More CDF News

The Chicago Dancing Festival (CDF) is getting some great press this week!

First, a piece in the August issue of Dance Magazine in the Dance Matters section by the über-talented Zac Whittenburg, plus a short article in Front Desk Chicago‘s Culture section by my alter ego (me!) and yesterday festival co-founder Jay Franke was on WGN‘s Midday News and introduced Hubbard Street dancers Jessica Tong and Jason Hortin who performed a duet from Kylían’s Petite Mort.

Nice.  I hope everyone is as excited as I am about this year’s fest!

On Her Way

Cecily showing how it's done at the James R. Thompson Center. Photo by Dennis Peralta.

At 16, Cecily Romaynne Shives knows what she wants to do with her life…dance! In fact, she’s known that she wanted to be a dancer since she was 10-years-old. Luckily, she is blessed with strong feet, innate talent and some fantastic genes (her parents are Evie Peña Shives, former ballerina at Tulsa Ballet Theatre and teacher at Chicago Ballet Arts and Willy Shives, former dancer and current Ballet Master at Joffrey Ballet). Add to the mix her love of the art form and spirited determination and you have a young artist ready to learn it all.

Shives gets up at 5:00 am to prepare for her days as an honor student at the Chicago High School for the Arts (ChiArts) where she takes academic classes in the mornings and dance classes at the conservatory in the afternoons. “It’s a very long day,” she says and admits to sometimes doing homework during her commute on the Red Line. Growing up in Pittsburgh, she remembers her first ballet class was actually the family living room where her Mom would teach her terminology. At 2, she got her first taste of studying at a local studio and was hooked, but didn’t get serious in her training until the family moved to Chicago. “My parents gave me a choice to keep dancing and I haven’t regretted the choice I made since,” says Shives.

Right now, she’s in Texas attending an American Ballet Theatre (ABT) summer intensive workshop for a month. She auditioned at the request of a friend (who didn’t want to go alone) and didn’t expect anything to come of it. “All the other girls were twice my height and had so much flexibility,” she recalls. “I was really nervous.” After the initial shock wore off, Shives let the excitement hit her. RB asked her a few questions as she packed for her ABT summer adventure.

What are your goals? Do you want to be a professional ballerina or would you consider other genres?

I want to become a professional dancer when I’m older. I think when dancing professionally you must know about other genres of dance because most companies don’t just have one in the repertoire. I feel that professionals don’t get anywhere unless they are well-rounded at all types of dance. I want to finish college at some point in my life, whether it’s before or after my dance career. I would eventually like to go to law school and follow in my grandfather’s footsteps. I have always been intrigued with the law and standing up for justice.

Which style do you like the most and in which are you the strongest?

I am best at contemporary ballet. I love classical ballet, but like to branch out of that. I love being off my leg and allowing gravity to take its course. Pointe/Variations class has been a lot of fun for me because of my strength on pointe and my understanding of each ballet. At Chiarts, we have learned some of Gerald Arpino’s works and variations from Paquita and Raymonda.

What’s your favorite role danced so far?

Peasant Pas de Deux from Giselle. The first time I performed it I was 12 and it was one of the best experiences of my career. I felt so strong and it improved my self-confidence.

What’s the best advice your parents have given you?

The best thing they told me was to learn every single part whether it was boys or girls. They told me to learn it and write it down, so in case someone is injured I know the part. This has paid off greatly.

Are you proud to be following in their footsteps?

I don’t think I’m exactly following in their footsteps. They both had great careers, but that was their own thing. I want to carve my own way in the dance world. I’m proud to have them as my mentors and I love that I have people who support my decision in becoming an artist.


Ballet Beauty

In honor of the Joffrey Ballet dancers going back to work yesterday (after reaching an agreement through AGMA with the management – yes!), here is a cute little Q&A with ballerina April Daly.

April Daly and partner Miguel Blanco in "Stravinsky". Photo by Herbert Migdoll.

In her eighth season of what has turned out to be her dream job with the Joffrey Ballet, April Daly finds herself in a really good place.  The 29-year-old Lincoln Square resident, when not on stage eliciting thunderous applause for her artistic talents, might be seen rooting on the Cubs or devouring a steak at Tango Sur.

Do you have any pre-show rituals?

