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NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>> www.nchoreographers.org Adrienne Benz, Andrew Brader & the NCI ensemble in “Piece for Eight” by Helen Heineman photo by Dave Friedman 2010 nci national choreographers initiative Molly Lynch, artistic director

National Choreographers Initiative 2011

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NCI is an intensive 3-week project to support choreographers and their work. Director Molly Lynch invites four choreographers to participate, as well as sixteen professional dancers from ballet companies across the country. 2011 choreographers are: Brian Enos, Heather Maloy, Peter Pucci, Paula Weber A showing of the new works will be held: July 30, 2011 at 8pm Irvine Barclay Theatre, 4242 Campus Drive in Irvine www.thebarclay.org

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NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

www.nchoreographers.org

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National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

Table of Contents

From the Artistic Director ...................................................3

About NCI .............................................................................4

The 2011 Choreographers

Brian Enos ............................................................................6

Heather Maloy ....................................................................10

Peter Pucci .........................................................................14

Paula Weber .......................................................................18

NCI’s Choreographic Chronology ....................................22

The NCI dance ensemble ..................................................24

NCI Discovery: The Showing ............................................26

NCI’s Press Articles ......................................................27-33

NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

The National Choreographers Initiative was developed

to promote the creation and production of professional

dance. It is also an opportunity to engage outstanding

choreographers from around the United States in the

creative process.

There is a need nationwide to have a workshop setting

where choreographers can initiate new work as well

as experiment and develop their craft. The National

Choreographers Initiative is an opportunity to develop

and produce dance in support of the national dance

community by inviting choreographers of note to

participate in this project. NCI provides an opportunity

for the southern California community to be a part of

the process of creating new contemporary ballets and

seeing these works performed for the very first time.

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National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

National Choreographers InitiativeAdvisory Committee

Anne B. Nutt - Chair

Bobbi Cox

Sophie Cripe

Diane Diefenderfer

Joanne Keith

Molly Lynch

Lois Osborne

Barbara Roberts

Sally Anne Sheridan

Barbara Tingley

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NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

Molly Lynch is an award-winning choreographer and artistic director, with over 30 years of experience creating, produc-ing, and presenting dance. She is currently an Assistant Pro-fessor of Dance in the Claire Trevor School of the Arts at the University of California, Irvine. She teaches ballet, pointe, partnering, ballet repertory, and dance management. Ms. Lynch is the Founder and Artistic Director of the National Choreographers Initiative, an internationally known project designed to nurture the development of new choreography.

She was the Artistic Director for Ballet Pacifica from 1988-2003. During her tenure, Ms. Lynch established Ballet Paci-fica as Orange County’s leading professional dance compa-ny and one of the area’s top performing arts organizations. Among her innovative trademark programs was the Paci-fica Choreographic Project. Under Ms. Lynch’s direction, the company worked with forty choreographers, premiered more than forty new ballets and restaged some of America’s most beloved classics by George Balanchine, Antony Tudor and Choo San Goh. Ms. Lynch has also choreographed over 30 concert and story ballets, 6 children’s ballets and a full-length production of “The Nutcracker.” Ms. Lynch recently created new ballets for Sacramento Ballet, Festival Ballet, Nashville Ballet, BalletMet (Columbus, Ohio), Dance Collage

(Hermosillo, Mexico), Academies of Ballet In Philippines (Manila) and Singapore Dance Theatre.

She began her dance training with Lila Zali, received a schol-arship to the Joffrey Ballet and performed as a soloist and principal dancer with the Louisville Ballet and Ballet Paci-fica for over 10 years. As a Fine Arts major at the University of California, Irvine, she studied with distinguished figures in dance such as Eugene Loring, Antony Tudor and Olga Maynard. Upon receiving her MFA in dance from UCI, she was named Outstanding Graduate Student, the first student from Fine Arts so honored. In 1992, Ms.Lynch was given the esteemed Outstanding Alumnus award from UCI and was named one of Orange County Metro Magazine’s “Ten Wom-en Who Make A Difference.” She is also the recipient of the Red Cross Clara Barton Cultural Arts Award and the Boy Scouts of America Women of Excellence award in 1996. She is the recipient of the 2001 Choo San Goh Award for Chore-ography and the 2007 Outstanding Arts Organization Award for her National Choreographers Initiative from Arts Orange County. In April 2008 she was honored with the Irvine Bar-clay Theatre’s prestigious Jade Award for her extraordinary leadership and creativity.

National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

Brian EnosChicago, Illinois

NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

Originally from San Francisco, CA, Brian

Enos has been making dances since age

14. When he was just 18, and still a student

in the Houston Ballet Academy, Enos was

invited by Artistic Director Ben Stevenson to

create his first work for The Houston Ballet.

He has since gone on to create works that

have been performed both domestically

and internationally for companies such

as Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, Ballet

Met, DanceWorks Chicago, Ballet Austin II,

Chicago Ballet, Hubbard Street 2, Momenta,

and the University of Chicago.

Enos was named “Best up and coming

choreographer” by The Houston Press and

was also a winner of the annual Hubbard

Street 2 International Choreographic

Competition. As a dancer, he spent several

years performing with The Houston Ballet

before embarking on an eight-year career as

a dancer and choreographer with Hubbard

Street Dance Chicago.

Through his choreography, Enos hopes to

inspire, and entertain both audiences as well

as the beautiful and dedicated dancers he

is so fortunate to work with every day in the

studio. He also enjoys writing about himself

in the third person.

“Enos pushed the boundaries of ballet making it relevant and exhilarating.

He reminded us what dance can do, and why we love it.” - The Houston Press

www.brianenos.net

National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

Dark & Lovely choreography by

Brian Enos

Threechoreography by

Brian Enos

➧Click to play

Time-Out Chicago Issue 136: Oct 4-10, 2007

Making Tracksby Lisa Arnett

Hubbard Street Dance Chicago company member Brian Enos brings a club vibe into the concert hall with his new work B-Sides (12” Mix). The 20-something dancer and budding cho-reographer has indulged in a little DJ wizardry, creating a soundtrack composed of tracks by the Welsh elctronica duo Hybrid – spanning from early, unreleased music to more recent work incorporating orchestral strings. B-Sides debuts in the second weekend of Hubbard’s 30th-an-niversary program, which runs through Sunday at the Harris Theater in Millennium Park.

Enos edited the music himself, a process that started by poring over Hybrid’s entire career. “The hard part was selecting what I wanted to use, paring it down and also making it friendly [for dancing], where there weren’t too many long sections of just intense music – because there are only five dancers in the piece, and that would have just killed them.”

Enos’s enthusiasm for Hybrid’s progressive breakbeats began serendipitously several years ago while he was hanging out in a supersize bookstore near Lincoln Center in new York City, waiting for a friend at Juilliard to finish class. He happened across one of their CDs and became totally captivated. He ended up listening to Hybrid tracks nonstop for the next month, making a point of digging up every avail-able recording of the band that he could find. “I never really had a passion for dance and club-oriented music, but at the time, I was listening to a lot of Depeche Mode and ‘80s synth pop. I think it’s interesting because this style of music was a natural progression from that.”

Rather than creating movement on his own and then teaching it to the dancers, Enos favors a more spontaneous approach: He works out his choreography in real time with the dancers during his three-week studio allotment. Before getting in the studio, however, Enos spends a lot of time listening to the music he’ll be using. This helps him work out an overall structure of how he wants the dance to go.

In the past, he’s experimented with choreographing specific material before meet-ing with the dancers, but he found that it doesn’t look as he imagined it. “I fell like it saves time in the long run to create it with the dancers there, and you can look at something and see how it actually works on real people.”

Working with familiar faces (his fellow HSDC company members) made for a “low-stress creation process,” Enos says. The B-Sides dancers are veteran Shannon Alvis, in the company since 2000; Penny Saunders; Kellie Epperheimer; Philip Colucci, a newcomer from Pennsyl-vania Ballet; and Prince Credell, a former LINES Contemporary Ballet dancer whom critics have likened to exceptional modern dancer Desmond Richardson on more than one occasion. They’ll dance in form-fitting bright red and purple costumes designed by Alec Donovan, a friend of Enos’s from Houston Ballet who now studies at Parsons the New School for Design.

