Floriana Frassetto: Decades Of Dance

Floriana FrassettoFloriana Frassetto was born in 1950 to Italian emigrants in the States (Norfolk, Virginia). She studied at Alessandro Fersen’s Theatre Academia in Rome from 1967 to 1969 and completed her training as actress attending a comprehensive course (mime, acrobatics, dance) at Roy Bosier’s Teatro Studio.

Having worked in Rome in several pantomime and theatre productions, the idea of founding MUMMENSCHANZ resulted from meeting Andres Bossard and Bernie Schürch: two young Swiss clowns called Before and Lost in 1972.

Floriana has since co-invented the repertoire of MUMMENSCHANZ and played in each performance. The creation of costumes, the choreography of Giancarlo Sbragia “Faust” played in the Roman amphitheatre of Taormina (Sicily), the staging of some MUMMENSCHANZ scenes for André Heller’s musical Body and Soul, the artistic collaboration with Isabelle Baudet for the children musical Oliver Twist in Lausanne (Switzerland) all rank among her greatest individual achievements.

When did you begin performing, where and why?

As a very shy child I loved to express myself through movement, clown and mime: my inner world. I started performing when I was 17 in Rome, Italy.

What were your early years of performing like?

As a youngster I was full of dreams, criticism against part of the society which I did not agree with. I was, of course, a ’68 flower child. I performed in schools, in warehouses and in the streets of Rome.

With whom and where did you train?

I trained with Alexandro Fersen, a private acting school in Rome and with Roy Bosier, a Swiss Mime in Rome.

What is a typical day like now?

Doing some office work and maintaining the materials, the masks, the costumes, the shapes. Occasionally creating a new sketch.

How do you maintain your technique?

If there is the occasion I would love to [take class]. I keep on top of my technique by training.

What’s the best part about performing?

The interaction with the audience.

What would you say was your greatest achievement to date?

Having co-created more than a 100 sketches in 40 years and wakened that innocent child which is the same all over the world.

Which part of dance do you enjoy most?

I am not really a dancer but I love when dancers truly dance with passion and a baggage full of technique

What’s next for you?

To study and to sacrifice until they achieve and find their own language.

Boris Eifman: Russia’s Gem

Boris EifmanRenowned choreographer, and Artistic Director of Eifman Ballet for over 37 years, Boris Eifman talks about his latest work shown at London’s Coliseum…

Mr Eifman, how did it all begin?

Dancing first began in my mother’s tummy when I began making my first moves! I always new I should be a dancer – I went to dance school and always felt an urge to express myself through dance. You cannot be taught to become a choreographer, you have to be born one.

So where did your choreographic career begin?

I went through general education and professional education later on followed by a dance academy – I felt this was necessary in order to communicate with the world on a professional level. During my ballet school years I started to choreograph and with growing experience there was the realisation that I was a professional choreographer.

What do you like most about choreography?

Choreography is a very individual thing but for me I find it extraordinary to be able to share emotions with an audience that you experience on a personal level. To influence the way they feel is a unique feeling for me.

What would you say was your greatest achievement to date?

I have actively directed my company for 37 years: my greatest achievement is the opportunity for my company to remain one of the most creative and unique companies, one which continues to develop.

What are your upcoming pieces about?

Anna Karenina is the story of a woman captivated by lust and passion; it is the emotional struggle which is depicted in the performance rather than rebelling the story, showing what she went through.

Rodin is a performance about culture and the famous lover Camille, the passion of her relationships. It looks at the creative process and the emotions within this, and the relationship between two people.

Do you have a connection to these pieces? What inspired you to create?

I can personally relate to Rodon as I understand it on an individual level, about the artistic struggle, the emotional processes of a career, life and love life, and thousands more can relate to this too. Rodin is a huge success all over the world and I feel privileged to show it in London.

What’s next for you?

It is lovely to dedicate myself to a bit of everything! I want to continue choreographing, develop my company and a new generation of artistic elites and work on the Dance Palace. I’m planning to open a new theatre in St Petersburg called the Dance Palace: it will be unique. There will be three companies and centuries of Russian ballet – the nineteenth century, my own company and a new company of the twenty-first century which will be particularly quintessential and avant-garde.