I’m an OCD shower-taker.  I’m really superstitious.  I blame my mother.  Before a show, a hot shower before warm up and I feel like it’s a brand new day.

Do you still get nervous?

Yes.  I think nerves are a great thing.  They’re kind of inevitable.  If one day I don’t get nervous, I’ll be scared.  It gives you the adrenaline.  I try to make sure it stays in the wings and it never comes on stage with me, because it takes all the fun out of it.

Personality-wise, would you be a white swan or black swan?

I think I might be more on the black swan side, but not in an evil way.  I’m pretty outgoing and feisty.

Growing up, were you a tomboy or a girlie girl?

A total girlie girl – I still am.  I don’t own tennis shoes. I have to be in heels at all times.  After rehearsals, I refuse to be in flats.  I can do a flip flop in the summer, but I’m in heels 99% of the time.

Most people think dancers don’t ever eat.  What’s you favorite ice cream flavor?

Ben & Jerry’s Strawberry Cheesecake.

What would be your last meal?

An amazing steak and definitely a big glass of wine.  I love food!  I’m a huge foodie.  I’m not that stereotypical ballerina.  If I had to be on a diet all the time, I would find another job, because I love food too much.

Rhythm World 2011

A JUBA! performance from Rhythm World.

Today – Monday, July 25, 2011 – marks the start of Chicago Human Rhythm Project‘s (CHRP) 21st annual Rhythm World, a two-week festival of  American tap and contemporary percussive art.  The festival offers performances, educational and community outreach programming, master classes, workshops, residencies and conferences.  CHRP Founder and Artistic Director Lane Alexander leads the way with classes beginning today at the Fine Arts Building at 410 S. Michigan Avenue.  Rhythm World 2011 features instructors and performers from Canada including Kim Chalovich, Heather Cornell, Travis Knights, Tasha Lawson, Lisa La Touche, Danny Nielson, Matt Shields and Everett Smith.

The intensive residencies brings in percussive powerhouses to teach:  Bril Barrett of MADD Rhythms, Derick K. Grant of Bring in ‘Da Noise, Bring in ‘Da Funk (loved that show!) and Imagine TapStep Afrika! Artistic Director Jakari Sherman and Sam Weber, winner of the Bessie Award for outstanding creative achievement.  In addition to the classes and workshops, CHRP honors tap community members Heather Cornell (Aug 4) and Randy Skinner (Aug 6) with the JUBA! Award for Lifetime Contribution to the Field.  Congrats!

The first week of August has multiple performances at three separate venues.  Monday, Aug 1, is the Jazz Showcase featuring Rhythm World faculty, students and jazz musicians at 8 pm (806 S. Plymouth Ct. – $10/door).  Tuesday, Aug 2, has the faculty and students tapping at an informal showcase at the Harold Washington Library’s Cindy Pritzker Theater (400 S. State – $5 suggestion).  The rest of the week’s performances (Aug 3, 4, 6) will be at the MCA Stage (220 E. Chicago).  JUBA! Masters of Tap and Percussive Dance shows off emerging “beat-niks” or artists in their 20s in Emerging Voices, Canadian performers (named above) in Spotlight on Canada as well as the best of the best from the local tap scene in Chicago Celebration.  Tickets for JUBA! are $30 for the public.  For more information:  312.397.4010 or mcachicago.org.

ACTION!

The U.S. House of Representatives is set to vote on more cuts to the National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) this week, however, Congresswoman Louse Slaughter and Congressman Todd Platts (sounds like a heavy metal band, no?), who co-chair the Congressional Arts Caucus have started a “Strike the Last Word” effort  – or pro-forma amendment – in the House in the hopes of securing time to speak or submit a statement before the vote.  Please let your representative(s) know how you feel about arts funding and urge them to join this effort.

For more information on what you can do, go to The Performing Arts Alliance.  Click on “Take Action” on the left of the screen.  On the next page (right-hand side) click “Find Your Representative”.  The site will give you contact information for all of your district reps.   You will find more advocacy info at Dance/USA.org.

CDF’s 5 After 5 Event

Jay Franke and Evin Eubanks address the crowd while Chicago Cabaret Project's Kyle Hustedt looks on. Photo by Vin Reed.

