Dance

676 results
Page 46
Bond, Krodman in 'Colony': Just two colors, plus lipstick.

Dance at the Fringe: Something missing

Looking for dance in all the wrong places

This year's Philadelphia Live Arts/Fringe Festival offered a great deal of movement but precious little in the way of genuine dance. A loss of funding was the culprit.
Merilyn Jackson

Merilyn Jackson

Articles 7 minute read
Poe: Inspired by stewardesses and drum majorettes.

Jumatatu Poe's "Private Places' at Live Arts Festival

What we can learn from airline stewardesses

Jumatatu Poe's provocative if uneven Private Places ultimately delivers a prescient message: that dehumanizing, societal and capitalist controls on our lives contain the seeds of their own disintegration.
Jonathan M. Stein

Jonathan M. Stein

Articles 4 minute read
If 150 Philadelphians can dance together...

Sylvain Émard's Grand Continental at Live Arts Festival

What Barack and Mitt could learn from the Fringe

In Le Grand Continental, ordinary citizens achieved the impossible. Is there a lesson here for local and national governments?

Kelly George

Articles 1 minute read
Don't overlook the <i>mise-en-sc&egrave;ne</i>.

How to write a dance review

So you want to be a dance critic?

The New York Times Book Review's recent male-dominated issue on “How-To” books provoked an anguished plea for more “How-To” pieces by women. As a long-standing member of the shrinking society of professional American critics, I offer my modest contribution to the cause of gender balance.
Merilyn Jackson

Merilyn Jackson

Articles 3 minute read
Keegan: Not so easy, and a little dangerous.

BalletX Summer Series: Farewell, Anitra

Sophisticated fun

BalletX did it again, assembling a program rich in musical choices, burnished by exceptionally challenging choreography that kept dancers and audience alike on edge.

Janet Anderson

Articles 3 minute read
Zion Hill Church: If these walls could talk— and now they do.

Commotion Festival: The city as a work of art

The city you thought you knew

What James Joyce did for Dublin, Commotion Festival is doing for three emerging Philadelphia neighborhoods— that is, savoring the poetry in the lives of ordinary urban people and places.
AJ Sabatini

AJ Sabatini

Articles 6 minute read
'Barber Violin Concerto': All too obvious. (Photo: Alexander Iziliaev.)

Pennsylvania Ballet plays it safe

Pennsylvania Ballet's quandary: Daring dancers, cautious programs

The Pennsylvania Ballet could be an international sensation instead of a regional stalwart if it didn't play it so safe.
Merilyn Jackson

Merilyn Jackson

Articles 5 minute read
Yogev, Fadeley: Next year, a program for kids?

Pennsylvania Ballet's "Peter Pan' (2nd review)

Peter, we hardly knew ye

Pennsylvania Ballet's Peter Pan was sumptuous and entertaining. But unlike The Nutcracker, it probably left most kids clueless about its original enchanting characters and story.

Janet Anderson

Articles 3 minute read
None dare call her 'middle-aged.'

"Montage Ó Trois': Jeanne Ruddy's farewell

Jeanne Ruddy closes a chapter

In a dozen years as a wonderful part of Philadelphia's dance community, Jeanne Ruddy and her company found drama, tragedy and comedy not in theater or mythology but in everyday life. Her farewell was a beautiful blend of dance and artwork.

Janet Anderson

Articles 4 minute read
Alexander Peters as Pan (below) and Evelyn Kocak as Wendy: All this and aerial dancing too.

Pennsylvania Ballet's "Peter Pan' (1st review)

When ballet dancers fly: Neverland on Broad Street

Thanks to the spirited Pennsylvania Ballet premiere of this 2002 work by Trey McIntyre, Philadelphians now have the makings of a new children's classic that can become a recurring treat in the repertory.
Jonathan M. Stein

Jonathan M. Stein

Articles 4 minute read