Enos is know for lush, flowing movement that calls on dancers’ strong technical founda-tions, and he describes this piece – his second for the main company and fourth for the HSDC organization – as a stream of consciousness, with activity that ebbs and flows.

“What I tried to do is create a very amorphous environment for all of the dancers to be in, where it kind of goes between group sections and solos in what I hope to be a very smooth way,” he says. “It’s not a posing piece – it’s constantly moving. The energy of the movement grows as the music builds, but then it really keeps a constant motion, even within quiet mo-ments. It maintains a certain underlying current that propels the piece throughout.”

HSDC appears at the Harris Theater in works by Enos, Naharin, Kylian, and Duato.

B-Sideschoreography by

Brian Enos

NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

Heather MaloyAsheville, North Carolina

NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

www.terpsicorps.org

Heather Maloy received her training at the

North Carolina School of the Arts (NCSA). She

began her professional career when she joined

the North Carolina Dance Theatre (NCDT)

at the age of 17. Maloy stayed for thirteen

years, dancing principal and soloist roles and

made guest appearances with BalletMet and

Tampa Ballet. She excelled in works by George

Balanchine, Salvatore Aiello, Paul Taylor,

Alvin Ailey, William Forsythe, David Parsons

and Alonzo King. Mentored by Aiello, Maloy

choreographed her first professional work

when she was only nineteen. After Aiello’s

death, Jean Pierre Bonnefoux commissioned

her to create five more pieces for NCDT and

brought her work, “Couch Potatoes,” to the

Joyce Theatre in New York City, where it was

received with great success. Maloy has created

premieres for the Chautauqua Ballet, Nashville

Ballet, and the Wake Forest and Jacksonville

College Dance Departments. She was chosen

in a nationwide competition to participate in

Central Pennsylvania Youth Ballet’s Choreoplan

2002. Recently she placed 1st in round one

and 3rd overall in the national 21st Century

Choreography Competition sponsored by Ballet

Nouveau Colorado. She was also honored to

return to NCSA to create a new work for the

spring Dance program in 2008 and to stage

her work “le Suil Go...” for their 2007 alumni

performance in Manteo, NC. She has been

living in Asheville, NC since 2003, where she

founded the summertime dance company

Terpsicorps Theatre of Dance as a vehicle for

her work and the work of Salvatore Aiello. As

a staff of one, she has done the job of both

artistic and managing director as well as

choreographing the majority of the company’s

repertoire for its two yearly productions.

Video excerpts of Ms Maloy’s work. Click on the image to play.

National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

Describe your home: Attic chic. It’s a mixture of antiques, art deco and 1960s stuff.

Collections: Costumes. I have a hard time getting rid of them. And I collect spices that I get at a farmers market in Atlanta.

Favorite costume: I loved doing character roles and over-the-top comedy. One of my favorites was an ugly stepsister in Cinderella. I wore a giant headpiece and big dresses.

Most memorable performance: My first year with the NC Dance Theatre, I was understudy in Night in the Tropics and had to step in for the lead. I hadn’t done any large roles up to that time. It was simultaneously terrifying and wonderful.

Personal hero: Salvatore Aiello, NCDT artistic director who brought me on at 17, the young-est dancer in the company’s history at that time. He let me begin choreographing two years after that. He is part of the reason I started Terpsicorps—to keep his work alive.

Best thing about being a dancer/choreogra-pher: Dancing is freedom to me. I’m in another world on the stage. The best thing about choreography is that I get to let out whatever’s inside of me.

Worst thing about being a dancer/chore-ographer: With dancing, the worst thing is that it ends. You work so hard and then your body gives out and you can’t do it anymore. With choreography, the worst thing is exposing myself to judgment. I’m very emotional. It’s me you see up there.

Secret fantasy: To never have known danc-ing—to have a totally different life—to see what else I would have done.

Morning routine: Usually I teach a ballet class every morning from 9:30 to 11. Even if no one else shows up, it’s my workout.

Evening routine: Four nights a week I teach. Other nights I go to movies...and all the local theatre.

A perfect Sunday would be: Sleep late, cook a great brunch for friends, go hiking and then go see a great movie. I’d love to meet a guy to go hiking with. I would say right now that I am one of Asheville’s most eligible bachelorettes.

Vehicle: A 1996 Honda civic filled with cos-tumes and playbills.

Pet: Monster, my cat. He’s a story. I’d lost my cat before I moved here and one of my dancers brought me this filthy little kitten with worms. He stole my heart. We were doing Waltz of the Monsters at the time and he sat in the studio during all the rehearsals.

Can’t live without: Movies and the theatre. I’m obsessed.

Guilty pleasure: Ginger ice cream with choco-late sauce and a shot of espresso poured over it.

Drink of choice: Pomegranate sparkling wa-ter. As far as alcoholic drinks go, I like a dirty martini.

Most treasured piece of clothing: Boots—any boots. Cowboy boots, leather boots, go-go boots. I love them all.

Favorite musician: It changes all the time. I’m drawn to strong female personalities like Aretha Franklin and Amanda Palmer of the Dresden Dolls. I like Louis Prima when I’m cooking, Aretha in the morning, Nora Jones when I’m tired.

Superstitions: At every premiere I wear a ring that belonged to Salvatore Aiello. When I was dancing, I used to hammer my point shoes. If I made a sound with them, I thought I would fall.

Personal philosophy: No matter what seem-ingly horrific thing happens, it’s worth it if you have a good story to tell afterwards.

Memorable cathartic moment: One of my friends died when I was working on a show. The piece ended up being about funerals. It was very healing.

Most treasured memento: Right now I’d say it’s this letter A [a metal letter painted red]. My friend who died did things with found objects. He found this in a dump and I used the font for the Scarlet Letter show two years ago.

Person from history you’d like to meet: I’d like to talk to the wife of any great American hero or to the wives of the founding fathers. You know they’d have good untold stories.

If reincarnated, would like to come back as: My mother’s cat. I’d like a life where I did noth-ing because this one is so chaotic.

Latest project: The Recession Blues with the Firecracker Jazz Band. It will pay homage to the depression as well as current hard times. They have a new CD coming out that we’ll use that’s kind of swing.

Back-shelf project: I’m thinking of writing a one-woman show for myself called My Life in the Skinny Mirror.

Best thing about living in Western North Carolina: It feels like a big city and has all the good things of a small town at the same time.

For more information on Terpsicorps Theatre of Dance, visit www.terpsicorps.org.

Heather MaloyBy LINDA C. RAY

Heather Maloy is all about the narrative. As the founder, artistic director and resident choreographer of Terpsicorps Theatre of Dance, a contemporary ballet dance company based in Asheville, Heather has channeled her long dance career into a calling that utilizes all her talents. “This just

tapped into all my creative juices,” she says. “I love being in charge; I love to micromanage. I design the whole thing.”

Heather grew up with a mother who taught dance in Winston-Salem. Mom always gave her the option to quit dancing, but she says she’s never considered anything else. By fifth grade she was putting on neighborhood ballet productions. After graduating from the North Carolina School of the Arts, Heather joined the North Carolina Dance Theatre in 1989, where she was a dancer for 13 years.

While she uses dance as the medium to tell the big stories, every corner of her studio apartment in the River Arts District of Asheville is crammed with memorabilia

and objects d’art that are rich with personal history. A small loft in her apartment holds costumes she’s worn and designed throughout her career. A bust of her muse Terpsichore sits atop an old tube radio, and dancing legs protrude from a potted palm.

The 1920s barber chair in one corner belonged to her mother and weighs “a ton,” an intrepid array of spices is displayed in the kitchen, the old touring suitcases she got from revered ballerina Patricia McBride are a reminder of nomadic days. These treasured objects are threads that Heather spins into the yarn of a creative life.

Spring 2009

photo By Rebecca D’Angelo

NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

Head to the Diana Wortham Theatre box office at Asheville’s Pack Place, take the elevator to the third floor, step out, stop and look to your left. “Welcome to my broom closet,” says Heather Maloy, founder and one-woman managerial team of Terpsicorps Theatre of Dance. She’s not kidding. The tiny space once served as a janitorial room for Pack Place. Now painted slate gray and lit by the pulsing glow of an Apple computer, the old cleaning room looks positively chic. Maloy loves it. “It’s taken a lot of time and work and energy to get here,” she says. She’s not kidding about that part, either.

