meadows school of the arts southern methodist university
Transcription
meadows school of the arts southern methodist university
MEADOWS SOUTHERN SCHOOL OF METHODIST THE ARTS UNIVERSITY Preston Center Dance, Inc. @;)ettiWJ the ci}tit;Jhe.st @;)tan'iJar;().s in ~ance @fJucation 8}Jr;e-@;)choot thr;ow;Jh 8JJr;c1e.ssionat Preston Center Dance, Inc. Salutes the Meadows School of the Arts Division of Dance for their Continuing Excellence in the Arts. DAN CE L! Preston Center Dance Densil Adams, Janis Rosenthal, Directors 6162 Sherry Lane, Dallas, Texas Meadows School of the Arts Division of Dance Southern Methodist University present l~f ~~~~ ~~~Lf L~~Lf~l Spring Loaded March 29-April2, 2000 Bob Hope Theatre CHOREOGRAPHERS Agnes de Mille, Asaf Messerer, Joe Orlando, Larry White ARTISTIC OJ RECTOR Jeremy Blanton LIGHTING DESIGN Susan A. White COSTUME DESIGN Leila Heise STAGE MANAGER Kelsey Altom Kling SEASON SPONSORS WRRlOUf.m The SMU Dance Division's production of Gold R11Jh is funded by a Heritage and Preservation grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. ACT I Suite Johann Music by Johann Sebastian Bach (Suite No.1 for Unaccompan ied Cello) Choreograph y by Larry White Cellist: Kaname Nezu Rehearsal Director: Sabrina Madison-Ca nnon CAST Julius Brewster Jr., Sara Howland, Dana Ingraham, Britt Keel, Traci Klein, Orlando Martinez, Tanee McCall, Sharon Milanese, Cheryl Polvorosa, Jeana Rebers, Shayne Staley, Lori Velazquez, Jennifer Weddel Understudies : Kelli Ahearn and Kandra Oldham The cello suites of J.S. Bach beg to be choreograph ed and danced: each of the six movements takes its form and meter from a different pre-classic dance, such as gigue, courante and minuet. This contemporar y dance work is an ode to the sweetness and light of Bach's musical invention. PAUSE 3 Spring Water.! Music by Sergei Rachmaninoff Choreography by Asaf Messerer Staged by Jeremy Blanton CAST March 29, 31, and April 2 Jacquelyn Dowsett and Royce Zachary March 30 and April 1 Allyson Ashley and Tommy Rapley This dance had to be encored at every performance of the Bolshoi Ballet in London. Arnold Haskell, noted British ballet authority, recalled that the dance "does something that I cannot remember ever having seen before. It uses an acrobatic technique of amazing difficulty to convey with wonderful musicianship a deeply lyrical emotion." The dance creates the illusion of ice turning to water after a cold Russian winter. IS MIN UTE INTERMISSION 4 ACT II GolJRLUh Music by Frederick Loewe Arranged by Trude Rittmann Choreography by Agnes de Mille Re-Staged by Gemze de Lappe and Diana Gonzalez Rehearsal Directors: Shelley C. Berg and Jeremy Blanton Pianists: Elaine Davidson, Jeff Lankov CAST March 29, 31, April 2 March 30, April 1 Jli,onne Jli,onne Traci Klein Parisa Khobdeh Pete Tommy Rapley Pete Chaz Glunk Suz anne Suzanne Daria Nedre Daria Nedre FandangoJ F andan.9o.1 Allyson Ashley, Whitney Birk, Jacquelyn Dowsett, Lindsay Hawkins, Tara Lizak, Tanee McCall, Sharon Milanese, Melissa Peck, Annie Polack, Stephanie Reed, Jennifer Weddel, Alison Whitworth, Janie Ye Allyson Ashley, Whitney Birk, Jacquelyn Dowsett, Lindsay Hawkins, Tara Lizak, Tanee McCall, Sharon Milanese, Melissa Peck, Annie Polack, Stephanie Reed, Jennifer Weddel, Alison Whitworth, Janie Ye MinerJ Minerd Hector Berlanga, Scottrain Corbin, Chaz Glunk, Christian Richards, Antonio Sisk, Carey Villeneuve, Royce Zachary Hector Berlanga, Scottrain Corbin, Tommy Rapley, Christian Richards, Antonio Sisk, Carey Villeneuve, Royce Zachary IS MINUTE INTERMISSION 5 ACT III Y2MUCH (the millennium begins next year) Music by Harold Arlen & Johnny Mercer (One for My Baby) and Lee Morgan (Sidewinder) Choreography by Joe Orlando CAST Elizabeth Aillet, Antoine Ashley, Megan Auer, Derrick Gordon, Lindsay Hawkins, Tara Lizak, Daria N eidre, Annie Polack, Kenneth Porter, Elizabeth Prather, Stephanie Reed = = ~ , y 6 The Artists JEREMY BLANTON Jeremy Blanton trained in his native Tennessee, and continued his ballet studies at the School of American Ballet and with Antony Tudor at the Metropolitan Opera Ballet where he danced featured roles. He was Premiere Danseur with the National Ballet of Canada, performing principal roles in ballets by Balanchine, Tudor, Bruhn, and Ninette de Valois. He created the role of Prince Charming in the Emmy award winning production of CindereLLa. His