Ieva Kuniskis: contemporary culture

Ieva KuniskisIeva Kuniskis is an emerging choreographer from Lithuania currently living and working in London. She makes physical theatre work that draws on her heritage, theatre and the folklore tradition of storytelling. She makes dance for stage, film and sited performance. A double bill of her work is at Blue Elephant Theatre 7-9 May.

When did you begin dancing, where and why?

I am originally from Vilnius in Lithuania, so my first taste of dance was there. One summer (I was about 16), I made a friend who’s sister taught contemporary dance and was immediately intrigued – prior to that I had been going to a yearly contemporary dance festival (The New Baltic Dance), but never considered it for myself. I went along that autumn and it all made perfect sense in my head and for my body, I felt that I found the right place for myself.

What were your early years of dancing like?

Before taking up contemporary classes I didn’t really dance, so my early years dancing looked like this: a few moths of Lithuanian folk dance and a month doing ballroom (from where I was kicked out for chatting – I was 6!)

I did more theatre; a company my dad knew needed a child for a role in Moomins and they cast me as one of the little twins who spoke a made up language. I was less than 10 years old and got to spend a whole season with a professional theatre company!

But movement was never completely alien to me – my dad was involved with mime and theatre, taught Tai Chi, so generally I was still somewhat physical, though not taking the typical route into dance.

How long have you been choreographing?

I started choreographing at university. I got there already sensing that this is where my interests lie. I graduated just over 3 years ago and went straight into making work.

Where did you study and what was a typical day like?

I went to Middlesex University in North London. For at least the first term I remember standing in the corner of the studio waiting for my turn to do a travelling sequence and looking around with this heady feeling ‘Am I actually doing this?!’. It took me a whole year to get used to the thought that this is my life now. (I worked in photography for several years before making the switch to dance).

The course is part academic (I did BA in Dance Studies), so sometimes there was only one technique class a day to make room for library time; we had the option to join other classes in our year and the years below, so by the final year you could really fill up your schedule. And during the summer or half term I’d go to the professional classes at The Place or GDA to keep the momentum going.

Our campus was inside the beautiful Trent Park with a lake, wildlife and hordes of hikers, so sometimes we’d rehearse or do class outside on the grass. We were the final year before the campus closed; by the end all the other courses had already moved and it was just us, so we lived in our pretty little dance bubble.

What is a typical day like now?

The only typical thing now is that my week is completely unpredictable from one day to the next. I might do a morning class followed by an admin afternoon of writing projects, applications or generally catching up on emails (there is a lot more computer time involved in being a choreographer than I ever anticipated!); one day I’ll be working out some material in the studio, at the Southbank or in my kitchen, then going to see a show somewhere. The next – it’s meetings with potential collaborators followed by 6 hours of rehearsals, followed by an exhausted collapse into bed.

I also work as a photographer’s assistant, so when it’s quiet with dance projects I can spend a lot of the time in a photo studio or on location. That can be quite deflating, so I recently resolved to take at least one class per week to remind myself how much I love dance.

Do you still take classes?

After graduating I didn’t do any technique, just Contact Improvisation and Gaga – I was a bit fed up with the structured ‘face the mirror, do as I say’ dancing. But after a year I began to miss the brain and body training that comes with working out somebody else’s material and figuring out how to apply it to your own body.

I had an injury last summer, so I didn’t take class for a while. But I am back and trying to take one regularly – for training, for motivation, to remind myself how much I love it, for creative inspiration and the social aspect of it, too. I just returned from a week-long Gaga Intensive in Belgium, so am feeling refreshed and inspired.

Do you prefer choreographing to performing?

Yes, definitely choreographing. Although sometimes I miss performing, too. I do maybe one performing project a year or have to take over in one of my own pieces.

If I take on a performance project I try to find one that gives me an opportunity to learn something new in the creating process; that’s what I love most about making dance, whether as performer or choreographer – the time in the studio.

What’s the best part about choreographing your own work for yourself?

I love working in the studio with other people. I love the ‘making’ time – bringing an idea, unpeeling the layers; seeing how suddenly (and it always seems to catch me by surprise!) an idea becomes a movement phrase, then moulds into a whole section – a trace of something you know is unique and special. It’s the rush of those moments that I love; maybe it’s a kind of adrenaline rush?