For years, she worked out of her apartment on Terpsicorps, the professional ballet company she started in Asheville in 2003. She and her dancers had no regular rehearsal space until they moved into a large, un-air-conditioned second-floor room in the River Arts District’s Wedge building in 2007. For a dance company that rehearses and performs mostly in summer, the workout can be brutal. But Maloy, a 37-year-old who grew up in Winston-Salem, has been de-

termined to bring her own brand of contemporary dance to Asheville, hiring professional dancers from around the country to perform in Asheville during summer breaks from their regular companies. It’s a model that’s worked well and kept costs low for the nonprofit Terpsi-corps for six seasons. Maloy and her crew were planning to expand their schedule to include traveling summer gigs.

But then came last fall’s stock mar-ket crash, followed by what some now call the Great Recession. Maloy, who choreographs shows quickly and often chooses timely topics, started pondering the Great Depression. For months, she se-questered herself in her stylishly modern broom closet to plan for this summer’s performance, The Recession Blues & Other Works. During a time of financial struggle for everyone, but especially artists, Maloy felt it simply wasn’t the right time to fund-raise as aggressively as she might have in the past. In-stead, she wanted to scale back, get creative and reach out to others who might need money more than she did.

Though the group usually performs two shows each summer, this year, Terpsicorps will perform only The Recession Blues. And for this show, Maloy has rolled out a special deal with four Asheville-area nonprof-its—Asheville Buncombe Commu-nity Christian Ministry (ABCCM), Manna FoodBank, Mountain Hous-ing Opportunities and Green Op-portunities. Anyone who donates $45 or more to their causes before May 29 will receive a buy-one, get-one-free ticket voucher to see The Recession Blues.

Dance performances don’t usu-ally have characters and plots like plays, but Maloy says there is a main “character” in The Recession Blues—a sad lonely figure who rep-resents America’s uninsured. “It’s one of the worst things that’s hap-pening in our society,” Maloy says of the swelling ranks of uninsured people in the current downturn. In the show, the other dancers ignore this character as events happen all around her.

Poignant and solemn as that may sound, Maloy promises it’s not a whole show of doom and gloom. Set to upbeat music by Asheville’s Firecracker Jazz Band, who will play several songs from their new album Red Hot Band, the show might call to mind speakeasies or lively back allies during the Great Depres-sion. With The Unemployment Kick Line and satirical numbers like The Dance of the Fat Cat CEOs, the idea is to deal with serious issues in a fun, over–the–top style.

A dancer since age six, Maloy un-derstood her life’s calling early on. For high school, she was accepted into the North Carolina School of the Arts, a prestigious arts con-servatory in Winston-Salem. After graduating at 17, she was hired to dance with the North Carolina Dance Theatre—and was the young-est performer ever employed by the company at that time. For 13 years, she toured with NCDT, performing in pieces by famous choreographers like George Balanchine and Paul Taylor. The group also occasionally got a chance to work directly with superstar choreographers like San

Francisco’s Alonzo King.

But by 2003, Maloy felt it was time to hang up her dancing shoes—at least long enough to pour her en-ergy into launching Terpsicorps and to focus on her true passion: chore-ography. “As a dancer, your artistic responsibility is to interpret. You’re given the work, and it’s your job to fulfill the choreographer’s vision. You are creative but not with the same kind of freedom you have as a choreographer,” she says.

But with the good comes the bad. Maloy operates Terpsicorps on her own, which means more creative freedom comes with an equal help-ing of responsibility. Still, she be-lieves her original business model—as a summer company—will keep her dancers on their toes during a period of economic instability. Be-cause larger dance companies make longer-term financial commitments to their dancers, hiring them for between six and nine months, they also have a more rigid set of obliga-tions. With Terpsicorps, Maloy has more freedom because she hires dancers per show and only for a few months at a time.

Christopher Bandy, a full-time danc-er with Dance Alloy Theatre in Pitts-burgh, has joined Terpsicorps every year since its inception (minus the year his daughter was born) and he plans to return this summer for The Recession Blues. “Heather always does unique kinds of things—things I’ve never done before,” he says. “She always creates at least one new work. As a dancer, it’s so nice to have a work made for you.”

Maloy says starting Terpsicorps is the hardest thing she’s ever done. But raising money for it during a nasty recession may prove even harder, and this year is likely to be one of Terpsicorps’ most challeng-ing to date. “I knew raising money would be difficult, but I didn’t re-ally have a concept of how difficult it really is,” she says. “I have come to learn that the key to success is being flexible. And that’s just what we’re going to keep doing.”

by Jennifer McNally photo by Rimas Zailskas

National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

Peter PucciNew York, New York

NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

Peter Pucci was born and raised in Baltimore. He

graduated from the North Carolina School of the

Arts with a BFA. For nine years he was a member of

Pilobolus Dance Theatre, where he served as principal

dancer, co-choreographer, and rehearsal director.

Since 1986, Peter has directed and choreographed for

his company Peter Pucci Plus Dancers.

Since its founding, the company has performed

annually in New York City, including five appearances

at the Joyce Theater, and has toured extensively

throughout the United States and Europe. Peter has

created movement for many theatrical productions

including Sam Shepard’s “The Late Henry Moss”

produced by The Signature Theater in New York

and The Magic Theater in San Francisco. Peter

has also created movement for industrials, fashion

shows, commercials, videos, film, television, skaters,

opera and several dance segments for the children’s

television program “Bear in the Big Blue House.”

In addition to creating over 50 repertory works for PP+,

Peter has choreographed ballets for numerous ballet

and modern dance companies both in the US and

abroad including: Alberta Ballet, Ballet Arizona, Ballet

Met, Ballet Pacifica, Colorado Ballet and Pittsburgh

Ballet. In 1990, Peter became the first recipient of

the Samuel H. Scripps Humphrey/Weidman/Limon

Fellowship, a choreographic commission awarded by

the American Dance Festival. Peter is also the winner

of an Absolut Joffrey Award for Choreography and two

Choo-San Goh Awards for Choreography.

“Mr. Pucci draws his audience into the world of a performer of

unmistakable intelligence, integrity and sensitivity.

He is a choreographer with a sense of humor and of deft observation” - The New York Times

www.pucciplus.com

Click here for videos

National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

By SYLVIANE GOLD

PETER PUCCI moves around a lot. And not just because he’s a choreographer. In any given week, he might spend a couple of days in a local studio working out a new ballet, then devise a few Broadway-style numbers for an out-of-town theater and afterward race back to Purchase to teach his modern dance class at Manhattanville College.

The scenery varies, the dance vocabu-lary changes and so do the techniques of the dancers. During a recent break — a short one — from all the hopscotching, Mr. Pucci admitted that it can be trying. “But it’s also fun,” he said. “I’ve learned how to do it.”

One of the things that helps him focus as he bounces from, say, the elite profes-sionals of the Joffrey Ballet in Chicago to nondancers at Hartford Stage is his home base, the three-bedroom colonial on a hill in Mount Kisco that he shares with his wife, Ellen Sirot, a top hand model and a former dancer, and their 9-year-old daugh-ter, Lana.

And sometimes his travels take him around the county rather than the coun-try. This past week, for example, his lat-est dance, “The Inevitability of Desire,” received its world premiere at Manhat-tanville’s spring dance concert (April 2

to 5). And on April 3, Mr. Pucci, named the Westchester Artist of the Year by Arts-Westchester, was to receive the award — the organization’s most prestigious — at a celebratory luncheon.

Awards are not exactly a novelty for him. He started out as an athlete, aiming to teach physical education. But dance class in college changed his direction, and he became a dancer, most notably with the popular Pilobolus. In 1986, he founded his own company, Peter Pucci Plus Dancers, probably best known for flinging them-selves across the stage along with Fris-bees, basketballs, badminton rackets and other sporting goods in “Pucci: Sport,” which they have performed in theaters across the country and at Madison Square Garden. Mr. Pucci has garnered numer-ous awards for his choreography, which, whether all-out slapstick or gorgeously lyrical, is always readily accessible. And last year, he won a Lucille Lortel Award for the off-Broadway musical “Queens Boulevard.”

