Email Author Deborah Jowitt
A choreographer dies; the work lives on. Or does it? And if the artist in question has created and maintained a company devoted to the... More >>
Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company More >>
The year: 1985. The place: Dance Theater Workshop. A man and a woman stand shoulder to shoulder, close to the audience, to perform Susan... More >>
Lets face it. Choreographers are thieves. Like magpies, they see the glint of bright bits and grab them to bedeck their nestser,... More >>
The Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater's kid sibling, Ailey II, is more than just a farm team to supply the parent company with fresh blood now... More >>
Gertrude Stein was a woman of few words. She wrote few words that became many words words that twisted back on themselves, picking up words... More >>
For once, I didnt read the program. When the lights came up on Stephen Petronios Underland, I watched videos of fiery... More >>
The members of the Merce Cunningham Dance Company are dancing as if there's no tomorrow. And in a sense that's true. These 15 supremely gifted... More >>
Unrequited love, infidelity, revenge, battles for territory and honor, suicide, repentance! Im not talking about spaghetti westerns or... More >>
During the first third of the 20th-century, European art was awash in revolutionary movements. By 1923, dada, with its witty outrages,... More >>
One great theme haunts many of Martha Grahams dances: The hero-artist must descend into the depths, struggle with demons, and experience... More >>
Foray/Forêt. . .the title couldnt be more apt. Trisha Brown grew up roaming the forest in the Pacific Northwest; she worked on... More >>
If you listen to pop music these days, you probably wag your head and jerk your shoulders with the beat. But theres other music that sets... More >>
The adventurous works of the 1960s and 1970s came to be identified as postmodern some time after the question, Is it dance or not? had... More >>
Sometimes I wonder what Paul Taylor's dreams are like (and sometimes I'd rather not know). The first premiere of his company's City Center... More >>
Interviewed by Time Magazine in 1962, Martha Graham described the heroine of her new Phaedra as a phantasmagoria of... More >>
A guy lurches back from the cash bar, carrying overflowing plastic glasses of beer for himself and his buddies. A woman is asked to please go sit... More >>
I saw Susan Stroman's two-part For the Love of Duke as the closer to a mostly kid-friendly New York City Ballet matinee that began with... More >>
Somewhere in the middle of Walter Dundervills entrancing new Destiny 1: Candy Mountain, a performer says, Its all... More >>
This is the second year that Danspace Project has asked various dance artists to mastermind a series of performances in Saint Marks Church... More >>
The man loves to dance! He feels happy, empowered. And what is the dancing that so thrills him? A Swiss traditional form called the... More >>
In the late 19th century, a "spectacle" meant sorcerers and flying fairies, parades, tricks of light, disappearing acts, and, maybe, real... More >>
Sometimes I wish choreographers revealed more about their intentions in titles and program notes; sometimes I wish they said less. Then... More >>
Sarah Michelson is an artist you can trust, even if you're not exactly sure what she's doing. She's brilliant at making apparently simple... More >>
As I worked my way down the aisle of the Joyce, after the opening-night applause for Philippe Saireâs Lonesome Cowboy... More >>
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