Modern times: Salt Lake City's Repertory Dance Theatre has created a living museum of classic 20th century choreography.When the Rockefeller Foundation Rockefeller Foundation, philanthropic institution established (1913) by John D. Rockefeller, Sr., to promote "the well-being of mankind throughout the world." During its first 14 years the foundation received $183 million from Rockefeller. approached Linda C. Smith about the possibility of establishing a modern dance company in Salt Lake City, she was stunned. The idea of Rockefeller seed money underwriting a salaried professional repertory ensemble seemed unbelievable. But it was the '60s. Definitions were crumbling, artists were heaving out the old assumptions, and arts funding in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. was entering its most imaginative and expansive period. In 1966 the Rockefeller's philanthropic gamble launched the Repertory Dance Theatre, now celebrating its 40th anniversary as an anchor component of the Salt Lake City arts community. Prompted by the influential Utah modern dance educator Virginia Tanner Born April 25th, 1915 in Salt Lake City, Utah, Virginia Tanner began her formal dance training at the University of Utah. She studied with Doris Humphrey in New York City before returning to Salt Lake City in the early 1940s to establish her school for creative dance for children. , the Rockefeller Foundation envisioned a small company that would function leaderless, an "artistic democracy" performing revivals of landmark dances as well as new works. Repertory--in the sense long accepted for opera and symphonic music--has been a difficult concept for modern dance. Companies lived uncertainly from year to year, fed by the creative energies and personal charisma of their leaders, and convinced that to be "modern" meant dispensing with the past. By the mid-'60s only one major company, Alvin Alley American Dance Theater The German Tanztheater ("dance theatre") grew out of German expressionist dance. Its most influential performers are Pina Bausch and Susanne Linke. , regularly showed the work of several choreographers, but like its peers Ailey's identity in the world bore the imprint of its artistic director. Given the highly individual, choreographer-centric nature of the field, it took an outside agency to create a different model. Repertory Dance Theatre was conceived as a permanent company committed not to any single artist's dreams but to modern dance as a whole. A collective enterprise with no particular stylistic territory to protect or promote, RDT RDT 1. Renal dialysis treatment 2. Retinal damage threshold set out to explore what a living archive might look like. Within three years the eight-dancer company had taken on challenges as diverse as Jose Limon's formal Vivaldi Concerto Grosso concerto grosso: see concerto. concerto grosso Principal orchestral music of the Baroque era, characterized by contrast between a small group of soloists and a larger orchestra. , Anna Sokolow's angst-ridden Steps of Silence, and the lush lyricism lyr·i·cism n. 1. a. The character or quality of subjectivity and sensuality of expression, especially in the arts. b. The quality or state of being melodious; melodiousness. 2. of Nocturne nocturne (nŏk`tûrn) [Fr.,=night piece], in music, romantic instrumental piece, free in form and usually reflective or languid in character. John Field wrote the first nocturnes, influencing Chopin in the writing of his 19 nocturnes for piano. by Donald McKayle Donald McKayle (born July 6, 1930, New York City) is a modern dance and Broadway choreographer, director, and performer who has worked with many choreographers such as Martha Graham, Alvin Ailey, Anna Sokolow, and Merce Cunningham. . At a time hen freelancing was almost unknown in modern dance, early commissions to E" Geoffrey Holder, Glen Tetley, and John Butler established RDT as a working instrument for choreographers without companies of their own. In addition, RDT set out to encourage local choreographic talent, especially from within its own ranks. The company began life as artists in residence in a converted World War II army barracks bar·rack 1 tr.v. bar·racked, bar·rack·ing, bar·racks To house (soldiers, for example) in quarters. n. 1. A building or group of buildings used to house military personnel. on the campus of The University of Utah The University of Utah (also The U or the U of U or the UU), located in Salt Lake City, is the flagship public research university in the state of Utah, and one of 10 institutions that make up the Utah System of Higher Education. . The university contributed in-kind support, and its dance department trained many of the