The show’s characters reflected the borough’s diversity, and Mr. Pucci’s vivid choreography drew on dance vocabular-ies from India and Japan, disco and hip hop. He is equally eclectic when it comes to his musical inspirations, using Prince, k.d. lang and Vivaldi to score some of his work. For the Manhattanville concert, he

settled on a muscular percussion piece by Blue Man Group.

Now in his second year as Manhat-tanville’s artist-in-residence, he noted that he especially relishes the “residence” part. “It’s the first time in 20 years that I’ve had an anchor for my schedule,” he said. And the best part is that the anchor is so close to home.

A native of Baltimore, he came to New York in 1980 “with a duffel bag and $50,” and quickly got the Pilobolus gig. Moving to Westchester was never part of the plan. But then he saw Ms. Sirot performing and fell for her instantly. He had been living in the West Village; she had an apartment on the Upper West Side. When they began hankering for a weekend place, they de-cided to consolidate, selling her apartment and buying the house in Westchester from the woman who had lived in it since it was built in 1925. “She gave us a really good price,” he said, “because she liked us. She didn’t want to sell it to anybody else.”

They slowly began to “morph,” he said, from being people who were in Westchester for the weekend to people who were “two minutes from the Kisco train station and 50 minutes from Grand Central.” After five years, they gave up the apartment in the Village and made the house their home, helped along by the ex-ample of their neighbors.

“Cynthia Anderson, who used to be with American Ballet Theater, lives right behind us,” he recalled. “Another dancer lived down the road. Four or five dancers from New York were all in this little com-munity.” He met Iris Salomon, the former dancer who founded Barnspace, the non-profit performance studio in Katonah; he met local musicians and began commis-sioning pieces for his company. “I started doing stuff locally,” he said, “and once people knew I was in the area, they started reeling me in to do other things.”

More than anything, choreographers need warm bodies and a space to move them around in. Mr. Pucci found them readily available in Westchester. Instead of traveling into the city, hiring dancers and renting studio space, he could workshop a ballet with dance students at Purchase College, where he was a frequent guest teacher.

“I started finding ways to make living in the area work,” he said. “For me, it’s been the best of both worlds. I’m close to the city. But then I can do a lot up here — I get free studio space at Barnspace when-ever I need a place to go. If I get a bal-let commission, I can go to Purchase and say, ‘I need six dancers for two or three days.’ “

Most Manhattanville students are not quite on the same pre-professional track as the ones at Purchase. But “The Inevitabil-ity of Desire,” a high-energy romp for nine women, is nonetheless a kind of homage to them. “It came out of the rehearsal pro-cess,” he said. “There are a couple of these young dancers who are just shining in it — desirous of dancing, and dancing well, and dancing full out. And there’s this underly-ing feeling of community among these girls, who’ve worked with each other and have become a very good ensemble.”

Mr. Pucci, who doesn’t reveal his age in deference to his wife’s modeling career, said it reminded him of his own early days in dance, and of the connection he felt to the others coming up along with him. “Being in the business and dancing all the time,” he said, “you forget about those things. It’s nice to see these young dancers dancing with such confidence and strength.”

Michael Posnick, director of the dance and theater department at Manhattanville, said that Mr. Pucci’s presence has some-thing to do with that. “He’s raised the bar quite a bit,” he said. “I’m really happy that he wants to stay.”

Janet Durrans for The New York TimesA TEACHER Peter Pucci with Jeanette Perk and other dance students at Manhattanville College, where he is the artist-in-residence.

Arts and Entertainment

At Home in the Studio, and Always on the Move

THURSDAY, APRIL 2, 2009

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In the middle of an award-winning choreog-raphy career, Peter Pucci joined the circus.

For the past 18 months — when he hasn’t been teaching Juilliard first-years how to approach a script or choreographing and teaching at Manhattanville College or helping to stage musicals — Pucci has been thinking about jugglers and acrobats.

Starting Thursday, the fruit of the Mount Kis-co choreographer’s labors fills the Big Apple Circus’ big top in Lincoln Center’s Damrosch Park, as the circus’ 33rd season begins its New York run.

This season’s circus, aptly titled “Dance On!,” marks a change on several fronts at the one-ring wonder, where no seat is more than 50 feet from the action.For one, it’s the first season under artistic director Guillaume Dufresnoy, who succeeds founding artistic director Michael Chris-tensen.

For another, there’s Pucci, a former Pilobolus dance troupe member, whose contribution has broken the mold of the little circus.

He uses the artists’ downtime to make “Dance On!” even more playful, inventive and family friendly than past seasons at the playful, inventive, family-friendly circus.Instead of having the separate acts appear, perform and then sit backstage awaiting the curtain call, Pucci has created a community of players through dance.

For example, when the members of the Chi-nese Hebei Wuqiao Acrobatic Troupe aren’t performing, or getting ready to go on, they take to the ring and balance basketballs on their heads or join in the dance moments that fill the spaces between the acts.

The central character of “Dance On!” is Mark Gindick as Man Who Dances, a character who mixes clowning with an irresistible love of dance that proves infectious. When Man Who Dances starts moving to the music, the acro-bats, contortionists and jugglers can’t seem to keep from joining in, wordlessly answering his call to let loose.

The effect is a more playful circus. And play is exactly how Pucci managed to get Kenyan pole climbers, Chinese acrobats, Mongolian contortionists and an Ethiopian juggler to ac-cept his plan for “Dance On!”

For four weeks in upstate Walden — where the circus takes shape each summer — Pucci gathered the international cast to build those dance moments that carry one act to the other.

He had to overcome circus conventions and language and movement barriers to get the artists to buy into his concept.

He did it over a three-day “creative period.”

“I had hula hoops and basketballs and um-brellas and Frisbees, all kinds of props that I thought would be appropriate,” he says. “I started playing and I got them to start playing. I didn’t know that the Chinese (acro-bats) could balance balls on their heads. Or that the Mongolians (contortionists) are re-ally good with hula hoops. I tried to find out what their other talents were outside their acts.”

“They loved it, because I don’t think they ever get to do that, to just play,” he says.

Pucci says that once he won over the artists, they sought his feedback on their acts.

“They’re very eager to have input from the choreographer because they don’t usually have that. I’ve had my hand, movement-wise, in everyone’s pies.”

Pucci also had to make sure to give the artists ample time to warm up for their real jobs, ones not associated with Man Who Dances.

Running off to choreograph the circus isn’t too far a stretch for Pucci, a fixture in the world of dance and a former member of the dance-theater troupe Pilobolus, masters of form and balance.

“In a weird way, the circus fits all of the things I’ve done — dance, theater, Pilobolus — and I’m working with all different kinds of artists so all the skills I have are being used to the fullest.”

His playful approach in “Dance On!” has its roots in “Pucci Sport,” a dance piece he con-ceived in 1999 that integrated baseball, bas-ketball, Frisbee and other sports into dance.The takeaway from his circus work is simple: “How to get people who are nondancers to invest in making movement. I’ve done that a lot, but I’ve learned that circus people — who are very much specialists — are very eager to do other things. Because it gets boring do-ing the same thing.”

Pucci has made a career out of rarely doing the same thing.

He has choreographed for groups ranging from the Joffrey to Chautauqua to American Dance Festival and Dance Theater of Harlem.

In 2008, he was nominated for a Drama Desk Award for outstanding choreographer and won the Lucille Lortel Award for Out-standing Choreographer for his work on “Queens Boulevard (The Musical).” He won a special Drama Desk award for his work on “Orphans’ Home Cycle,” nine newly adapted plays by Horton Foote.

In 2009, ArtsWestchester named him West-chester Artist of the Year.

He works with Juilliard’s new drama students on their approach to scripts and is in his fourth year as artist-in-residence at Man-hattanville College in Purchase, where he choreographs, teaches and produces dance concerts.

He’s also helping singer-songwriter Sloan Wainwright find the right movements to accompany her new songs. And in June, he worked on the musical “Johnny Baseball,” directed by Diane Paulus, who also directed the recent Broadway revival of “Hair.”

Still, the circus timetable was different from his dance work.

“You spend two weeks choreographing a 15-minute dance six hours a day,” he says. “This has been more like working on a musical.”

Before he choreographed for Big Apple, Pucci was a fan.

