The buzz on Broadway: Explore Dance! hits Broadway. (Summer Study Guide 2003).It's a summer afternoon, and fifty-five girls from around the country are gathered onstage at 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 City's Fiorello H. LaGuardia
Fiorello Henry LaGuardia (born Fiorello Enrico LaGuardia; December 11, 1882 – September 20, 1947) (often spelled La Guardia High School of Music & Art and Performing Arts, the school that inspired the movie Fame. They're learning one of the dance numbers from the current Broadway revival of Oklahoma! choreographed by Tony Award-winner Susan Stroman. Their teacher, and Stroman's assistant, is Lisa Shriver shrive v. shrove or shrived, shriv·en or shrived, shriv·ing, shrives v.tr. 1. To hear the confession of and give absolution to (a penitent). 2. , a lively young woman who throws in showbiz buzzwords Below is a list of common buzzwords which form part of the business jargon of Corporate work environments. General Conversation
For five days during the summer, or four days in February, Curtain Call Explore Dance! Learning Camp for Dancers brings dancers ages 10-18 and their parent or teacher chaperones (required for those under 14) to New York City New York City: see New York, city. New York City City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S. for a multilayered mul·ti·lay·ered adj. Consisting of or involving several individual layers or levels. experience of dance. Tonight, the girls have tickets to Oklahoma!, not only to see the musical but to watch how the Broadway dancers perform the steps the dancers are now learning. After the show, the girls go backstage and meet the cast, which gives the young dancers exposure to professionals at work. Presented by Curtain Call Costumes, hosted by LaGuardia High School on Manhattan's Upper West Side, and now in its third year in New York City, the program includes technique classes in ballet, tap, jazz, Broadway dance, Pilates, and stretch. It also includes a choreography workshop that introduces basic Laban notation; tickets to shows; tours of dance schools such as 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. ; chats with dance professionals; workshops on music-video production and preparing for auditions; and seminars on dance history and college planning. Remarkably, there is also time built into the program for the students to see the sights of New York. Designed by Susan Epstein, a dancer, choreographer cho·re·o·graph v. cho·re·o·graphed, cho·re·o·graph·ing, cho·re·o·graphs v.tr. 1. To create the choreography of: choreograph a ballet. 2. , and teacher at her own studio, Explore Dance! was conceived as an educational part of Curtain Call's Dance Club for young dancers. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Epstein, Explore Dance! is for inquisitive in·quis·i·tive adj. 1. Inclined to investigate; eager for knowledge. 2. Unduly curious and inquiring. See Synonyms at curious. dancers who are interested in delving into a complete dance experience, from studio to stage. "You don't need to aspire to aspire to verb aim for, desire, pursue, hope for, long for, crave, seek out, wish for, dream about, yearn for, hunger for, hanker after, be eager for, set your heart on, set your sights on, be ambitious for dance as your career. It's not talent based," she explains, noting that no auditions are required. She continues, "It's not about how well you dance. It's more about your innate interest in dance." For Curtain Call it also means educating future teachers and audience members. Epstein designed Explore Dance! to highlight aspects of the art that young dancers might not have considered. In the Oklahoma! pre-performance workshop, for example, learning a dance number from the current show is only part of the drill. Before they begin moving, the dancers are first introduced to the legacy of Agnes de Mille Noun 1. Agnes de Mille - United States dancer and choreographer who introduced formal dance to a wide audience (1905-1993) Agnes George de Mille, de Mille , who choreographed the original 1943 Broadway production. The girls learn about de Mille's life from Patricia Harrington Delaney, an assistant professor of dance at Southern Methodist University Southern Methodist University, at Dallas, Tex.; United Methodist; coeducational; chartered 1911. The school's facilities include laboratories for electron microscopy and stable isotopes, a museum of paleontology, and a graduate research center. , and watch a video of de Mille's Oklahoma! choreography in order to compare it to Stroman's version. Comparing the two treatments, says Delaney, "helps them see how the idea of what choreography is has changed over time. That was a very innocent time--you didn't need as much razzle-dazzle to entertain people." Epstein believes in the need to include dance history in the program because, she says, it's neglected in most dancers' education. "I grew up in the dance world, and I didn't learn anything about dance history until I was a freshman in college," she explains. "Yet I danced from the time I was 3.... Music students learn their history as they learn their music, but dancers don't--and I wanted to do something about that," she says. Seeing Oklahoma! after the workshop brings the impact of the dance home to the girls, according to Epstein, and for Brantlee Ann Stalworth, 12, a dancer from Alabama, the impact was visceral. "We were all sitting in our chairs, doing it with them," she says. "It was cool!" Meeting the cast after the show also made a big impression on the girls, who asked questions ranging from "How old are you?" to "When did you know that you wanted to do this with your life?" The next night the girls met the cast of Thoroughly Modern Millie. To Jackie Balls, a dance-studio owner from the Cayman Islands Cayman Islands (kā`mən), British dependency (2005 est. pop. 44,300), 100 sq mi (259 sq km), comprising three islands in the West Indies. who came with six of her dancers and two of their mothers, this post-show encounter was a highlight. It "was really lovely," she explains, because the girls "were actually able to talk to the casts of these musicals, and hear firsthand from them what their struggle was like; what it was like to audition, to actually land a job, and be there." To round out the view of a dancer's life, Explore Dance! participants also get a nuts-and-bolts session from dance pros on planning for college and possible dance careers. "You learn what it's like to be a professional dancer, and you can see what's available to you in your future," says Jacki Coutu, 13, a dancer from Massachusetts. Parents and other chaperones are welcome to attend workshops as well as join the girls at the theater. The multi-faceted program that Epstein calls a total package, includes hotel accommodations, some group meals, and guided tours of New York's sights for parents. "It was five days, but it felt like a month because it was packed so full," says Balls. "It was very informative, especially for us, coming from a small island." Epstein hopes that "what you come away with is a better understanding of what dance can be in your life, and that it doesn't have to be your career to be important to you .... Or, it can be your career!" Explore Dance! programs soon will be offered in London and Paris. Andrea Menotti is a New York-based dance writer whose work has appeared in DANCE MAGAZINE and The Village Voice. |
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