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Showing posts from 2012

New Place, Same Season, & Three New Projects

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Photo by Solsticesoul Photography As I welcome the month of December this year, I find myself in a completely new place. Yes, geographically I am in St. Louis instead of Connecticut, but it is more than that. Usually, December means preparing for Nutcracker performances and a variety of holiday performance events. For the first time in 17 years, I have nothing to do with the infamous holiday production or any of its derivatives. There are no nuts to crack this year for me. As much stress and drama it brings, the holidays don’t feel quite the same without it. So, instead of ramping up to a series of performances, I am winding down to the end of my first semester at Webster University. The semester has gone well and I am enjoying my students and colleagues immensely. I feel blessed. But, I sense the impending full month off between semesters (what will I do with myself?!) and my mind is bristling with creative projects for the Spring. I have three creative projects planned a

Absolutely Everything You Need To Know About St. Louis

I have officially been living in St. Louis for two months as of last Sunday. While I have much left to learn about this city and its unique culture, I am not going to let a lack of information, experience, and time prevent me from making some snap judgments about my new home town. After all, if making brash, uninformed generalizations and providing personal opinions as if they are scientific fact are good enough for our national politicians, then they are good enough for me. Thumbs Down 1) Provel Cheese First, I have to tell you about Provel. Prov-what? you say. Provel. It is this processed cheese substance made from cheddar, swiss, and provolone that is all the rage in St. Louis, but nowhere else. Why hasn’t this trend caught on in other regions? Why hasn’t it spread throughout the country? Because, it is awful. It is one of those terrible culinary idiosyncrasies that you can only love because you grew up with it. 2) Help Yourself Shrimp Bar The grocery store down

Times They Are A . . .

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Change is definitely in the air. At least for my family and me. This summer has been a whirlwind time of transition. Recently, Jakobi graduated from High School; Melissa, Jakobi and I relocated over a thousand miles away to St. Louis; I started teaching at Webster University; and Melissa started grad school at Fontbonne University. On Tuesday, Jakobi will begin a “gap year” that includes traveling to Europe and (possibly) Asia with his friend Sean. I am excited for him. I believe the trip will be the most eye (and mind) opening experience for him. Working and traveling  in other countries, seeing other worlds and lifestyles, changed my worldview in ways that I now value greatly. He is an “old soul” and I am confident he will garner so much from his gap year. So, while it frightens the hell out of me to imagine him on his own, I think it is an incredible opportunity and I am proud of his initiative. When his adventure is over, he will join Melissa and me in St.  Louis. Although

CelloPointe Concert March 30, 2012

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The CelloPointe concert went well; I am truly pleased with Dona and Morgan’s performance. As for the choreography, there are moments that intrigue me and others that I don’t like. Of course, this is typical. The creative process is, if anything, a process of revision. A piece is only finished when one stops working on it. And, sharing that aspect of dance-making here in this blog is part of my commitment to be open about the process. From my perspective, the successful aspects of the dance were (1) a handful of images I found intriguingly beautiful and (2) the flow of the phrasing. I am not going to point out the specific images I found intriguing here because I would like to get feedback (which I am going to ask for below) and I don’t want to influence authentic responses. What I will share right now, are some issues that I am struggling with in the dance. Below is an excerpt of the dance that includes the pas de deux (Bach Sarabande). Prior to the duet, there is a short solo (Gavot

Premiere of Courtly Dances from Gloriana April 14, 2012

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Last night was the premiere of a collaborative work between the Ridgefield Symphony Orchestra , the Ridgefield Guild of Artists , and the Ridgefield Conservatory of Dance . The event went beautifully and it was interesting to see these organizations working together, especially from the point of view of the Dance Paradigms . A strongly conventional, classical-minded audience supports the Ridgefield Symphony Orchestra. The current artists-in-residence at the Ridgefield Guild of Artists, sculptor Justin Perlman and performance artist Adelka Polak , are contemporary artists. My students from the Ridgefield Conservatory of Dance have a strong classical foundation in ballet balanced with experience in modern and contemporary dance, including exposure to contemporary composition and improvisation. I guess the biggest question for me going into this project was whether the gap between the symphony’s classical paradigm and the artists’ contemporary paradigm would be difficult to bridge.

CelloPointe Rehearsal Day 3

I have been so silent on here recently--sorry. I promise that will end soon. I have been preoccupied with a variety of projects/events:  performance and residency at Scotland Elementary School,  rehearsals for a performance with the Ridgefield Symphony Orchestra ,  performances of the Ridgefield Rhythm Tap Ensemble,  being on a committee for Advancing Creative Thinking: Imagination to Innovation , students preparing their own choreography for Draw On! at the Aldrich Contemporary Arts Museum , and a whole lot of traveling.  Coming up this weekend is a premiere of a new work I created with Morgan Stinnett and Dona Wiley of Connecticut Ballet . I shared the first rehearsal in the last post …here is a clip from the third rehearsal . This Friday, the new work will debut in CelloPointe   and features choreography by Deborah Wingert , Emery Lecrone , Michele Gargan, and myself. If you are local and enjoy live music and dancing, please join us on Friday March 30 for the concert. Hope to

CelloPointe Rehearsal Day 1

Today I began rehearsals for a new piece to be premiered in a concert on March 30th. The concert, “CelloPointe”, fuses contemporary ballet and all live cello performances. There is an impressive roster of choreographers, musicians, and dancers on board and I am excited to be involved. My contribution is an original work set on Dona Wiley and Morgan Stinnett—both from the Connecticut Ballet . Dona was a student of mine and I set pieces on her last year for the concert "String Theory." This was my first time meeting Morgan. It turns out that he is from Akron, OH—small world after all. He studied with Nan Klinger, took a class from my ballet teacher Inna Stabrova, and was even in a piece my dear friend Bill Hastings set on the Cuyahoga Valley Youth Ballet. I try to avoid gross generalizations, but Morgan supports the one about Midwesterners being easy to get along with. Both Dona and Morgan are really generous and humble young artists and I really appreciate that. We began g