He and his wife, the hand model Ellen Sirot, have taken their daughter, Lara, to see the one-ring circus for 9 of her 10 years.

“It has been great to be on the other side, behind the scenes,” he says. “Besides learn-ing a few words of Swahili and Mongolian and Chinese, it has been a great ride.”

Photos by Vincent DiSalvio/The Journal News: (Top) Mount Kisco’s Peter Pucci inside the big top of the Big Apple Circus in Manville, N.J., the first stop for “Dance On!” which Pucci choreographed. The circus opens Thursday at Lincoln Cen-ter. (Bottom) Mark Gindick, left, as Man Who Dances, has a little fun with Grandma the Clown (Barry Lubin), in “Dance On!” the 33rd season of the Big Apple Circus.

Running off to join the circusfrom The Journal News, December 2010

National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

Paula WeberKansas City, Kansas & Albany, New York

NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

wylliams-henry.org

Paula Weber received her Bachelor of Arts degree in

Dance from Butler University and her Master of Fine

Arts degree in Dance from Smith College. She has

studied ballet with such masters as Maria Tallchief,

Jean Paul Comelin, Dermot Burke, Basil Thompson,

Larry Long, Marjorie Mussman and Maggie Black.

During her professional career, Ms. Weber performed

solo and principal roles in more than 45 major

works including “Swan Lake,” “Giselle,” “Romeo

and Juliet,” “Coppelia,” and contemporary works

by George Balanchine’s, Agnes DeMille, John Butler

and Alvin Ailey. She has worked with many choreog-

raphers such as Bill T. Jones, Laura Dean, Charles

Moulton and Kevin Jeff. She has been a member of

the Milwaukee Ballet, Lyric Opera Ballet of Chicago,

Chicago Ballet and the Indianapolis Ballet Theatre,

and guest artist with the Hartford Ballet.

She is currently a member of the Wylliams/Henry

Danse Theatre and is a principal dancer/ballet mis-

tress with the Albany Berkshire Ballet. In 1996, Ms.

Weber was invited to be a guest instructor of ballet

for the Shenyang Conservatory of Music, Shenyang,

China, making her the second American ballet

master to visit that conservatory. Ms. Weber was

the recipient of the 2001 Muriel McBrien Kauffman

Excellence in Teaching Award presented to her by

the Conservatory of Music and Dance, University of

Missouri-Kansas City. Of most recent acclaim, Ms.

Weber choreographed “Toccata e due Canzone” for

the Kansas City Ballet, and a successful “Carmina

Burana” for the Kansas City Ballet and the Albany

Berkshire Ballet, Albany, NY.

www.berkshireballet.org

National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

Video Excerpts of Ms. Weber’s workTo view the video click on the image.

NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

T H EALBANY BERKSHIRE BALLET

Carmina Burana ------------------------------------------------------------------Choreography by Paula WeberMusic by Carl Orff Costumes by Victile Donahue

Featuring a dramatic score by Carl Orff and spellbinding choreogra-phy expressing the universal themes of love and springtime, revelry and darkness by Paula Weber. When premiered by the State Ballet of Missouri in April 1996, the St. Louis Dispatch described the ballet as a “compelling masterwork of dance, music and song”.

In order to set her choreography to Orff’s unorthodox work, Ms. We-ber studied the history from which Carmina Burana is said to derive. The poems were selected by Orff from writings by medieval poets known as goliards who wrote satirical verse in the so-called “gut-ter Latin” and were performed by minstrels and jesters, much of it blatantly profane, seasoned with pagan ritual, despite the widespread Christianity of the time.

The poems were preserved over the centuries by Benedictine monks, for whatever reason and the choreographer employs the metaphoric presence of the monks as she develops the delicate tread of a sto-ryline. ‘The monks read the poems,” she explains, “And they think the poems.” This image of the monks’ thinking the poems is the spiritual force driving the work forward. They appear on the stage in the ominous opening passage as dark-cloaked figures. Springtime is approaching and the monks must release the poems from their minds for the earth to reawaken to seasonal growth. Four monks remain on-stage, sitting and thinking while the remainder disrobe, reveal-ing nude-appearing bodies in flesh-colored leotards. The cycle of life begins to play itself out as Adam and Eve, the wheel of fortune, good luck and bad luck – until the conclusion of the work with the onset of winter, when the poems must be reabsorbed into the minds of the monks to be preserved for the next seasonal cycle.

“...a strong statement to an equally strong piece of music.”

...Berkshire Eagle

Original choreography by John Butler, original costumes by Ruth Morley. First performed at the New York City Opera, November 19, 1959, by Carmen DeLavallade, Glen Tetley, Veronica Mlaker and Scott Douglas. Ruth Morley. First performed at the New York City Opera, November 19, 1959, by Carmen DeLavallade, Glen Tetley, Veronica Mlaker and Scott Douglas.

National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

Year Choreographer Original NCI Working Title Premiere date Title Company

2004 Choreographers

Ann Marie DeAngelo “The Guy in the White Shirt” 2006 “The Guy in the White Shirt” Marymount Manhattan Dance Ensemble; NY

Peter Pucci “Whisper on the Wind” 2004 “Whisper on the Wind” Snowy Mountain Range Dance Festival; WY

2006 “Whisper on the Wind” Symphony Space; New York NY

James Sewell “Modular” 2004 “Anagram” James Sewell Ballet; Minneapolis MN

2006 “Anagram” James Sewell Ballet; Joyce Theatre, NY

Lynne Taylor-Corbett “Appalachia Stories” 2005 “Jamboree” Carolina Ballet; Raleigh, NC

2006 “Jamboree” Carolina Ballet; aired on Public Television

2005 Choreographers

Val Caniparoli “Untitled” 2006 “Violins” Richmond Ballet; Richmond VA

Christopher d’Amboise “Untitled” 2006 “The Studio” South Coast Rep; Costa Mesa, CA

William Soleau “In Passing” 2007 “In Passing” Ballet Gamonet; Miami FL

Luca Veggetti “Subject Forgotten” 2005 “Subject Forgotten” Paris Opera Ballet; Paris France

2006 “Subject Forgotten” Cincinnati Ballet; Guggenheim Museum, NY

2008 “Cloudscape - Moon” Saarbruecken Festival; Germany

2006 Choreographers

Ron De Jesus “No Fixed Points”

Graham Lustig “Yield” 2007 “Yield” American Repertory Ballet; Ballet Builders, NY

Charles Moulton “A Rope into the Water”

Gina Patterson “Broken” 2007 “Cryin’ Out” Nashville Ballet; Nashville TN

Adam Hundt, Corina Gill, and the NCI ensemblechoreography by Melissa Barak photos by Dave Friedman 2007

NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

Year Choreographer Original NCI Working Title Premiere date Title Company

2007 Choreographers

Melissa Barak “Yueh Fei”

Frank Chaves “Untitled 1” & Untitled 2” 2009 “Tuscan Rift” & “Sentir em nos” River North Dance Chicago; IL

Edwaard Liang “Untitled” 2007 “Vicissitude” Morphoses Ballet; Vail Intl Dance Festival

2007 “Vicissitude” Morphoses Ballet; City Center, NY

Jerry Opdenaker “Fragments” 2007 “Bailame” Ballet Gamonet; Miami FL

2008 Choreographers

Amy Seiwert “SoCal Sketch #1” & “SoCal Sketch #2”

Edmund Stripe “Shortened Suite”

Emery LeCrone “Expressions of Leaning into Light”

Ma Cong “French Twist” 2009 “French Twist” Smuin Ballet; San Francisco, CA

2009 Choreographers

Sidra Bell “Iconography”

Deanna Carter “Ash to Glass” 2010 “Ash to Glass” Ballet Quad Cities; Ballet Builders, NY

Rick McCullough “Weather” 2011 “Weather” Florida State University

Olivier Wevers “Hush-Hush”

2010 Choreographers

Ann Marie DeAngelo “Process: Discovery and Integration” 2010 “I’m Really Dancing” American Ballet Theatre II Career Transitions for Dancers Gala

Helen Heineman “Pieces for Eight”

Viktor Kabaniaev “Series of Unrelated Events” 2011 “Series of Unrelated Events” Sacramento Ballet; CA

Peter Quanz “Luminous” 2010 “Luminous” Hong Kong Ballet; China

Chronology of NCI works and their premieresThe choreographers chosen for NCI are not required to produce finished works during their time here. Their mission is only to create, to stretch themselves artistically, and share what they’ve learned with the NCI audiences. Many of the participating choreographers have chosen to expand upon their work at NCI and have taken these works to various companies across and U.S., Europe and Asia.