What would you say was your greatest achievement to date?

I think just the decision to stick with dance is a pretty big achievement! Everything I do feels like small gradual steps towards making my career into something that keeps me stimulated and last into old age. Some of these steps are very considered and strategic, others feel completely accidental.

On reflection I can name some things as achievements; for example, the fact that my first piece Gone To Get Milk was invited to perform in Austria and Lithuania (at that same prestigious New Baltic Dance festival I used to go to for my dance fix). Having the first solo run in May – a double bill evening of my own work – must be an achievement in the official books, but I can’t tell yet. I think it’s too early in my career to talk about achievements.

Which part of dance do you enjoy most?

This is a difficult question; there is no one part. I can answer which part I enjoy the least; it’s being glued to my computer doing admin, writing project plans, trying to verbalise ideas – it feels isolating and keeps me away from the studio (although I understand that in the long run it is part of the preparation that gets me into the studio and closer to the sustainable career I want).

I like the people I get to meet and work with – they are passionate and inspiring. There is also a sense of shared understanding and respect there, nobody will dismiss you. I once got an email from a choreographer whom I never met before; she had recently seen my work. She has been working in dance longer than I and invited me for a drink, just to chat and offer to share her experiences and advice. It’s really comforting to feel this sort of support! I think it’s quite unique within any professional industry, but I see a lot of it in contemporary dance. We are a peculiar type.

What advice would you give to someone aspiring to be part of the dance industry?

You have to really, really love it (neurotically, obsessively!) and keep trying to re-find that love whenever you feel fed up with being penniless or feel like friends with ‘normal’ jobs are moving ahead with their lives while you’re still serving drinks in a pub.

Take class, it gets you into the pool of like-minded people, who are just as mad as you for choosing this career – apart from training it’s reassuring and inspiring, it is also great for networking. Stop thinking about taking class or seeing a performance as a luxury, it’s part of your continuous development, like keeping your practicing license up to date.

Make a schedule, know that you will do a class every Wednesday and see a performance or an exhibition, or a play once a month. Having a routine is good – you have something to look forward to and work towards, and you can plan around it. This is something I am still trying to implement in my life, talking with friends it seems that routine is hard to master for creative heads.

What’s next for you?

I am going into rehearsals for Gone To Get Milk and Women’s Tales, that’s a double bill evening running 7-9 May at the Blue Elephant Theatre; then, a few days off to spend with my dad, who timed his visit so that he can see the show.

I am working on a really exciting collaboration with a violinist Abe McWilliams exploring and re-imagining Lithuanian folk music. There are also seeds being planted for a really interesting male duet, which I am getting really excited about.
And in my dreams – a full length piece for 2015.

Oh, and I am seeing Eva Recacha’s Easy Rider next week – that’s my once-a-month thing for April.

Choosing An Audition Piece

Dance AuditionsAuditions are a huge part of any dancers life: some dancers revel in auditions with the chance to perform in a more informal environment, others speak of auditions with dread and worry. Whatever your view of auditions, there are a few key points to help you along the way, especially when preparing your dance piece for the big day.

When selecting the pieces you will perform at an audition, you must ensure that you are well prepared. Check dance audition guidelines as there may be specific points to consider. The guidelines will be provided by the production, company or school you are auditioning for, and may make the difference between a cut and a part. Another essential part of auditions is the ability to follow instructions!

If you are not sure about any part of the upcoming audition, seek the advice of the dance teacher who is currently educating you. Your dance teacher will be able to give you guidance based on your genre and your audition, with help in areas such as content, preparation and presentation. They may also help you prepare extra choreography for your audition, just in case you are required to present more pieces.

The piece you select to present should then be well rehearsed so you can perform it well, whilst remaining relaxed and expressive that enables you to dance to your best ability. Choose something that reflects your personality and ability, with music and movement that engage and interests.

Take copies of everything you need to the audition, such as any sheet music, recorded music, attire, dance shoes or simple costume/prop pieces you may need for your pieces as well as for an additional piece if requested.

Good luck!

