Dance
676 results
Page 55

Dancing for his life in Rwanda
Rwanda's dancing orphans— the sequel: One boy who fell through the cracks
Eighteen months ago I had the rare privilege of teaching dance to a unique group of orphans victimized by the 1994 genocide in Rwanda. When I returned last month I discovered that the sponsoring group has folded, the safe house is gone, and these kids are back on the streets of Kigali. The solution to their problem is costly by African standards— and piddling by ours.

Articles
4 minute read

Alex Ketley: A choreographer's failure
The itinerant choreographer: What seeds does he plant?
The itinerant choreographer Alex Ketley rolled into town, created something beautiful, and then swept it away into dust. What community does his art create?

Articles
4 minute read

Pennsylvania Ballet's "The Nutcracker'
Once more into the land of Candy Canes and Dew Drops
Anyone can stage a Nutcracker performance. But only the Pennsylvania Ballet and two other companies are authorized to perform the Balanchine version. It's still the ideal antidote for the darkest weeks of the year.
Articles
5 minute read

BalletX Fall Series: Three premieres
A mixed bag from BalletX
Of the three premieres offered by BalletX, Alex Ketley's mesmerizing Silt spoke volumes about the human condition. Meredith Rainey's tedious They Break felt like a walk through a museum; and Matthew Neenan's lighthearted Last of the Year left the audience laughing.
Articles
5 minute read

Philadanco's 40th anniversary
A night of happy heinies
Philadanco's 40th anniversary show made for a night of happy heinies”“ one of creation's cutest assets. Three of the four works on the program featured swaying, vibrating and bumpin' butts. Even the company's 77-year-old matriarch, Joan Myers Brown, gave her shapely rear a shake.

Articles
4 minute read

"Fraulein Maria' by Doug Elkins (3rd review)
How do you solve a problem like the Nazis? (Well, you could try ignoring them)
With Fräulein Maria, choreographer Doug Elkins purports to radically deconstruct The Sound of Music. But how radical is it, really?

Articles
3 minute read

"Fraulein Maria' by Doug Elkins (2nd review)
A hip-hop Sound of Music
Fraulein Maria is more than a terrific dance presentation; it's great theater as well. Choreographer Doug Elkins has achieved something truly unique by combining an iconic old musical with today's street movement and pure sass.
Articles
4 minute read

"Fraulein Maria' by Doug Elkins (1st review)
How do you solve a problem like Maria? Or: Why didn't the nuns think of this?
When is a parody better than the original? When it's choreographer Doug Elkins spoofing The Sound of Music. His Fraulein Maria lets the movements of his gay, Asian and male Marias speak for itself.

Articles
2 minute read

Martha Clarke's "Garden of Earthly Delights'
One hour with Hieronymus Bosch
Last winter's revival of Martha Clarke's dance theater masterwork, Garden of Earthly Delights, freely adapted from Hieronymus Bosch's Renaissance triptych, was a work of astonishing beauty and rare erotic candor in its revival production, the first in more than 20 years.

Articles
5 minute read

"Thank You, Gregory' at Annenberg (2nd review)
In the steps of their forebears
Tap is a uniquely American dance form with black, Irish and street improvisation roots. But if you think tap dancing is a quaint relic from the past, think again. Thank You, Gregory, a fine piece of theater as well as an homage to tap dancing, literally wowed its audience.
Articles
5 minute read