Click on each choreographer’s name to learn more about his or her work.

National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

2011 NCI Ensemble

Women:

Alissa Dale Nevada Ballet Theater

Corina Gill Boston Ballet

Nadia IozzoKansas City Ballet

Kalin MorrowNevada Ballet Theater

Emily RamirezBallet Met

Kateryna SellersLouisville Ballet

Maggie SmallRichmond Ballet

Andrea Vierra Nashville Ballet

Men:

Grogori Arakelyan Nevada Ballet Theater

Andrew BraderBallet Met

Christian BroomhallHubbard Street Dance Chicago

James Fuller Ballet Austin

Dustin James Ballet Met

David NealRichmond Ballet

Thomas Ragland Richmond Ballet

Christopher StuartNashville Ballet

Apprentice:Karen Wing

The ensemble of professional dancers that is assembled each summer is an integral part of the success of the National Choreographers Initiative.

The dancers come from various companies around the U.S. to spend part of their summer for the sole intent of taking an active part

in the creative process.

They all arrive with a strong background in ballet technique, but they must have much more to give. They must be versatile and adaptable to many

different styles of dance, open to suggestion, and willing to try something they’ve never done before – and be able to learn a lot of choreography

in a very short time.

Each dancer works with two choreographers while they are here. For the three weeks of the Initiative, the dancers work 6-8 hours a day, six days

a week. They start their days by taking class for an hour in the morning. Then they rehearse with one choreographer for 3 hours in the morning.

After a lunch break, they rehease for another 3 hours with the second choreographer. The schedule requires incredible stamina,

both physical and mental.

NCI also provides an opportunity for southern California audiences to see some of the fine dancers from some important regional companies that

rarely, if ever, tour to the West Coast.

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NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

American Repertory Ballet

Atlanta Ballet

Ballet Austin

BalletMet

Ballet Pacifica

Ballet West

Boston Ballet

Carolina Ballet

Company CContemporary Ballet

Eugene Ballet

Festival Ballet Theatre

Hubbard StreetDance Chicago

James Sewell Ballet

Kansas City Ballet

Los Angeles Ballet

Louisville Ballet

Nashville Ballet

National Ballet of Canada

Nevada Ballet Theatre

North CarolinaDance Theatre

Richmond Ballet

Sacramento Ballet

Slovene National TheatreOpera and Ballet

Smuin Ballet

State Street Ballet

Tulsa Ballet

Zurich Ballet

From 2004-2011 dancers from the following companies have been represented in the NCI ensemble.

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National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

NCI DiscoveryThe three weeks of the National Choreographers Initiative culminate in a public showing of the work that has been created during the project.

Each choreographer gives a short introduction to his or her work, which is presented in coordinated rehearsal clothing. A lighting designer works with the choreographers to give each piece an appropriate atmosphere.

The last step of the NCI process is about providing insight. After all the pieces have been presented, Molly Lynch brings the choreographers back to the stage to take questions from the audience, and each other, and get audience feedback on the work.

Every NCI project is unique and different than the summer before. It’s an eye-opening journey into creation and the world of dance. NCI Discovery has become the must-see dance event of the summer in southern California.

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NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

CALIFORNIA DREAMIN’If you’re not at the Irvine Barclay Theatre on July 22 to see the newest choreography of Ron De Jesus, Graham Lustig, Charles Moulton, and Gina Patterson, it’s a safe bet you’ll get another chance. The choreographers are in Southern California at the invitation of Molly Lynch, director of the National Choreographers Initative. Each year since 2004, NCI provides tudio space at the University of California Irvine, for three wekks, and shows the results in a public performance attended by the artistic directors of dance companies who are shopping for new works to add to their repertoires.

In just two years, NCI has established itself as an incubator that gives new choreography a large footprint. In March, for instance, Richarmond Ballet premiered Val Caniparoli’s piece created at NCI in 2005. Lynne Taylor-Corbett’s Carolina Jamboree became a full-evening work for Carolina Ballet and aired on public television in January 2006. Ann Marie De Angelo’s Guy in the White Shirt from 2004 (pictured with Eddie Mikrut of Nashville Ballet and Hitomi Yamada of BalletMet) was performed in New York by students of Marymount Manhattan College this May, and Peter Pucci’s Whisper on the Wind is on the fall bill at Symphony Space in New York. www.nchoreographers.org

– Karen Hildrebrand

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National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

By LAURA BLEIBERG The Orange County Register

There are few places in this country where choreographers are told, “Go ahead – make whatever kind

of dance you want.” The third annual National Choreographers Initiative (NCI), a private, nonprofit program done in partnership with the Irvine Barclay Theatre, is one.

Directed by Molly Lynch, NCI brings together four choreographers and 15 dancers at UCI’s dance studios and lets them “play,” without any strings attached. The choreographers get rehearsal time, a stipend and the freedom to experiment. They might complete a dance, but they do not have to.

Ron De Jesus, Graham Lustig, Charles Moulton and Gina Patterson are this year’s

participating choreographers. An informal, works-in-progress showing is scheduled for Saturday at the Irvine Barclay Theatre.

Here is a snapshot of the choreographers and what they have been working on:

RON DE JESUS

Age: 43

Based in: New York City,

Résumé: Independent choreo-grapher, former member of Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, and original cast of “Movin’ Out.”

Working title:”No Fixed Points”

Music: Selections by composers Owen Belton and David Lang

• What have you been working on?

“Since this (NCI) was sort of a lab to kind of mess around and explore, I thought it would be

interesting to do a pointe piece. ... And I found it extremely difficult in the beginning. I think I was favoring the females, what their capacities were, their capabilities, and I stopped choreographing from within. Then I just realized, ‘Take the pointe shoes off.’ It wasn’t coming out naturally. So we took the pointe shoes off, continued to work, and then about four days into it, I decided to go back to the pointe shoes. I said (to myself), ‘Don’t give up. Push, push.’ Because I wanted to go back to my comfort zone. So it is exactly what the program is designed to do, to allow you to have that exploratory process to see what will you discover about yourself and the dancers.”

• Are you using a different working process?

“Yes. Usually when I start a piece, I have soft music and we do

a therapy and we have exercises and we keep a journal and we get very ‘Kumbaya.’ We just have a wonderful spiritual journey. ... This process was different. I came in aggressively. There was a resistance; it was a different way for me to work, a different way for them to work, and then all of a sudden, a light bulb came on.”

GRAHAM LUSTIG

Age: 51

Based in: New Brunswick, N.J.

Résumé: Artistic director of American Repertory Ballet; choreographed ballets for Scottish Ballet, American Ballet Theatre and many others.

Working title: “Yield”

Music: piano pieces by Philip Glass and selections from different techno bands.

Play timeThe National Choreographers Initiative allows four artists the freedom to create and challenge themselves.

The Orange County Register DANCE Sunday, July 16, 2006

OUT OF THE MOLD: NCI’s opportunity for experimentation drives choreographers in various ways. Graham Lustig, above, looks to surrender to the creative flow, while Charles Moulton, at left, seeks new inspiration in the beauty and innocence of centureis-old music.

NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

OCRegister.com• What is the piece you are working on?

“My idea was the word ‘yield.’ And because this is a very unique project, without begin indulgent, I wanted to yield to my fancy, to my wish, as a choreographer and to move away from the critical voice that sits on my shoulder at all times when I’m in the studio and try to shut that up and try to go with the flow. So ‘yield,’’ on the one hand, it speaks of giving up, surrendering to a pressure of some sort. But yield also has another meaning, which I also found very fine and that was the meaning of return on investment, of harvest. So the idea of working with a group of dancers over this period of time and taking that as the harvest and investing that into the work ... that’s what I’ve been exploring.

“I’d love to feel that I’ve come away from here and my horizons have been broadened further, that I haven’t narrowed myself ... My goal, I suppose, is to explore the music of Philip Glass. Contained within his repetitiveness is such an exhilarating amount of movement and change and yet it seems like something that is static....”

