers was a central part of Ailey's vision. This spring Waters gave apprentice Chang Yong Sung the opportunity to choreograph a duet for their 2008 Joyce season. Sung, now a full member of Ailey II, says, "Her mind is a museum, a repository for information, a steel trap lined in velvet." Currently 85 percent of the present Ailey company has come through Ailey II. Others have gone on to work with the likes of Ronald K. Brown/Evidence, Alonzo King's LINES Ballet, David Parsons, Elisa Monte, and Complexions Contemporary Ballet Complexions Contemporary Ballet celebrates excellence in dance, provokes thought and inspires impassioned performance with the finest dancers in a full range of disciplines. . Some have segued into Broadway shows like The Lion King and The Little Mermaid. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] And just what does this elegant, energetic woman say of propagating some of the world's finest dancers? Her dimples emerge, and as she modestly grins, you can almost see the 13-year old girl Alvin Ailey taught years ago. "Well you know," she replies, "dance has kept me in good company." Indeed it has. --Theresa Ruth Howard [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] Lawrence Rhodes There are celebrities in the dance world. And then there are those who peacefully go about their careers, spreading their inspiration and influence in profound and pervasive ways. Such is the case with Lawrence Rhodes, who moved audiences deeply as a dancer and who now, as artistic director of the Juilliard Dance Division, shepherds dance students to their peak potential. Rhodes' singular qualities as a dancer are vividly recalled by anyone who saw him perform: his ease of movement that was both masculine and sensitive; a dramatic expressiveness that came from a search for the truth behind the movement; and a bold charisma that pierced the theater's fourth wall. His career peaked at a time when male dancing in America was entering a golden age, and his unsplashy, sophisticated virtuosity provided a model for many young dancers. As a teacher, he has taken all the elements above into the studio. In doing so, he guides his students to become fully rounded dancers capable of mastering a wide range of choreography, from the most classical to the most contemporary. Lawrence Rhodes began his training with Violette Armand in Detroit and took his first job with the Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo Ballet company formed in Monte Carlo in 1932. The name derived from Sergey Diaghilev's Ballets Russes, which dissolved after his death in 1929. Under René Blum and Col. W. . In 1960, he joined the Joffrey Ballet, creating lead roles in ballets by Gerald Arpino and Brian Macdonald, while mastering the Bournonville style so impeccably that he almost seemed to speak Danish. In 1964, he joined the Harkness Ballet and made his mark as a true American star dancing works like After Eden by John Butler, Grand Pas Espagnol by Benjamin Harkarvy, and Monument for a Dead Boy by Rudi van Dantzig Rudi van Dantzig (Amsterdam, August 4 1933), is a Dutch choreographer, ballet dancer and writer. Since 1965 he is co-artistic leader of Het Nationale Ballet (Amsterdam, The Netherlands). . From 1968 to 1970 Rhodes directed the Harkness Ballet. After the disbanding of the Harkness troupe, he became a principal dancer with the Dutch National Ballet Dutch National Ballet was formed in 1961 when the Amsterdams Ballet and the Nederlands Ballet merged. The company has been directed by Sonia Gaskell (1961-1969), Rudi van Dantzig (1969-1991), Wayne Eagling (1991-2003) and is currently directed by Ted Brandsen. . In his six years as a principal dancer with the Pennsylvania Ballet, he danced memorable roles in the classics and in ballets by Tudor, Lim6n, and Balanchine. He also performed as a principal dancer with the Eliot Feld Ballet and was a favorite partner of the legendary Carla Fracci. In 1981, Rhodes took over the chair of NYU's dance department, where he restructured the program into a more cohesive curriculum. In 1989, he accepted the directorship of Les Grand Ballets Canadiens in Montreal. During his decade-long tenure in Canada, he brought in innovative repertoire by choreographers like William Forsythe, Jirf Kylian, Ohad Naharin, Nacho Duato, and Mark Morris. After the untimely death of Benjamin Harkarvy, the artistic director of the Juilliard Dance Division, Rhodes was offered the position in 2002. In building on the foundation that Harkarvy established, Rhodes has created a gold standard for university level dance departments. The Juilliard Dance Ensemble rivals many of the top professional dance troupes in its excellence. As a dancer in the 20th century, Rhodes was ahead of his time, intelligently combining ballet and contemporary movement in a 21st-century manner. Today, he embodies that wisdom as he teaches and guides Juilliard's students in their technique and artistry.--Joseph Carman Car´man n. 1. A man whose employment is to drive, or to convey goods in, a car or car. |
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