original dancers, but RDT was to remain artistically autonomous. While the company worked out its game plan, the Rockefeller money was gradually phased out, as intended. For the first decade, RDT functioned as a collective, building a repertory and a reputation both locally and more broadly as a participant in the National Endowment for the Arts National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) Independent agency of the U.S. government that supports the creation, dissemination, and performance of the arts. It was created by the U.S. Dance Touring Program. In 1972 they began giving six-week summer sessions that attracted 150-200 students and brought in vital revenue. Teaching was also an important source of income for the dancers as their initial 52-week contract gradually stabilized at between 30 and 35 weeks. While the company was housed at the U. of Utah--parallel but not attached to the dance department-on-campus teaching activities were necessarily limited. Today most RDT dancers teach part-time at area colleges and universities or in the company's own school. Smith describes RDT's classes in modern, ballet, jazz, hip hop, flamenco, African, and ballroom as a service to the community rather than training for dance professionals. Linda Smith and Kay Clark were elected as artistic coordinators in 1977, and the leadership passed to Smith after Kay Clark moved to California in 1983. By then the company had acquired works by most of the pioneers. They had produced a survey evening, "Then: The Early Years of Modern Dance" and collected enough Doris Humphrey dances to fill a program. Later surveys and "American Masters" programs extended from the early years of American concert dance to Merce Cunningham and postmodern pioneer Yvonne Rainer. Company dancers like Tim Wengerd and Bill Evans made new works, along with contemporary choreographers Lar Lubovitch and Jennifer Muller, and postmoderns Douglas Dunn and Viola Farber. The '70s ended and the dance boom decelerated, along with ambitious schemes for new theaters. RDT began a search for a new home that continued for the next 20 years. Determined to leave their barracks at The U. of Utah, they looked at unsuitable buildings and pursued one doomed plan after another. In 1985 the university announced plans for a new dance building, without space for the company. Looking to strengthen their campaign for an off-campus home, in 1989 RDT spearheaded the formation of a consortium of area groups, the Performing Arts Coalition, to find a location, plan, fund-raise fund·raise or fund-raise also fund raise intr.v. fund·raised, fund·rais·ing, fund·rais·es To engage in fundraising. Verb 1. , and ultimately realize a building. When the U.U. barracks were finally demolished in 1992, the company moved into the first of a series of temporary spaces downtown. Anticipating the 2002 Olympics, the city was revitalizing its downtown area, with arts facilities as a major component. In 1993 Salt Lake County purchased an industrial site, the Restaurant Equipment and Supply Company, to develop the PAC project. The proponents launched a major drive to raise what eventually amounted to over $15 million for a new building. Early in the process, they gained a superb benefactor in Izzi Wagner, a local businessman who had actually been born on the RESCO RESCO Rural Electric Supply Co-Operative Society Ltd (India) site, who'd lived and built a recycling business there, and who endowed the future performing arts center A performing arts center, often abbreviated PAC, is a multi-use performance space that can be adapted for use by various types of the performing arts, including dance, music and theatre. as a memorial to his mother, Rose Wagner, and to his dancer wife, Jeanne, and his sister Leona. The Rose Wagner Performing Arts Center grew in two phases. The first, opened in 1997, houses RDT's offices and studios, the Leona Wagner Black Box Theater For the theater in Oslo, Norway, see Black Box Teater. The black box theater is a relatively recent innovation, consisting of a simple, somewhat unadorned performance space, usually a large square room with black walls and a flat floor. , and a smaller space now used for experimental theater productions. In 2001 Phase II was completed, with more office and studio spaces and the beautiful 500-seat Jeanne Wagner mainstage surrounded by a sweeping, windowed Win´dowed a. 1. Having windows or openings. lobby and gallery spaces. The entire building is owned and administered by Salt Lake County. RDT, Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company is an American contemporary dance company based in Salt Lake City, Utah. Founded in 1964 by University