CHARLES MOULTON

Age: 51

Based in: Oakland

Résumé: Independent director-choreographer; dances made for White Oak Project, Joffrey Ballet,

Lar Lubovitch and many more; choreography for “The Matrix Reloaded.”

Working Title: ”A Rope Into the Water”

Music: Various violin sonatas and partitas by J.S. Bach.

• Tell us about your piece.“I am making a completely

different kind of work than I’ve made in the past. My work has been post-modern, which means it deals with very formal structural investigations often using unusual vocabulary in combination with new structure of some kind. (J.S.) Bach’s structure is as old as structure can be. It’s really A, B, A, B. That’s it, and that was interesting to me – to go ‘What if I am actually working with a very old structure. How would I animate that?’ And the result is very, very emotional. The vocabulary is very expressive, very emotional, quite spare in some ways. ... I’m trying to say, ‘What about this speaks to me and to people in an audience? Why does this music still work? It’s 400 years old. It’s still very moving, very passionate, very important, and it says a lot about the dignity of the human spirit. I think it says a lot about the revivification of life and death, how this cycle works for us.”

• In what ways are you using this experience to make something different from what you’ve done before?

“Another aspect of this which is very interesting for me that I have not explored ... is that this (music) is very beautiful and I think that beauty in the world of modern art has gone out of fashion. There’s an uplifting quality to it and an innocence to it, which I find very childlike and quite attractive. I have a niece and a nephew who are 16 and 12 and some of this work, I’m thinking, well, maybe I’m making this for them. Maybe this is something that is about aspects of our emotions that are not sophisticated, that are not ironic. ... How does one make a work of art that is emotional without it being idiocy, without it being mindless sentimentality? And Bach is doing this.”

GINA PATTERSON

Age: 36

Based in: Austin, Texas

Résumé: Principal dancer Ballet Austin; choreography for Hubbard Street 2, Ballet Florida and others.

Working title: ”Broken”

Music: Selections by Nashville musician Gary Nicholson and Alberto Iglesias’ soundtrack for the movie “Talk to Her.”

• What have you been working on?

“It’s the first time I basically came (at a dance) with nothing (prepared), and so for me that’s

very different. I had one (dance) phrase as an idea that I started with. I have a commission from Nashville Ballet for next year and so my idea for coming out here was I would workshop what I’m doing there, so I would have more time with it. I’m going to be working with a musician, Gary Nicholson, and it’s going to be live. The recordings I have are fully produced and what we will have in Nashville is Gary is going to play the guitar and sing and maybe have a pianist. So the sound of the recordings will be quite different. So that got me thinking, how does that change if you choreograph to one piece of music, and then you change it (the music)? What does that look like?”

• In what ways are you using this experience to make something different from what you’ve done before?

“I just wanted to get back in touch with ‘What do I have to say right now?’ and really let it be about the process. When you have commissions, you’re working for an end. I think it’s really important to have some time to feel creative and let it go in another direction if you want it to. I feel I’ve made a lot of discoveries – even though it’s only been a week and a half – that I think will be instrumental in my future as a choreographer.”

CONTACT US: 714-796-4976 or [email protected]

A MATTER OF MOTIVES: Choreographer Gina Patterson says she rel-ishes the chance to be creative outside of her commission work. REACHING: De Jesus works with Gina McFadden.

National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

Un programa intensivo de

3 semanas es un foro a la creatividad

Por Gloria Díaz Excélsior

Durante cuatro años, 15 bailarines y cuatro coreógrafos se han reunido en la Universidad of California, Irvine, como parte de la “Iniciativa Nacional de Coreógrafos” (NCI, por sus siglas en inglés). Los bailarines aprenden cuatro piezas originales creadas por cada uno de los cuatro coreógrafos que asisten al programa intensivo que está bajo la dirección de Molly Lynch. El final del proyecto es la presentación pública de los cuatro ballets creados durante las últimas tres semanas. Recientemente, Excélsior tuvo la oportunidad de conversar con el coreógrafo Frank Cháves y con el bailarín Gilmer Durán sobre sus experiencias en el

programa. Ofrecieron su propia perspectiva sobre el particular.

LA PERSPECTIVA COREOGRÁFICA

Residente de Chicago, Frank Cháves ha sido desde 2001 el único director artístico para la Conpañía de Baile de River North Chicago, a la que se unió en 1992. Esta es la segunda vez que el bailarín de 47 años de edad ha participado en el programa NCI. Aunque nacido en Cuba, Cháves fue criado en los Estados Unidos. Ha sido miembro del Ballet Hispánico de New York, algo que dijo “tuvo sentido para mí física y emocionalmente”.

¿Cuán importante es ser un latino en esta industria? Mientras más viejo me pongo más importante es ser latino. Cuando trabajaba con coreógrafos, ellos comentaban acerca de la pasión en mi trabajo y empecé a reconocer las diferencias y era que yo soy latino y cubano.

¿Qué significa estar involucrado en NCI?

Esto es un lugar donde uno puede llegar para hacer cualquiera cosa que nos haga feliz. Para un coreógrafo tener un lugar como éste es un sueño que se ha vuelto realidad.

¿Qué has aprendido de esta segunda participación en NCI? Disfruto cuando he obtenido la oportunidad de hacerlo de nuevo. La gran lección es saber que puedo venir aquí y hacer un trabajo coreográfico completamente diferente.

LA PERSPECTIVA DEL BAILARÍN

Nacido en Barquisimeto, Venezuela, Gilmer Durán ha trabajado con el Ballet Nacional de Caracas y estudió en la Fundación Arte Nuevo por dos años. Al llegar a los Estados

Unidos, Durán se convirtió en miembro del Tulsa Ballet, pero dejó la compañía después de media temporada. A los 34 años ya ha cumplido su cuarta temporada con el Eugene Ballet/Ballet Idazo.

¿Cuán importante es ser latino en esta industria? Al pensar que estoy aquí e intentando hacer algo diferente, descubro un cierto sentido de propiedad de lo que hago. Y eso es lo que ser latino representa para mí.

¿Qué significa para ti participar en NCI? Te concentras en trabajar en lo que necesitas trabajar, lo que es el proceso. Hay algo que es muy regocijante para el bailarín o el coreógrafo, ésto es el proceso creativo. El ambiente es perfecto.

¿Cuál es la parte más difícil de estar aqui? Desde todos los aspectos esta es una gran experiencia, pero la parte más difícil es la estámina y el entrenamiento. Tener que entrenar todos los días y esforzarse hasta el límite todo el tiempo porque al final del día es lo que te hace mejorar como bailarín.

Coreógrafos y bailarines juntos en la NCI

COREÓGRAFO: Frank Cháves está participando en el Programa “Descubrimiento / NCI” por segunda vez. (Fotos cortesía de Irvine Barclay Theatre)

BAILARÍN: Nativo de Venezuela, Gilmer Durán interpretará el sábado lo que será la culminación de su entrenamiento en un programa de tres semanas.