Holasz Choreography and The Charcoal Movement

Treacle HolaszAfter a successful premiere at The Place’s Resolution! festival, Holasz Choreography is set to launch the next installment of its piece for Resolution!, Yfronts – a contemporary lap dance as a collaboration with The Charcoal Movement on Friday 7 March at The Etcetera Theatre in London.

As a choreographic movement taking its first steps, founder Treacle Holasz has already made her mark on the contemporary dance map, presenting her work to much acclaim earlier in February. For March at The Etcetera Theatre the format is due to be much the same as at The Place: a playful duet involving feminism, politics and a fair bit of larking about!

Audiences can enjoy a live set design created by The Charcoal Movement and there may even be the chance to get your hands mucky and join in as well! The set will then become the home to Holasz Choreography’s Yfronts, accompanied by live music and washed down with a beverage or two!

For those interested there is also an open dance workshop available. Places are limited but it is is fantastic opportunity to get up close to the action and learn a little more about how Holasz went about creating her Yfronts. There is a special combination booking price of just £12 for both the performance and workshop, or £6 for just the workshop.

The workshop will be led by Charlie Ford, Georges Hann and Treacle Holasz, the team behind Holasz Choreography, offering the opportunity to learn repertoire from Yfronts and explore some of the creative tasks that created it. Some dance experience is required and places are very limited so booking well in advance is recommended.

Don your Yfronts, you are in for a real treat!

August Bournonville

August BournonvilleIconic classical ballet productions such as Swan Lake, La Sylphide, Giselle, and The Sleeping Beauty are all the work of one choreographer: August Bournonville. It is arguable that La Sylphide is perhaps the most internationally famous representative of classical Danish ballet, created by Bournonville and paying homage to the distinct Danish style of classical ballet. The style was prolific, having engendered the ‘Bournonville school’ or ‘Bournonville ballet’.

Bournonville was born in Copenhagen, Denmark, in 1805. He went on to dance with the famed Marie Taglioni and became a soloist with the Royal Danish Ballet, eventually serving as its balletmaster. He remained there until the end of his life, in 1879, having made 50 ballets for the company in the unique style he created from his studies in the Italian, French, and Danish schools.

Bournonville movement is characterised by the use of petit allegro (fast, intricate footwork with small jumps) rather than by big, virtuoso lifts or grand allegro. Bournonville believed that dancing should be understated, graceful, and light, epitomised by the lowered eyes of the Bournonville dancer, giving the overall appearance of graciousness. The dancer must be directly on top of the music, meaning there is very little rhythmic freedom to speed up or slow down movement. Despite this, Bournonville ballets remain expressive.

Today the Bournonville style is surrounded by the sky-high extensions and dazzling turns and jumps of other choreographic styles however the beauty and difficulty of the dances must not be underestimated. Bournonville’s ballets continue to be performed throughout the world and the Royal Danish Ballet upholds the Bournonville style as one of its proudest traditions. The style encompasses both high technical demands and an infectious celebration of life.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Muddles of Memorising Movement

Memorising MovementPicking up choreography in class or rehearsal can be an arduous task. If, as a dance student, it is something that you struggle with, it can be frustrating and inhibiting to observe peers grasping the movement while you are still worrying about the first eight counts. The movement can have the utmost simplicity, the counts can be clear and you can be familiar with the music, however putting the movements together and remembering them in that order can be a feat.

A term which can be used to describe the process of quickly picking up choreography is ‘sight-reading’; quickly observing the movement once and repeating it with precision and attention to detail. The act – or skill – of sight-reading is hugely important to dancers, and can be developed over time for both class and rehearsal, and then performance. It can be used in any dance discipline and generally improves with time. The longer you take classes, the easier it becomes to read and remember movement.

Choreography does not have to be out of reach. An app available – Dance Journal – can be used to take note of what is learnt during each class, adding images and video to make the process of remembering a more pleasant process. Entries can be sorted by teacher, date or dance discipline, the the entry can even be shared with others within the app.

Video can also be used to record the movement sequences or combinations to play back time and again outside of class and rehearsal. This amount of repetitions may not be practical or available in the studio, so working on the movement in your own time can be extremely beneficial in memorising what is required.