musical theatre credits include My Fair Lady, and Bob Fosse's Chica,9o, where he was personal assistant to Mr. Fosse and coach for Gwen Verdon and Chita Rivera. Mr. Blanton was affiliated with American Ballet Theatre for over a decade as teacher, coach, and associate director of ABT II. He directed the Jeffrey II Dancers before becoming the founding Director of ABT Studio Company. Mr. Blanton was appointed Associate Chair of the Dance Division in the Spring of 1999. JOE ORLANDO Joe Orlando's extensive dance background includes work with Luigi, the M.iami Ballet and others, including teaching for the Alvin Ailey American Dance Center in New York City and The American Dance Festival. He was a recipient of the Award for "Excellence in Teaching" presented by the White House Commission on Presidential Scholars. Mr. Orlando has also taught and choreographed for Bat-Dor Dance Company and summer workshop in Tel Aviv, Israel from 1992 to 1995. Former chair of the Interlochen Arts Academy and currently Assistant Professor at Southern Methodist University, Meadows School of the Arts, in Dallas, Texas, Joe tours the U.S. and abroad, teaching and choreographing. LARRY WHITE Larry White has choreographed more than sixty contemporary dance works which have been seen in Russia, Hong Kong, and in numerous cities in the U.S. A former principal dancer in the Martha Graham Dance Company, he has performed in twenty countries and been featured in PBS specials in M.iss Graham's works. He has served on the faculties of the Martha Graham Center of Contemporary Dance and the Alvin Ailey Center in New York, the Hong Kong School of the Performing Arts, and Butler University. He has given master classes and workshops in France, Italy, Sweden, and the Philippines. He is currently an Assistant Professor in the Division of Dance at SMU. 7 l AGNES DE MILLE Noted dance critic Clive Barnes observed that Agnes George de Mille was "one of the architects of American ballet, and one of our greatest native-born choreographers ." De Mille, dancer, choreographer, director, lecturer and writer, was in every way a trailblazer. Her choreography for the Rogers and Hammerstei n musical, OkLahoma/, was a landmark in American musical theater, and she was the first woman to direct a Broadway musical, Allegro, in 1947. She choreographed many notable and popular musical theater classics, including Br~9aJoon, CarotMe~ and Paint Your Wagon. De Mille's ballets frequently dealt with American themes, including the delightful Rodeo, and the powerful FaLL River Legend, a dramatic re-telling of the story of Lizzie Borden. The extraordinary breadth of de Mille's choreographic repertory, the innovation of her musical theatre dances and the scope of her artistic collaborations make her a seminal figure in American dance. GEMZE DE LAPPE I 1 Gemze de Lappe, noted d a ncer, actress, director and choreographer, has been associated with the works of Agnes de Mille for more than fifty years. She was a protegee of the choreographer in the 1940's and 50's, dancing in productions of OkLahoma!, CarotMeL and Paint Your Wagon. De Lappe later joined American Ballet Theatre, and was acclaimed for her performances in de Mille's FaLL River Legend, Jerome Robbins' Fancy Free and Antony Tudor's Judgment of Pari.:!. As an artist in residence at Smith College for thirteen years, de Lappe taught ballet, musical theatre dance as well as Isadora Duncan dance. She has re-staged de Mille repertory across the country, and stage the "Dream Ballet" from OkLahoma! For the SMU Dance Division in 1998. DANCE FACULTY Jeremy Blanton, Associate Chair Shelley C. Berg, Patricia Harrington Delaney, Karen Kriete, Nathan Montoya, Joe Orlando, Larry White STAFF Richard Abrahamson", Lona R. Holt, Jay Majernik", Jamal Mohamed", Mina Polevoy, &lward Lee Smith, Janeen Vestal, Susan A. White " Member lntemational GuilJ ofMuJicianJ of Dance 8 Histori cal Notes for GoLJ RuL1h Agnes de Mille created the choreography for several of Broadway's classic musicals of the 1940's and SO's, including Oklahoma!, One Touch of VenuJ, Carou.Jef and Brigadoon, the last with the renowned musical theatre team of Alan Jay Lerner and Frederick Loewe. In 1951, when Lerner and Loewe were preparing Paint Your Wagon, a new musical recounting the life and death of a gold strike town in 1850's California, they asked de Mille to devise the