Monday, March 22, 2010

Mary Buckley in "There Is An Elephant In This Dance"

Saturday, March 27 at 8pm
Sunday, March 28 at 7pm

The elephant is a rich and contradictory image that choreographer Lionel Popkin puts front and center in There Is An Elephant In This Dance. Set around a human-size elephant costume, Popkin refers to both the obvious and the unspoken—from religious iconography to personal cultural heritage to the arrival of parenthood. The work is an evening-length dance in which choreographer/performer Lionel Popkin is interrupted by and entwined with his own group of dancers as well as local DC dance artists. The piece features original music by Obie and Bessie winning composer/cellist/vocalist Robert Een .

Popkin’s dances are characterized by his blend of humor, subtle sensuality, precision, sly wit, and raw physical power that The Village Voice says, “yields first to the senses” and then to “intimate adventures”. His work comes from a deeply sensory and unabashed kinesthetic curiosity that places vibrant individuals within an imagistic or abstract landscape.

Mary Buckley , George Washington University Professor and former Board Member of Dance Place, will dance the role of the Elephant. Other performers include recent MFA graduate from George Mason University Adriane Fang, and Carolyn Hall.

Buy tickets at www.danceplace.org

Monday, March 15, 2010

The Washington Post: Lord Arthur Savile's Crime

The Washington Post:
"a pleasingly lighthearted adaptation, by Largess himself, of Oscar Wilde's novella Lord Arthur Savile's Crime. The production, which features a suitably foppish James Konicek as the unctuous, utterly clueless Lord Arthur, is a palate-cleansing way to inaugurate the Stage Guild's new life, in the undercroft of a Methodist church on Massachusetts Avenue, a block from the Convention Center. Largess, who also directs this world premiere, does a swell job of converting the ripostes of Wilde's novella into dialogue. With all these gentle ministrations, the guild genially takes up where it left off." -Peter Marks.

Thursday, March 11, 2010

Afgahni vocalist and celebrity, Mozhdah Jamalzadah, visits GW

Mozhdah Jamalzadah.

Mozhdah Jamalzadah is the most famous female vocalist in Afghanistan and Thursday, after she sang for President Obama at the White House, she visited the Dance and Community Settings class to talk about the power of art and its ability to help women in Afghanistan. She launches her new nationally televised talk show this year from Kabul. The students asked sophisticated questions regarding global politics and the place of art as a transformative medium. She finished her question and answer session by singing to the class in Farsi. She was phenomenal and we look forward to following her show and videos on YouTube and on her website!

Website: www.mozhdahmusic.com

Much thanks to Jill Staggs and the State Department for arranging this wonderful moment at GWU! Dana

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

UNEVENLANE AT THE KENNEDY CENTER Mary Lane Director

October 28 and 29, 2010 - 6:00pm

Mary Lane, Director of Unevenlane, has been selected selected for the John
F. Kennedy Center 10th Annual Local Dance Commissioning Project Award. The
Kennedy Center created the Local Dance Commissioning Project (LDCP) in 2001
to foster new dance works by local artists, and present these artists to the
widest possible audience via the Millennium Stage and the internet
web-casts. A select number of Washington, D.C. metro area choreographers are
chosen each year from a pool of more than 50 applicants. The project
provides funds for each artist to create a new piece, a venue to premiere
the work, as well as rehearsal space and technical assistance. Past LDCP
recipients have included Nejla Yatkin, Jason Hartley, Ed Tyler, Boris
Willis, Meisha Bosma, Ludovic Jolivet, Helanius J. Wilkins, Aysha Upchurch,
Gesel Mason, Karen Reedy, Vincent Thomas, and Cassie Meador.