Taking class regularly with the same teacher can also improve the sight-reading skill as you are becoming more familiar with the movement they use, meaning your ability to pick up their movements should improve. This sense of mastery adds confidence to your ability and in turn improves the memorising process in future.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.

Hofesh Shechter, the next Brighton Festival Director

Hofesh ShechterIconic choreographer Hofesh Shechter has been named as the individual to guest direct Brighton Festival 2014. Running from 3 May to 25 May, the Brighton Festival is an annual mixed arts event that takes place across the city. Whilst full programme details will be announced on 25 February 2014, it is already knowledge that the festival will open with Shechter’s contemporary dance company’s new production, Sun.

Sun has been co-commissioned by Brighton Festival and runs from May 3 at the festival, marking the end of the production’s world tour. Shechter, who is also a composer and musician, is one of the most important choreographers of the twenty-first century, creating many innovative works for his dance company. This is in addition to that for the U.Dance youth company as part of Youth Dance England’s U.Dance 2012 festival at the Southbank Centre last year. Meanwhile, Sun features 14 dancers and a soundtrack composed by Shechter himself, embodying the piece entirely.

The Hofesh Shechter Company was named the first resident company of Brighton Dome and Brighton Festival in 2008, so it is now fitting that 2014 will see Shechter direct the festival. Since 2008 his dance company has been commissioned by Brighton Festival to create works including Shechter’s cornerstone piece Political Mother. Shechter has expressed his fondness of the seaside town as a place where one can develop and grow artistically as an important thing.

The Brighton Dome and Brighton Festival is renowned for having an inspiring, energising and encouraging arts quality, something with Shechter has valued over the last five years. After such a successful time as part of the festival in the past, it seems a natural progression for Shechter to work closer with the festival as a director.

Barak Marshall: A Philosophical View Of Dance

Photo Courtesy of Barak MarshallBarak Marshall is a choreographer incredibly sure of his message. From studying at Harvard, to his first choreographed work, to his upcoming commission for Rambert dance company, Barak has an innate sense of communication, both through dance and in conversation. Self-taught, Barak is a choreographic phenomenon, fuelled by humans and the expanse of description in dance.

When did you begin dancing and why?

Umbilical whiplash!

My mother, Margalit Oved, is a very famous choreographer and a dancer. She was born in the British Protectorate of Aden and after immigrating to Israel she became the prima ballerina of the Inbal Dance Theatre where she danced for 15 years touring the world including performances at Drury Lane and on Broadway. In 1964 she met my father in Los Angeles while filming a movie there. They married and she moved to LA where she taught dance at UCLA and founded her own very successful dance company.

I spent my childhood touring the US with her dance company on a broken down red school bus with 10 hippie dancers and a lot of homemade cheese. In the summers we would return to Israel where my mother would perform guest roles with Inbal. My sister and I slept more on studio and theatre floors than in our own beds. When my mother was not performing my parents went to every dance, theatre and music performance they could.

So, dance was the last thing that I wanted to do. I went to college and in 1993 I graduated from Harvard where I studied Social Theory and Philosophy and planned on going back to law school.

But, in 1994, my mother was appointed Artistic Director of Inbal and my father asked me to help her settle in. Shortly after we arrived, my Aunt Leah – who was a second mother to me – unexpectedly died. I was overwhelmed with grief and every day after sitting Shiva with my family (the Jewish tradition of observing seven days of mourning) I would return to the studio and lock the door. I was afraid that my memories of my aunt would fade so I tried to consciously remember every detail I could so that I would never forget her: her stories, words of wisdom, the way she laughed, cried, cursed, cleaned the floor, cooked, blessed me and sang.

I didn’t know this at the time but one of my mother’s dancers was secretly watching me from a balcony above the studio. At the end of Shiva, she surprised me in the studio and said that she wanted to show me some movement. She showed it me, I told her that it was beautiful and she said, “This is your movement. You should build a piece in memory of your aunt.” So I created and danced in my first work, Aunt Leah, which was a ritual remembrance of her life, her wisdom and her kindness filled with Adenite blessings, sayings, gestures and music.

That’s how I began to dance.

What were your early years of dancing and training like? What was a typical day like?