dances and musical ensembles. The musical's creative team knew that de Mille was able to portray scenes of America's pioneer past vividly and convincingly; her "cowboy" ballet Rodeo, and Oklahoma! were ample evidence of her success. Paint Your Wagond theatrical producer, Cheryl Crawford, stated that she wanted " a robust, earthy piece of Americana," and de Mille promised to make the audiences' eyes "pop." With her innate sense of drama, de Mille contrasted the lusty, vivacious dances of the travelling "fandangos," or dance hall girls, with the moody, self-absorbed meditations of the lonely miners. For the lovers, Yvonne and Pete, originally danced by Gemze de Lappe and James Mitchell, she created two of her most inventive and dramatic duets. The New York TimeJ drama critic Walter Kerr, neatly summed up de Mille's contribution to the musical. "Miss de Mille is the real heroine of Paint Your Wagon" he wrote. "She knows what the form should be, and when she is in command, she gives the show that honest and moving quality which the authors have everywhere aimed at and rarely achieved." The American West was a favorite theme of de Mille's and, in 1958, she returned to her dances for Paint Your Wagon and revised and re-envisioned them for a work entitled Goff) Ru.Jh. Working with music arranger Trude Rittmann, de Mille created a small-scale "danced folk opera" with elements from the earlier musical. Go[() Rwh was broadcast as part of the CBS Seven Lively Arts productions, and it featured, along with de Lappe and Mitchell, singer John Reardon, Beatrice Arthur and former Ballet Russe principal dancer Sono Osato as the exotic Suzanne Duval. In 1973, de Mille briefly revived Goff) Ru.Jh for her own American Heritage Dance Theatre based at North Carolina School for the Arts. 9 The SMU Dance Division's production of GoLd Iuuh is made possible by a Heritage and Preservation grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. The ballet was re-staged for our dancers by Gemze de Lappe and Diana Gonzalez, who was de Mille's last rehearsal assistant. During the reconstruction process, Billie Mahoney, a notator designated by the Dance Notation Bureau in New York, documented the ballet in Labanotation. In addition, we videotaped the teaching and coaching process of the work, and collected critical reviews and articles on de Mille and her choreographic process. The GoLd Rwh!NEA project is part of the Dance Division's continuing initiative to develop and implement the presentation and documentation of twentieth century choreographic masterworks. Through this project, we have executed an initiative that preserves a significant ballet by a major American woman choreographer, created educational and resource materials of perpetual value to dance students, educators, scholars, professional artists and the general public and developed a prototype for future projects in dance documentation and preservation. The SMU Division of Dance wishes to thank the following individuals and organizations for their invaluable help in the revival of Agnes de Mille's GoLJ Rtuh: Or. Barbara Barker Warner, Or. Barbara Cohen-Stratyner, the CBS Corporation and Marilee Martel, the Dance Notation Bureau, Ed Delaney, Marie Jeanne Godwin, Paul Hotaling, the New York Public Library Dance Collection and the New York Public Library Music Collection and Trude Rittmann. 10 Dance Theatre Shop The Pavilion on Lovers Lane 5600 West Lovers Lane Dallas,TX 75209 Phone:(214) 351-2555 Fax: (214) 351-2577 Hours: Mon., Tue., Wed., Fri. &Sat. 10-6 Thursdays 10-7:30 Sundays 1-4 II Production Staff PRODUCTION MANAGER COSTUME CREW Michele McCoy Derrick Gordon, Sion New, Alexandra Rasmussen, Christa.! Walls TECHNICAL DIRECTOR Shane K. Smith SCENE SHOP ASSISTANTS COSTUME SHOP MANAGER Giva Taylor Neil Fleming, Nick Keel, Noah Houghland, Ryan McCallum, Shawn Pfautsch, Jon Snow MASTER ELECTRICIAN David Geel LIGHTING ASSISTANTS SOUND DESIGNER/ ENGINEER Curtis Craig Charles A. Bothwell, Kath erine Campbell, Erin Damron, Kevin Kingston, Brian Weed HEAD CARPENTER SOUND ASSISTANTS Steve Leary Connor Chauveaux, Dewitt Dawkins, Liz Fausek, Korey Kent, Erin Neal SCENE SHOP FOREMAN Eliseo Gutierrez COSTUME SHOP ASSISTANTS CUTTER/DRAPER Melinda Robinson STITCHER Mercedes Rangel OPERATIONS COORDINATOR Ronda Leigh Craig Chad Brinkman, Kat Campbell. Kel.ly Hutchins, Erin Kel.ler, Marika