Last night the Chicago Dancing Festival (CDF) kicked off its summer season with a launch party 5 After 5 at Benchmark in Old Town.  Dance enthusiasts, supporters, board member, artistic staff, bloggers, pr reps and dancers all gathered on the top floor of the swanky bar to mingle and toast the start of CDF events.  Executive Director Evin Nicole Eubanks greeted guests at the door, while Co-Founder Jay Franke worked the crowd.  Notable absent was Co-Founder Lar Lubovitch who is out of town with his company that is performing at Jacob’s Pillow through July 24th.

Kristi Burris and Jessica Chapuis show us how it's done! Photo by Vin Reed.

After sipping cocktails — Bean and Body even crafted a signature Cinq cocktail for the event – emcee Kyle Hustedt from the Chicago Cabaret Project opened with a rousing and humorous rendition of Wilkommen from what else…Cabaret!  After “wilkommening” the crowd, Hustedt introduced the first of three dance performances of the evening.  Chicago Human Rhythm Project‘s Kristi Burris and Jessica Chapuis delivered (I really want to say good, old-fashioned) tap-off with each taking syncopated turns on their wooden stages.  Fun!

Amber Jackson and Louis Jackson perform at CDF's "5 After 5". Photo by Vin Reed.

After a short pause, DanceWorks Chicago dancers Amber Jackson and Louis James Jackson (no, they aren’t related) literally exploded out of the crowd with a sassy piece “Beat in the Box” choreographed by Brian Eno.  I found out later that this was the last performance with DWC for these two beautiful dancers.  Louis is heading out as a performer on a cruise ship and Amber is looking for a job as a school teacher.  Best of luck to both!

 

Moníca Cervantes and Eduardo Zuñiga of Luna Negra getting close. Photo by Vin Reed.

Luna Negra dancers Moníca Cervantes and Eduardo Zuñiga later wowed the crowd with a flirty duet created  by Artistic Director Gustavo Ramírez Sansano for the event.  After the performances, more mingling ensued.  I got to meet some of my fellow CDF bloggers (click the icon at the top right of this page for more info) in the festival blogger intiative:  Scott Silberstein, Miguel Cano, Araceli Arroyo as well as Astek Consulting rep Rachel Yeomans and catch up with Silverman Group gurus Beth Silverman and Eric Eatherly.  I especially enjoyed hanging with visual artists Sasha Fornari and Vin Reed.

It was a fun evening and great way to start the CDF festivities!

Shows, Auditons, etc.

Aerial Dance Chicago (formerly AMEBA) performs Unearthed this weekend at the Ruth Page Center, 1016 N. Dearborn. July 22 & 23 @ 7pm. Tickets: $25 online, $30 at door, $20 for students and seniors.

The Seldoms are holding auditions for male and female dancers to perform in a special project in Feb 2012. Saturday, July 23 @ 10:00 am, Pilsen East Arts Center, 1945 S. Halsted, 4th floor.

The Dance COLEctive is holding auditions on Saturday, Aug 6th from 10:00 am – 1:00 pm at the Drucker Center, 1535 N. Dayton. Audition fee: $10.

Synapse Arts Collective is holding auditions on Saturday, Aug 30th from 12:00 – 2:00 pm (check-ins begin at 11:30) at the Menomonee Club, 1535 N. Dayton. Two paid company member positions are open.

Interview with Dance/USA Board Member – Julie Nakagawa

Don’t let her small stature and soft-spoken, polite nature fool you.  She is highly intelligent and a fiercely passionate advocate for dance.  Julie Nakagawa, Co-founder and Artistic Director of DanceWorks Chicago (DWC) and an officer on the Board of Trustees for Dance/USA, is an artist, teacher, mentor and director that focuses on nurturing not only the individual artist, but the global dance community as a whole.  There is no ego here.