NCI Discovery 28 de julio, 8 p.m. Irvine Barclay Theatre 4242 Campus Drive, Boletos: $22 - $28 www.thebarclay.org

SEMANA DEL 27 DE JULIO AL 2 DE AGOSTO DE 2007

NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

ShowTHE ORANGE COUNTY REGISTER • SATURDAY, JULY 26, 2008

By DEBRA LEVINE SPECIAL TO THE REGISTER

A choreographer’s life can be lonely, Molly Lynch observes. She should know. The Orange County native has worked closely with choreographers her entire career – first as a professional dancer, then as director of Ballet Pacifica, and lately as artistic director of the annual National Choreographers Initiative (NCI). “When choreographers arrive in a new town on assignment,” Lynch explains, “they live in the local hotel, and work long hours alone in a dance studio. They make the dance, transfer it to the cast, and then leave.” Choreography is a particularly hard gig in the ballet world, she notes, because “commissions come as part of a larger package. A ballet’s theme, music, length, set and costume design, and lead dancers are all often predetermined.” NCI provides a break from this system. Four selected choreographers create new compositions over a three-week period, using 16 professional dancers hired especially for the summer program. This annual Orange County “dance laboratory” closes its fifth summer session with a showcase tonight at Irvine Barclay Theatre. “NCI grants these

burgeoning artists the luxury of making a work of their desire. They choose their own music, theme and cast. That’s a significant gift to creative people,” Lynch says. “They’re granted the freedom to experiment, noodle and tweak for three weeks – with or without a finished product.” In principle, an entire NCI creation can land in the waste bin. Or only three good minutes of a 10-minute dance may be usable, finding its way into a larger work at another time. Many ballets do reach fruition. According to NCI officials, a dozen of the pieces begun here have been premiered or further developed and performed elsewhere in the U.S. and abroad. “Some choreographers arrive at NCI armed with a specific commission,” Lynch says. “Gina Patterson came with one from Nashville Ballet. Val Caniparoli had one from Richmond Ballet. Lynn Taylor-Corbett began her Appalachian music piece here, and then expanded it to a fullevening work for

Carolina Ballet.” NCI fellow Edmund Stripe finds the “no results necessary” policy astonishing, but in a good way. Says Stripe, “I’m used to working on deadline, so the open-ended concept is a bit alien. But it’s great.” Stripe’s abstract ballet, set to music by minimalist composer Marc Mellitz, will be on view tonight.

Lynch is devoted to the evolution of the art form: “I lean toward ballet dancers

and choreographers. The dancers we hire all speak the language of contemporary ballet. I want to support this vocabulary because I feel ballet choreographers don’t have as much opportunity as those working in modern dance.” “Many major ballet companies run in-house creative workshops,” Lynch says, “including

Pacific Northwest Ballet, San Francisco Ballet, and New York City Ballet. But

there’s no independent program comparable to NCI.” Experts at a national level praise the program. “It’s fantastic,” says Sasha Anawalt, director of USC Annenberg Cultural Journalism Programs. “It’s so important to give choreographers the chance to work in a relaxed atmosphere on something that is not ‘Swan Lake.’ “Also, Molly has very good taste in recruiting talent.” Some are puzzled by why the performance is one night only. This is a strategic decision by Lynch: “The performance is not the point; it’s about the threeweek process. We videotape the show and the audience Q&A, all for the

choreographers’ benefit.” One innovation this year is youtube.com/ncidance, where videos of daily studio sessions are posted. “The video diaries give our audience insight into a ballet’s origins. You can see that dance phrases are not set in stone; they’re molded, like clay sculpture,” Lynch says. “You see that dancers have input into choreographic decision making. This takes place in rehearsal. NCI is dedicated to the value of that process.” “We want to demystify our art form so audiences understand there is no right or wrong in interpreting a dance. It’s not fixed. Choreography evolves,” she says.

‘Dance lab’ results go into action onstageThe annual National Choreographers Initiative gives artists freedom and support to create new ballets, which will be performed tonight.

EYE ON THE PROCESS: Artistic director Molly Lynch watches the dancers and choreographers during the National Choreographers Initiative in June 2007.

National Choreographers Initiative • www.nchoreographers.org • July 12 - 30 , 2011

The program’s four dances were over, and the applause faded away. But most of the Saturday-night audience at the Ir-vine Barclay Theatre remained rooted to their seats.

Chairs materialized onstage, and it was time for “Ask the Choreographer,” a favorite part of the annual National Choreographers Initiative (NCI) works-in-progress showing. One man wanted an explanation for dance-maker Rick McCullough’s choice of music: a full 15 minutes of airraid-siren noise (by com-poser Michael Gordon).

“I knew it was going to become a chal-lenge for the audience,” McCullough ad-mitted. “There’s no escaping the emo-tional intensity of it. It’s about being afraid.”

Then he added: “I beg your pardon if it was hard to listen to.”

Getting an explanation from an art-ist, let alone an apology, is one of the reasons that NCI has become one of the most popular Southern California dance events. The independent, nonprofit NCI, run in partnership with the Barclay The-atre and UCI’s Claire Trevor School of the Arts, attracted a near-capacity crowd Saturday.

Nearly everything about it defies con-ventional wisdom. The pieces are in-complete and often experimental; they are performed by a pickup group of 16 dancers from mid-size troupes across the United States, with nary a star in the bunch; and the choreographers are little known outside the dance world.

But NCI, now in its sixth year, sells tickets to those who want a behind-the-scenes look at the mysterious and nor-mally private process of creation. As movies such as “Center Stage” and tele-vision programs like “Dancing With the Stars” have demonstrated, there’s an al-lure to dance’s backstage scene, which even sophisticated events like NCI can tap into.

Every year the NCI works-in-progress showing attracts neophytes, die-hard dance fans, local arts administrators and usually a surprise out-of-town guest or two. On Saturday, international star Vladimir Malakhov, now a dancer and di-rector with the Staatsballett Berlin, was spotted.

The director of NCI is Molly Lynch, former artistic director of Ballet Pacifica and now a UCI professor, and she served as host and moderator. The participants have been in Irvine since July 6 practic-ing six days a week for nine hours day, she explained. The 16 dancers were cho-sen from 100 applicants, a record num-ber. The choreographers have no condi-tions on what they can make, and they retain the rights to their works. (The per-formance is not reviewed.)

First up was Deanna Carter, a ballet mistress and professor at the University of Iowa. With five days to go before the showing, Carter said she finally put mu-sic (excerpts from compositions by Ezio Bosso and Gary Eistler) to her composi-tion, “Ash to Glass.”

“I came here without a preconceived idea of what I wanted to work on,” she explained, adding that the creation pro-cess would go on back home.

“So for me...,” she continued.Lynch gently touched her arm. “You

can’t tell everything,” Lynch said, and the two women left the stage so the eight-person lyrical piece could begin.

McCullough’s rapid-fire work “Weather” was second. “One of the things I set out

to do was to develop my own personal contemporary ballet vocabulary,” said McCullough, a professor at Florida State University.

New York resident Sidra Bell, the only one of the four who has her own com-pany, said she had been experimenting with gestures for her piece “Iconogra-phy.” She commissioned a vocal score from her father, jazz musician Dennis Bell.

“I’m very fascinated by hands and up-per body. One of the dancers told me, ‘I’m still trying to understand your lan-guage,’ ” she noted.

“Hush-Hush” was last. Created by Oliv-ier Wevers, a principal with Pacific North-west Ballet, it was an exploration of clan-destine relationships, and was framed by a shadow play scene in a doorway.

Like the others, Wevers began with movement before music. Well into the process, he still couldn’t choose between harpsichord compositions by J.S. Bach and Philip Glass. Stumped, he turned to his collaborators.

“I let the dancers vote,” he said, re-vealing just how democratic the fabled artistic process can be.

-- Laura Bleiberg

Dancers perform Deanna Carter’s “Ash to Glass.” Credit: Ringo H.W. Chiu / For The Times

Culture MonsterALL THE ARTS, ALL THE TIME

JULY 27, 2009

Choreographers Show Works in Progress

NCI Discovery July 30th at 8pm • Irvine Barclay Theatre • www.thebarclay.org • Click here for tickets>>

Events • laweekly.comJuly 23, 2010

National Choreographers InitiativeSat., July 31, 2010 at 8:00pm

Irvine Barclay Theatre

GOOD GOLLY MISS MOLLYBy Ann Haskins

Hardly the capital of the cutting edge, Orange County nonetheless harbors passionate proponents of contemporary dance. Exhibit one: Molly Lynch, who showcased new choreography during her years leading Ballet Pacifica, where she built an audience that trusted her taste in dancemakers and dancers. That audience followed Lynch when she left Ballet Pacifica and established the National Choreographers Initiative.

Now in its seventh year, NCI has again recruited four choreographers, who range from the known and established -- Anne Marie deAngelo and San Francisco’s Victor Kabaniaev, with the less familiar; Europe’s Helen Heineman and Canada’s Peter Quanz, who are given three weeks to explore new movement with 16 dancers. With professional ballet dancers on hiatus during the summer, NCI consistently attracts a high caliber of dancers from major U.S. ballet companies. With Lynch as moderator, the postperformance Q&A offers insights into the choreographers’ process. Catch a preview of the choreographers and dancers preparing atthebarclay.org.

Location

Irvine Barclay Theatre4242 Campus Dr.; Irvine CA