Tuesday, August 21, 2012
Coming up: exclusive interview with Enzo Celli
Enzo Celli's Guest Artist Series at Peridance beings September 7th- October 12th.
Peridance anticipates this exciting workshop with an exclusive interview with the choreographer on Monday, August 27th.
Send in any questions you want Celli to answer!
If you want to know more about the artist you can visit his website,
or
you can attend his show at the Between the Seas Festival!
Celli is a profound mover and choreographer, and this interview is sure to be a deep one (but don't worry, there will be giggles as well)!
Thursday, August 9, 2012
Interview with Nathan Trice of nathantrice / RITUALS
Nathan Trice is filling our studios in the afternoon this week. He and his company nathantrice / RITUALS are here giving all that they have got and hoping that workshop participants do the same. Following rehearsal this Wednesday, Trice spoke with me about his thoughts about his identity as a human being, his company's performance this weekend, and a possible 'made for TV' show.
Find out more about nathantrice / RITUALS' upcoming performance here
Peridance Capezio Center
How's your workshop going?
Nathan Trice It's good.
Class was great. The students seem hungry, so I'm happy about that.
P.C.C. What are you
focusing on for this workshop?
N.T. I just want them
to feel good and breathe. I want them to find a deeper alignment between matter
and breath, and of course have a good time with it, to just relax. My job is to
break (the tension) down.
P.C.C. Describe your signature move
N.T. Undulating and rippling arms
P.C.C. Who do you
admire as a dance artist in New York?
N.T. Ryoji Sasamoto.
He's one of my dancers.
P.C.C. Why?
N.T. He is a bit
surreal. His relationship with space is surreal.
P.C.C. What does that look like?
N.T. He looks like his
is constantly dissolving and forming in space.
P.C.C. When do we get
to see him (and the rest of your company) next?
N.T. We have a
performance this Friday, August 10th, at this space called FreeCandy.
This is going to be
our third episode at this space. The episodes are part of a project called Strange Love, which is about courtship,
intimacy and love, and how four couples deal with those things.
P.C.C. Can you explain
more about the project?
N.T. I've been working
on Strange Love about 4 years
now. We created an episodic performance series which we perform once a
month at FreeCandy. I wanted to do something different, rather than just
have a performance one weekend and then just be done with it.
P.C.C. What is the thing you define yourself as first.
N.T. I am an organism in constant process, In constant expiration. I'm always exploring the process of how things are happening.
P.C.C. What was your first job in new york?
N.T. I was working for these two Italians who rented out an apartment building and ran a delivery service out of it. I thought it was quite entertaining.
P.C.C. And how did you transition to becoming a dancer?
N.T. Well first, the restaurant moved into kiosks in Bryant Park. And then I auditioned for (the dance company) Momix.
P.C.C. What was your worst
audition experience?
N.T. It wasn't really 'the worst,' but it was a
scholarship audition for the (Alvin) Ailey program. My intention at
that time wasn't to go to Ailey. I auditioned as moral support for a
friend. I was standing next to Matthew Rushing, a principal dancer at Ailey,
and he had had 10 years training, and I had just been training for a year and a
half, so it was embarrassing, But I didn't care. I just got up and did it for
the heck of it. And I ended up getting the scholarship.
P.C.C. Any other
notable audition experiences?
N.T. I didn't audition
a lot. I waited until I was confident in myself. I knew that auditions would
make me really insecure, so I said 'let me wait until I feel really in my
body.'
P.C.C. And at what age
was that?
N.T. Oh, we’re getting
into ages now.
P.C.C. Sorry...
N.T. No, it's not a
problem. I started dancing at age 24. I was in the Navy at the time and when I
started (dancing) I had two more years in the military.
P.C.C. That sounds
like a 'made for TV movie'
N.T. You know, Debbie
Allen wanted to make a television series about it. But, no.....
P.C.C. Have you ever said there was something you would never do as a choreographer?
N.T. There's not much I wouldn't do, except make something that was empty of substance.
P.C.C. If you make a piece and you're satisfied with it, is that enough?