A native of Evanston, IL, Nakagawa moved away for a dance career with Off Center Ballet, Cleveland Ballet and Twyla Tharp Dance before returning to Chicago to be with Ballet Chicago dancer, husband Andreas Böttcher.  “We just wanted to be in the same area code,” she says from her River North office inside the Ruth Page Center.  At a crossroads in her career, a social dinner with Lou Conte offered her a surprising opportunity and she wound up managing the Lou Conte Dance Studio.  More opportunities came in the form of directing the Hubbard Street Training Ensemble (now Hubbard Street 2) which she nurtured for the first decade of its existence.  Böttcher joined the organization and an unstoppable team was formed.  With mentors like Conte and Gail Kalver, there really wasn’t any other outcome.  “That was a great place for us to learn separately and collectively and grow together,” Nakagawa says.  “Those two are the best in the business.”

When it was time for them to leave the organization, they took some time off to travel and really focus on what they wanted to do.  Eventually their brainchild DWC was born, which they announced at that year’s Dance/USA conference.  DWC just celebrated its 4-year anniversary in June.  RB sat down with Nakagawa earlier this summer to talk about DanceWorks, Dance/USA and the dance community.

How did the idea of DanceWorks Chicago come about?

The community was already showing signs of strain in resources.  The most obvious resource is money, but for dance, space (which is associated with money), time (which is associated with money) and just the pressure to produce too.  What seemed like a potential danger was that these young dancers that were coming up weren’t…their directors and the companies were at risk of losing the valuable time of investment.  To bridge the gap between student or BFA graduate or conservatory grad or first job, second job thing, because there wasn’t an extra studio space or ballet master to kind of help you along.  Or the idea that yes, we can hire a dancer that we need to put an investment year in…those things weren’t happening.  Directors were saying to me that they can’t renew them because there’s some resource that they are lacking and each company handles that differently, but for the dancer that’s devastating.  Psychologically, that’s devastating.  You don’t get prepared for that in school.  You get prepared for success, but what about the many different ways success can look?  What about things that look or seem like failure, how do you turn those around?  I don’t think that’s necessarily overattended to.  In talking to dancers…they were the ones that said to us that it’s important.  This contribution is important.  The emphasis on companies is constantly to produce the dances.  Our concern has always been to produce the dancers.  That is the difference.  And we need both.  We decided to found DanceWorks Chicago to fulfill that need in the community to continue to have this laboratory or this research and development time to invest in the dancers, because a really courageous and equipped dancer can really do something in these companies.  Where the companies themselves…that might not be their priority.  That’s not a criticism.  They need to produce dances, but the dancers need to be ready to do whatever it is they need to do to help those companies reach their goals. 

We’ve been committed to 30-week contracts for the dancers annually, on salary and with health insurance.  That’s been a push and will continue to be a push, but we’re committed to that because we feel that’s the right thing to do.  We’re committed to building that relationship with them.  To build any relationship you need time.   It can’t be a two-week project and a one-week project and a gig.  That’s not a relationship, that’s two projects and a gig.  Again, that’s not a criticism; it’s just a different rhythm.  Our rhythm needs to be that we’re with each other on a daily basis for full days (9:30 – 4:30).  Time is the most precious commodity.  Money, if  you don’t have it or if you lose it, you can get it back.  You might not, but it’s in the realm of possibility.  Time, you won’t get it back.  We take that very seriously.  The artists’ time, the audience’s time, funders’ time…it’s really important.  From little things like trying to start and end on time, to reconfiguring performances into these dance flights, which are two 45-min segments back-to-back separated by 15 minutes.  That total time is like a regular performance, but the audience has more of a say in how they want to spend their time or their resources.  Trying to do things like that has also been important to us, as well as this laboratory for dancers to explore who they are and test that muscle of courage. That’s a muscle that’s really, really important.  Confidence besides the technical tools, the intellectual capacity and the emotional availability to really be a compelling artist.  We try to give them experience so they can make the best choices.  Do I want to be in a touring company?  Maybe that’s not for me.  If it’s not for you, then you can eliminate certain situations and save you and the company time and discomfort.  It’s a broad dance world out there, but it’s got to be about the relationship and the fit.  Hopefully having these experiences helps them identify a better next step, a better fit for them.

How did you get involved with Dance/USA?