of Utah dance instructors Joan Woodbury and Shirley Ririe the company is dedicated to furthering contemporary dance by creating and performing , and the Gina Bachauer Piano Competition are regular residents, with other community groups and private functions renting spaces when the schedule allows. RDT's 40th anniversary season kicked off in September with "Touchstone," a program that could be a microcosm of its eclectic mission over the years. Acknowledging its kinship to Virginia Tanner--Linda Smith and several other company members started their dance life in Tanner's Children's Dance Theatre--the company revived the 1978 showcase Together, with sections choreographed by former RDT dancer Tina Misaka Mary Ann Lee (now the director of CDT CDT abbr. Central Daylight Time CDT Central Daylight Time CDT n abbr (US) (= Central Daylight Time) → hora de verano del centro; (BRIT ), Linda Smith, and Kay Clark. Almost 50 CDT children from tots to teenagers joined the company dancers in a celebration of multigenerational mul·ti·gen·er·a·tion·al adj. Of or relating to several generations: multigenerational family traditions. musicality. Veteran RDT choreographer-designer Marina Harris contributed a lyrical solo for dancer Lynn Listing, and Todd Allen, now dancing and choreographing 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 , represented all RDT alumni dancers with his own introspective in·tro·spect intr.v. in·tro·spect·ed, in·tro·spect·ing, in·tro·spects To engage in introspection. [Latin intr solo Lend Me Your Hot Licks. Allen also took one of the adult male roles in Together, having learned every move from the wings as a boy. Initiated into Virginia Tanner's classes at the age of 3, he went onstage a year later and hasn't exited yet. Allen says he thinks of Virginia Tanner as his artistic grandmother and his exposure to choreographers of many persuasions during his six years with RDT as excellent preparation for the variety of dance opportunities he finds in New York. Laura Dean's late-minimalist Sky Light (1982) was acquired by the company in 1991. Its propulsive geometric patterns and high-intensity stepping, spinning teamwork have made it a great favorite with RDT audiences. RDT first commissioned New York choreographer Zvi Gotheiner in 1993, and since then they've forged a productive relationship yielding half a dozen works. For the 40th, Gotheiner made Bricks, a dance-theater piece that evoked the company's own struggle to build a home and a working collaborative. The dance was a process. Three overlapping layers of activity played out over its 40-minute life span. People worked at constructing rudimentary walls and doorways out of plastic blocks. One or two at a time they danced their personal dramas. And in the background, like some necessary, taken-for-granted engine, they performed a series of closely-woven group dances that seemed to have the capacity to continue evolving indefinitely. The piece suggested not only the RDT story but today's news of shelter, home, territoriality Territoriality Behavior patterns in which an animal actively defends a space or some other resource. One major advantage of territoriality is that it gives the territory holder exclusive access to the defended resource, which is generally associated with , hope, despair, and refuge. When someone accidentally knocked over the biggest wall during the second performance, the metaphor became poignantly real as the dancers struggled to repair and rebuild while they finished the rest of the dance. New metaphors arose: New Orleans, September 11th, and the effortful journey to the Rose Building itself. On Sunday after the final performance, the company left on a two-week tour of Idaho and Montana. A few days later I asked Linda Smith on the phone what she saw as RDT's next big challenge. Security, she said, sustaining the company by strengthening the opportunities for individuals and maintaining ties with the community. Smith hopes to commission more works based on real world themes, like the landscape and history of the West. Most of all, she thinks about keeping the dancers working with the company even after they stop performing, "so we don't lose this marvelous institutional memory and everything we've learned." Marcia B. Siegel visited Salt Lake City in September to give talks and a writing workshop at RDT. Her relationship with the company began in 1979, when she authored the script for the program, "Then: The Early Years of Modern Dance." Siegel's new book, Howling Near Heaven--Twyla Tharp and the Reinvention of Modern Dance, will be published by St. Martin's Press next month. |
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