To this day I still have never taken a dance class. Because I first started in dance as a choreographer I focused on developing my own movement language. I follow a few rules: I create all of the movement on my own body, I try to create more movement than I actually need for the work, I try never to repeat myself and not to allow other choreographers’ movement sneak in.

How long have you been choreographing? Did you start young?

I created my first work in 1995 when I was 27. After running my own company for four years, Ohad Naharin appointed me house choreographer for the Batsheva Dance Company. However, in 2000 I severely broke my leg. The injury was so bad that I couldn’t walk without pain for 2 years. I had to stop dancing completely and moved back home to Los Angeles to recuperate. I thought I would never go back to dance but in 2008, the Suzanne Dellal Centre in Tel Aviv invited me back to Israel and commissioned me to create Monger, my first work in eight years. And I have continued to choreograph since then.

What is a typical day like now?

Even when I do not have a commission to work on I try to spend at least 2-3 hours every day researching ideas and images for future works. I read as much fiction and plays as possible. I struggle through books on theatrical theory and practice, and I scour the internet for plays and dance performances. Of course, I try and drag myself into the studio every day to dance. I’m not always successful.

Do you still take classes? How do you keep on top of your technique?

I think that at this point dance class might get in the way. I create dance theatre – not dance. I am not as interested in the aesthetics of movement. I am interested in the content of movement – not it’s form. Most techniques emphasise form so when I am in the studio I focus on developing and expanding my movement vocabulary. I guess the best way to describe it is trying to create a sign language for the whole body.

How do you begin your choreographic processes?

Before I was a dancer I was a singer and a musician. I’ve studied and performed music all of my life. I think that is the reason that I cannot see a work before I hear it. I really believe the dance begins with music.

So while I do begin a work with a vague idea or fragment of a story that I want to tell, I can only move forward when I hear it. My first task is to find the music that inspires the dance that tells the story. In creating the soundtrack of each piece I usually listen to around 10,000 tracks of music to find the 15-20 pieces of music that eventually make up the final score. That’s not as crazy as it sounds – most of the time I only listen to the first few seconds of a song. If it resonates physically, evokes an emotion or image or relates to a scene or idea that I want to investigate, I will save it to listen to at a later time.

My process involves collecting as many images, stories, ideas, songs, gestures and movements and little by little an image might resonate with a story, piece of music or a movement and create the beginning of a section. Slowly a storyboard emerges and I play with the various parts until a narrative arc emerges.

What inspires you?

People and their struggles inspire me. I’m an optimistic cynic and I see life as a constant struggle against forces – both external and internal – that seek to deprive you of your own free will and strength. All of my works deal with that. Aunt Leah was a piece about an overly kind woman who gave so much to others that she had nothing left for herself. The Land of Sad Oranges was about the danger of sanctifying a land or anything as holy. Emma Goldman’s Wedding dealt with a visionary woman’s fight against a stratified and misogynistic society. Monger is an upstairs/downstairs story about 10 servants controlled by a cruel mistress. Rooster is about a man so afraid of life that he can only realize his dreams by falling asleep. Harry deals with a man who defies the gods, Wonderland is a story about the dead. The work that I have created for Rambert, The Castaways, is a story of 12 deeply flawed individuals manipulated by an unseen master puppeteer.

In reading back over this list I realize that it all sounds quite dark. But I don’t believe in darkness. I believe my works are hopeful and humorous which I believe are the antidote to these forces.

What’s the best part of choreographing?

I love dance theatre because it tells a story, just like a play, film or novel does. I try to tell simple stories, not literal ones, and I am always conscious of it. I am quite jealous of theatre directors because they begin with a text that they can abstract upon.

I try and create the entire text or movement of the work before I get into the studio with the dancers. For me each movement is a word and these form a sentence or text that the dancer is speaking.

This is what I love most about choreographing: searching for the gesture or phrase that expresses the emotion, word or subtext that I want the dancer to speak physically.

What advice would you give to someone aspiring to a career in contemporary dance or choreography?

Be sober.