When I retired from dancing, I wasn’t sure what I was going to do.  It was more of a personal/professional decision.  I felt I’d had a great decade-long career and felt very grateful about my career and my dancing.  I enjoyed it.  I still was enjoying it, but felt like I needed to make a life choice..a life change.
I talked with my director Dennis Nahad at Cleveland Ballet and he suggested I go to Dance/USA.  Cleveland Ballet were a member organization.  So I went (Minneapolis) and I went to the dancers forum.  There was like seven of us, but it was a really great opportunity that there was a much broader dance community out there and that there were all these people working on all different levels and in all different areas.  To come to a national convening was something I’d never done.  It was really important.  That was my first connection with Dance/USA.  Then, Hubbard Street was a member organization, so I went again.  There’s a lot of value in it.  If you want to play on a national or international level, I think it’s a mistake to think you can do it just in your own backyard.  It doesn’t really matter where your backyard is, even with the internet and technology, it’s a people business.  While you can’t always jet around, you can go to Pittsburgh or Portland or…if you plan ahead, you can make that happen.  Seeing who was at Dance/USA, seeing who wasn’t at Dance/USA, seeing who was making things happen for themselves…there’s definitely a connection there.  The panels, the forums, the speakers, that’s all really important.  The time in the elevator, the time between sessions, even lunch is equally important.  There are so many connections made, deals done, business cards exchanged, synergies discovered that makes it exhausting.  But hopefully you’re exhausted in the right way.  We’re looking for that inside information, that extra edge.  One of the first things we did as a young organization (DWC) was join it.  We felt it was important.  Joining Dance/USA and having 30-week contracts with insurance…it’s not the norm, but if we can do it, it can be done.

…and joining the Board?

Someone nominated me, which was very generous and gracious.  I have some big shoes to fill.  Eduardo Vilaro (former Artistic Director of Luna Negra, currently Artistic Director at Ballet Hispanico) was the most recent Chicago representative on the board.  I think Eduardo is an example of someone who really was a great board member for Dance/USA and translated that into success for Luna Negra…and rightfully so.  I was honored to accept and was subsequently nominated to be Secretary.  I had to ponder that for logistical reasons.  I feel it’s really important to give back.

What do you think having the conference here this summer will do for the Chicago dance community?

We’re all really excited about it coming to Chicago.  It’s the center of the country, so hopefully it’s easy for everyone to get here.  It would be great to have more Dance/USA members in Chicago.  I think it’s such a vibrant community.  Sometimes there’s a perception that there’s New York and then the rest of the country.  I think that has been true.  I don’t think it needs to be true.  Does there need to be one destination for dance in the country?  No.  The math just doesn’t add up any more for lots of folks.  I think Dance/USA is navigating a broad spectrum of dance in terms of their constituency and a broad geographic range on an on-going basis.  I think Chicago is such a great destination for dance.  If you want people to come, it’s not enough just to be here.  Part of it is connecting with them where they are…it’s audience outreach.  I think that one of the things is that it has provided an opportunity for the dance community to convene.  As wonderfully diverse and dynamic as the community is, it’s not difficult to stay in your own area.  Sometimes it’s their geographic area, sometimes their genre…whatever it is.  We had a community breakfast, which drew a really great cross-section of people from the local artistic community.  Artists, presenters, press, agents…it was great.  The opportunity for the community is to come together around dance and around the conference and to represent Chicago.  I think the challenge for the community is what’s going to happen after this?  Are we all going to go back to business as usual?  Your energized and refreshed, and that’s not without value, but what is tangible?  That needs to be attended to.  I would love to suggest a post-Dance/USA community convening to share experiences.  There are so many things to select, there are so many session to attend…it might be beneficial to tag team, so you’re not all at the same meeting.  Can we do that at a broader level?  Can we have the community get together and share for the people that couldn’t come or selected not to come…so that they can still get something out of it.  Just sit down and talk.  I think that would be a great follow up.  And again, I’m a believer in personal responsibility.  Maybe there’s a group that wants to talk about national touring and they identify themselves at the follow-up meeting and then they start meeting bi-monthly.  It would be great to have some really honest, passionate, respectful conversation.

My hope is that the Chicago community really uses this as an opportunity to really shine a light on dance in Chicago in some way. Even if they can’t be there or don’t understand, they understand that the opportunity is out there and they made a choice to attend or not to attend and they stand by that choice.  We’re going to throw a big party – what’s going to happen after it?  That’s the place where there’s a potential to maximize the opportunity for each individual or organization.  There is a way that we can maybe do that as a community.