Mashburn, Valerie Moore, Jennifer Spillane, Lynn Suhaskumar SPECIAL THANKS Amanda Taylor, The De Mil.le Foundation and Jonathan Prude ASSISTANT STAGE MANAGERS Nicole Craft, Brian Weed SCENERY CREW Kristen Bramble, Blake Walker ELECTRICS CREW Kelcy Brendsel, Megan Crider, Sarah Marchetti, Matthew Nitc hie, Andres Salaiz DANCE PHOTOS BY Paul Talley 12 SMU I • MEADOWS SCHOOL OF THE ARTS Southern Methodist University CHAIRMAN, BOARD OF TRUSTEES W.R. Howell PRESIDENT R. Gerald Turner PROVOST Ross C Murfin Meadows School of the Arts MEADOWS TICKET OFFICE (214) 768-2787 12:00 p.m. to 5:00p.m. Monday - Friday Open one hour before performances Tickets for upcoming productions in the Meadows School of the Arts may be purchased by phone with an approved charge card and at the Meadows Ticket Office. DEAN HOUSE POLICIES Carole Brandt To ensure a pleasurable theatre-going experience, cellular telephones are not allowed within performance halls. Please note that photography and recording equipment are expressly forbidden at all Meadows performances. Please silence all beepers, watch alarms, and cellular phones. Access is available for the physically challenged. ASSOCIATE DEAN Alan AI barran ASSOCIATE DEAN Robert Stroker ASSOCIATE DEAN Greg Warden DIRECTOR OF EXTERNAL AFFAIRS Tencha Higgins FINANCIAL OFFICER Carleen Naugle DIRECTOR OF OPERATIONS AND EVENTS Greg Brown TICKET OFFICE MANAGER Andy Pate Division of Dance INTERIM CHAIR Robert Stroker ASSOCIATE CHAIR Jeremy Blanton ADMINISTRATIVE COORDINATOR Lona R. Holt 13 PLAZA HEALTH 1949 FOODS, INC. We help your body help itself OFFERING EXCELLENCE IN SERVICE QUALITY VITAMINS & HERBS COUNSELING Soup1 Sandwiche1 E1pte110 Present ad to receive free frozen yogurt INTRODUCES Vera Ferraro, R.M.T. IMASSAGES Specializing in Sports Massages Swedish * Polarity * Shiatsu * Reflexology . Myofasial Release * Pediactric Cancer Patients Plaza Health Foods, Inc.* 6717 Snider Plaza Dallas, TX 75205 * (214)363-2661 * (next to the fountain) SouTHERN METHODIST UNIVERSITY Meadows School of the Arts Dear Dance Patron: The Division of Dance of the Meadows School of the Arts is dedicated to the development of the dance artists of the future. We seek students with intelligence, imagination, talent, and dedication who will flourish under the guidance of our exceptional faculty. The performance you are attending is an example of our collective passion for excellence. Master choreographer Paul Taylor stated that the SMU Dance Division is "Something Dallas can be proud of." Therefore, we ask each of you, as part of our arts community, to join us in our commitment to the finest education and dance training we can provide by making a gift to support scholarships for our students. Your gift will help make it possible for our students to pursue their studies at SMU and expand their horizons through participation in outstanding summer programs such as Jacob's Pillow and the American Dance Festival. Please take a moment to complete the form below, check the box marked "Dance," and mail the form along with your gift to: Development Office Meadows School of the Arts Southern Methodist University P.O. Box 750356 Dallas, TX 75275-0356 Thank you for supporting the dance artists of the future. Sincerely, Jeremy Blanton Associate Chair Division of Dance 0 _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 0 Dr. 0 Ms. 0 Mr. 0 Mrs. Name _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Address _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ __ City _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ST_ _ Zip _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ (H) _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _____c(W) Phone I'd like to support the Meadows School of the Arts with a contribution of: OOther $ _ __ 0$1 ,000 0$100 0$500 0$25 0$50 0 Mastercard 0 Visa 0 Check Enclosed Card# _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ Expiration Date _ _ _ _ _ Signature _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ 0 My employer will match this gift Employer: _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ MEADOWS SCHOOL OF THE ARTS PLEDGE CARD Please make checks payable to Southern Methodist University My gift is designated for: 0 Dean's Discretionary Fund; 0 Art; 0 Art History; 0 Arts Administration; 0 Communication Arts; 0 Dance; 0 Meadows Museum; 0 Music; 0 Theatre; 0 Other