N.T. No. If I make it public, and I'm satisfied with it and that's it, that's self-absorbed. There's no consideration for other humans. We have to spend time on audience cultivation. It is (the choreographer's) responsibility to touch your audience with what you have to say.
and Peridance Capezio Center has MORE amazing workshops throughout the year. Learn about them on our website!
Monday, August 6, 2012
What do you want to ask Nathan Trice?
Exciting news! I will be interviewing Nathan Trice this week, and I want to know what questions you have for him!
Nathan Trice's workshop, August 6th to August 10th, promises to be an amazing opportunity for Peridance students. A New York based dancer/choreographer Mr. Trice has trained at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center and with Aulani Chun in San Diego. Read more of his bio here.
Post your questions on the Peridance Capezio Center page and view his answers later in the week on this blog!
Nathan Trice's workshop, August 6th to August 10th, promises to be an amazing opportunity for Peridance students. A New York based dancer/choreographer Mr. Trice has trained at the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center and with Aulani Chun in San Diego. Read more of his bio here.
Post your questions on the Peridance Capezio Center page and view his answers later in the week on this blog!
Friday, August 3, 2012
Class with Sean Curran
Sean Curran used to have to remind himself that dancing was meant to be a joyful experience. "I used to tell the dancers to point their toes!" Curran said in the middle of his weeklong workshop at Peridance Capezio Center yesterday. Now, he says, "I just tell them to smile." With this said, Curran beams with the giddy grin of the Cheshire Cat. The class responds with wide smiles of their own. In four days, Curran has obviously built a rapport and healthily silly relationship with his students. The class is eager to approach dance according to his requests, which include smiling, yawning like you just woke up, and laughing on command. This last task revealed the trust that Curran fosters in his classes. I was taking the workshop for the first time yesterday, and found that laughter was stuck somewhere inside my chest when he asked us to laugh. It wasn't going to happen. I was so caught up in my own judgements of myself that this simple task- one that probably is enjoyable to the participants- would not come naturally to me. I write this not to chastise myself, but rather to explain the true enjoyment that the students seemed to experience at Peridance this week. They were smiling and laughing heartily. And, possibly because their contentment spread all the way to the last tips of the hands and feet, they were pointing their toes, too.
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Hello from the new Peridance Blogger
Well, 2 weeks in to working at Peridance Capezio Center, I think that now might be the appropriate time to introduce myself. My name is Sofia Strempek and I am new on staff at Peridance. I'm going to be taking over the blog, updating it as much as possible with anything and everything exciting happening at Peridance!
I've written for my college newspaper's Arts Section, am published in Salt Lake City's dance journal loveDANCEmore and kind of love everything about dance (Saba's intro Modern class outside the office is making me smile so much right now! Those students are so amazing to watch move so bravely and with such emotion, when they have hardly ever danced before!). I majored in Modern Dance at the University of Utah, moved to New York the day after, and 2 months later I'm here. And I'm sooo excited to be working at Peridance.
I want this blog to be as interactive as possible. I want you to let me know what you want to know about. I want you to tell me what's working, what's not working. This blog is for YOU! You want me to interview someone? Research something for you? I'm in. Let me know. You can always email me at peridanceny@gmail.com
Let's make this fun. First up- taking Sean Curran's amazing workshop. Look for some words on that experience later this week.
I've written for my college newspaper's Arts Section, am published in Salt Lake City's dance journal loveDANCEmore and kind of love everything about dance (Saba's intro Modern class outside the office is making me smile so much right now! Those students are so amazing to watch move so bravely and with such emotion, when they have hardly ever danced before!). I majored in Modern Dance at the University of Utah, moved to New York the day after, and 2 months later I'm here. And I'm sooo excited to be working at Peridance.
I want this blog to be as interactive as possible. I want you to let me know what you want to know about. I want you to tell me what's working, what's not working. This blog is for YOU! You want me to interview someone? Research something for you? I'm in. Let me know. You can always email me at peridanceny@gmail.com
Let's make this fun. First up- taking Sean Curran's amazing workshop. Look for some words on that experience later this week.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)