Monday, November 29, 2010

Dances by Dancers: December 8, 2010 at 7:30 PM – Building J Down

Dances by Dancers (choreography for 3 or more) – 14 students in the Dance Composition Class present original choreography for casts of 3 or more.

Wednesday, December 8, 2010 at 7:30 PM – Building J Down

Trends in Performance Final Event (Title TBA)

Thursday, December 9, 2010 at 7:30 pm – Building J Down

FREE - Both programs are also requesting donations for a friend of Justin Balsamo, Business School, who died this past year. The Business School will send a representative to the programs to tell about this young person.

Movement Composition and Trends in Performance Art: Final Performance Dec 8/9

Join the Movement Composition and Trends in Performing Arts Classes in their final performance of the year!

This performance is FREE

Where: Studio J Dance Theater
Date: Dec 8/8
Time: 7:30 pm


Wednesday, November 17, 2010

GW Department of Theatre & Dance presents Fall DanceWorks 2010 Concert Director Anthony Gongora

The George Washington University Department of Theatre & Dance presents Fall DanceWorks 2010, featuring internationally acclaimed guest artist, Susan Rethorst, and GW student choreographers.

WHEN: Nov. 18, 19, 20; 7:30 p.m.

WHERE: The George Washington University
Dorothy Betts Marvin Theatre, Marvin Center 1st floor
800 21st Street, NW
Washington, D.C. 20052
(Foggy Bottom-GWU Metro Station, Blue and Orange lines)

COST:
General admission is $15 for the general public. Admission for students and senior citizens is $10. Tickets are available online at www.theatredance.gwu.edu, by calling 202-994-0995 or by visiting the box office on the night of the performance. The box office is located next to the Dorothy Betts Marvin Theatre, on the first floor of the Marvin Center.

BACKGROUND:
Concert Director, Anthony Gongora, holds an MFA in Dance from the University of Maryland. Gongora has danced in the companies of Loretta Livingston and Dancers, Chicago Repertory Dance Ensemble, Bob Eisen Dance, Mordine & Company and Jan Ekert & Dancers. Gongora has presented his own work nationally and internationally.

Susan Rethorst, internationally renowned teacher of choreography, was born in 1951 in Washington, D.C. Ms. Rethorst’s work has been presented by The Museum of Modern Art, The Kitchen Center, Dance Theater Workshop, Danspace Project at St. Marks, The Downtown Whitney Museum, as well as at various dance theaters, universities and festivals throughout the U.S. Internationally her work has been produced by The Holland Festival, Spazio Zero Rome, The Kunsthalle Basel, The Aix-en-Provence Festival and Jerusalem’s Room Festival.

Ms. Rethorst has received many accolades in recognition of her choreographic achievements including two “Bessies,” the New York and Performance Award for Outstanding Achievement. She was the recent recipient of the 2010 Alpert Award in the Arts for dance. The yearly award is given to five artists working in the fields of dance, film/video, theatre and visual arts. She has published articles on her choreographic thinking in “Movement Research Journal” and “Choreographic Encounters” and is currently completing a book titled “A Choreographic Mind”.

Tuesday, November 16, 2010

GWU Launches new MFA degree in Dance

GEORGE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY LAUNCHES INNOVATIVE ADVANCED DEGREE PROGRAM FOR THE MID-CAREER DANCER

Unique Program Allows Performers to Continue Career and Further Learning Through Individualized Hybrid Learning, Video-Sharing and Global Collaboration

WASHINGTON- Contemporary dancers from D.C. to Dubai now have an opportunity to continue their education and not miss a beat. The George Washington University’s Department of Theatre and Dance (TRDA) will offer a new Master’s of Fine Arts degree for mid-career dancers, performers and choreographers across the globe. The advanced degree program will allow dancers to refine individual style, technique and repertoire while developing professional relationships with the larger international dance community.


“As dancers and choreographers, we have limited time to build a career and the process of receiving more education should not slow the process, it should enhance it,” said Dana Tai Soon Burgess, chair of GW’s theatre and dance department, one of the region’s preeminent choreographers and director of DTSB & Co., Washington, D.C.’s premier Asian-American Dance Company. “Dance is a fundamental form of communication which bridges cultural differences, and we look to this new program as a way to enhance global dialogues between artists.”

The program is designed for highly-skilled, practicing professionals with extensive dance experience and will incorporate highly-individualized distance and on-site learning. With matriculation slated for June 2011, the new rigorous 18-month program offers an initial eight-week residency at GW, two semesters of supervised distance learning for artists working full-time domestically or internationally and completion of a performance portfolio submitted via electronic media. Each student will work one-on-one with a GW TRDA faculty member over an intensive 18-month period to develop their performance portfolio.

“I am delighted that this innovative program will be drawing accomplished artists to George Washington from around the world with a curriculum designed to develop their talents still further,” said GW President Steven Knapp.

Collectively, GW TRDA faculty mentors offer more than 50 years of technical training and performance experience, bringing both a professional and scholarly structure to the program. Additionally, students will learn from the opportunities that exist through specialists in the areas of dance curation, management and advocacy who work in institutions including the Kennedy Center for Performing Arts, the U.S. State Department Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, the Smithsonian Institution, the National Geographic Society and the National Endowment.

“This program is tailored uniquely for experienced and successful dance artists working with passion in the field today,” said Maida Withers, GW professor of dance. “A program that promotes and values association with other distinguished professionals from around the world.”

The advanced degree program strongly encourages applicants from the international dance community. George Washington University and its Department of Theatre and Dance value contributions that are made to the program by students from other countries and who bring a culturally diverse perspective to its program.

GW’s Department of Theatre and Dance

The Theatre and Dance department at the George Washington University is the premiere department of its kind within the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. In existence for more than 70 years, the oldest and most extensive visual arts department within the nation’s capitol has cultivated several prominent alumni in the arts. GW’s Department of Theatre and Dance offers a widespread curriculum in all repertoires of dance and all aspects of theatre including design and production. The department is one of a kind as it remains committed to research excellence through all forms of creativity. For additional information on GW’s Theatre and Dance department as well as program offerings, visit theatredance.gwu.edu.


MEDIA CONTACT: Courtney Bowe 202-994-5631; cmbowe@gwu.edu


Thursday, November 11, 2010

Modern Dance Mentorship: Dana Tai Soon Burgess wins grant to run Asian American youth dance program

Modern Dance Mentorship

GW dance professor Dana Tai Soon Burgess and his company recently won a grant from the mayor’s office to run an Asian American youth program. read more

Monday, November 8, 2010

New book based on Allyson Currin's Kennedy Center play, UNLEASHED!

Unleashed: The Lives of White House Pets (The Kennedy Center Presents: Capital Kids)

The White House is off the leash! The third book in the Kennedy Center Capital Kids series based on Allyson Currin's Kennedy Center play, UNLEASHED! Published by Simon and Schuster! Release date January, 2011!

Allyson Currin, Playwright/Actress
AEA, SAG
www.allysoncurrin.com