With rare exceptions I don’t believe that there is such a thing as a career in dance or choreography. Dancers’ careers are extremely short – most spend more of their lives training than they do dancing. Most choreographers are constantly battling to get enough jobs to survive. I know that I am doing better than most choreographers but there isn’t day that goes by when I am worried about paying the bills and consider changing careers.

Don’t get me wrong – I love dance and I love what I do. However, I believe that the dance world suffers from a collective self-delusion. Much of our system of dance education perpetuates a myth: that there is a huge career awaiting you. I have taught dancers throughout the world and time and time again I see a criminal failure to prepare dancers for the harsh economic reality that awaits them, and that’s if they are lucky enough to find a job. And I have seen too many wonderful dancers fall off the deep end when their careers come to an end.

Dancers and choreographers are also complicit in this—we cannot allow our love of dance to blind us to reality.

Again, I love dance, but I think it is time we started to have a serious discussion.

For dancers, my best advice is to understand that unfortunately much of the system and culture of dance focuses on telling you what you are doing wrong. Don’t buy this. You are humans not robots and that humanity is what can make dance so beautiful. And don’t ever allow a choreographer to force you to work through pain.

For choreographers my advice is not to get caught up in the drama (this isn’t easy because the dance world seems to be the last place of work where acting out is still seen as acceptable). We’re creating dance – not finding a cure for cancer – and the worst thing for a creative process is an environment where you cannot play, make mistakes or be vulnerable. You also should work harder than you think possible, create as much as possible and don’t over-idolise your idols. We all have choreographers whom we consider genius, are amazed by their creativity and aspire to be like them. But Emerson said it best: “Imitation is suicide.”

When I first started out my mother gave me some great advice. She said:

 

  1. Don’t care what other’s think—this kills creativity.
  2. Silence the critics inside your head.
  3. If you work, you will find, if you don’t work, you won’t find.
  4. Great artists don’t measure themselves by others, they are inspired by them.
  5. Fail.

For me growing as choreographer is all about trial and error, and more error.

Overall, what is the best part about dance for you?

I cannot think of an art form that more perfectly reflects the beauty and pain of the human condition.

What are you most looking forward to in choreographing for Rambert?

The dancers. They have a level of intelligence, talent and hunger that is rare. Beyond that I have not seen a company that is as ethnically diverse. They bring humanity to the stage and make my work better than it is.

Alvin Ailey: A Keynote Figure In American Modern Dance

Portrait of Alvin Ailey (1955)Alvin Ailey is widely regarded as one of the keynote figures in American modern dance, having established the stature of his Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater throughout the world. Ailey was born on 5 January 1931 in Texas, with his experiences of life in the rural South later inspiring some of the most memorable parts of his most popular and critically acclaimed work Revelations, through what he called ‘blood memories’: the blues, spirituals and gospel.

Ailey’s formal dance training began with an introduction to Lester Horton’s classes. Horton was the founder of one of the first racially-integrated dance companies in the United States and became Ailey’s mentor. After Horton’s death in 1953, Ailey directed Lester Horton Dance Theater and then began to choreograph his own works. In the 1950s and 60s, Ailey performed in four Broadway shows and went on to study dance with Martha Graham, Doris Humphrey, Charles Weidman and Hanya Holm, some of the huge powerhouses of American modern dance.

1958 saw Ailey found Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater to carry out his vision of a company dedicated to enriching the American modern dance heritage and preserving the uniqueness of the African-American cultural experience. He established the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center (now The Ailey School) in 1969 and formed the Alvin Ailey Repertory Ensemble (now Ailey II) in 1974. Ailey was a pioneer of programmes promoting arts in education to multi-racial American culture until he died on 1 December 1989.

The Ailey company has performed for an estimated 23 million people at theatres in 48 states and 71 countries on six continents, celebrating the uniqueness of the African-American cultural experience and preserving American modern dance. The company continues Ailey’s mission by presenting particular works of the 79 from Ailey’s past and commissioning new ones: in all, more than 200 works by over 80 choreographers are part of the Ailey company’s repertory. Before his death, Ailey designated Judith Jamison as his successor, and over the next 21 years, she brought the Company to unprecedented success. In July 2011, Jamison passed this great responsibility to Robert Battle as Artistic Director.

Image courtesy of Wikimedia Commons.