Thursday, December 9, 2010
Student Dance Festival Rehearsals
Sabatino A. Verlezza decided to submit his SDF piece for the ACDF Regional Conference in March, so we began rehearsals in November. We have had approximately six rehearsals and there are six female dancers. The piece is a journey into the movement Sabatino A. grew up seeing around his home as well as the May O’Donnell modern dance technique that his parents, Sabatino and Barbara Allegra Verlezza, teach and perform. The piece is quirky and fun but always technically challenging.
It was particularly taxing to rehearse this piece in the fall because I was also involved in three dance pieces that were performed at the Dance ’10: TranscenDANCE faculty dance concert. My brain and body were overwhelmed with choreography. I found it particularly difficult to remember the new choreography Sabatino A. taught us because I was still rehearsing the faculty dance concert pieces.
Now that the Faculty Dance Concert has passed, rehearsing Sabatino A.’s SDF piece is much more manageable. We have already completed over two minutes of the piece and are working on “cleaning” different sections. Tomorrow, Friday, December 10th, we will perform Sabatino A.’s SDF piece at a showing for the faculty.
Please come see the Student Dance Festival Concert in the spring! It is going to be an extremely diverse and entertaining concert!
Show Information:
E.Z. Blackbox Theatre in the Music and Speech Building
March 11 & 12 at 8pm
March 12 &13 at 2pm
More information and tickets at www.theatre.kent.edu
--Jessica Mego (BFA Dance Major)
A Letter To The Stage
As graduation gets closer, I can’t believe the overwhelming feeling of excitement that has filled my life with joy. Dancing for the Kent State University Dance Division has been a wonderful journey for me. As I complete my year, I will never forget the teachers and students that have been a part of my educational and life-learning experiences. I love you all-- and remember, the stage is not only for performances, but it is also a part of our life everyday for exploring and performing our talent for dance.
--Tamara Landry (BFA Dance Major)
Caring behind the audition table
--Ebby Howarth (BFA Dance Major)
Dancing with Finger-paint
But then I get hit.
With green paint.
I dream about it. I see glimpses of it as I go about my daily routine. I can feel it squish under my toes and its texture drape across my back. I want to choreograph it. I want to mold the paint through space, spread it across the floor and flick it through the air. The only question now is how. In my mind, it is epic and curious and the most intense finger painting the Dance Divisiont has ever seen.
--Michelle Brown (BFA Dance Major)
For the Love of Cotton
I found them in a thrift store about three years ago for a couple dollars and I think the dance gods up above sent them to me. I’m pretty positive they graced the calves of Hanya Holm in their past life. No matter how many times I leave them behind somewhere, which is extremely often, they find their way home to me. They have become a part of my everyday life, and experienced most of the important moments I have had in the dance department here at Kent State. I do not look forward to the day they will wear out completely and I will have to put them to rest.
This post is to commemorate those special pieces of clothing that have been through thick and thin, sweat and blood, and have always got your back (or calves, in my case).
--Michelle Brown (BFA Dance Major)
American Dance Therapy Association (ADTA)
I am a member of the ADTA, and got a wonderful opportunity in September to attend the 45th annual ADTA conference in Brooklyn, New York. The conference was entitled “Creating the Mind-Body Mosaic: Theory, Research, and Practice in Dance/Movement Therapy." My experience there was wonderful; I attended six seminars in which I learned many new things about dance therapy. I was also able to network with many people and build a professional associate contact list. Out of all of my experiences at the conference, I am most delighted to report is that I was invited to be a part of the new organization, BAAD (Black American and African Descents Affinity Group for Mental Health Practitioners). It is a brand new organization and I have the opportunity to be one of the founding members. I am so grateful for the opportunity to have attended the conference; my eyes have been opened to many new things and my spirit is joyful and excited about continuing my education in Dance/Movement Therapy.
--LaDonna Curry (BFA Dance Major)
Dance’10: TranscenDANCE
--LaDonna Curry (BFA Dance Major)
It's the most wonderful time of the year!
Since fall semester 2008 the freshman dance majors and minors (now juniors) have made a tradition, but not any tradition-- a secret Santa. This has been going on for two years going on three. As we approach another holiday season we have another exciting exchange, this time including fellow upper division modern dance students. It is an exciting time because of the hard work that we've all done this semester, so when this exchange comes around it is like a reward. I can't wait to see all the smiling faces!!!
Now on Dasher, Dancer, Prancer, Vixen, Comet, Cupid, Donner, Blitzen, and good ole Rudolph-- bring secret Santa gifts to all the wonderful dancers of Kent State Dance Division.
--LaRonica Southerland (BFA Dance Major)
Wednesday, December 8, 2010
Reflections: TranscenDANCE
Jerimie, the stage manager, was also especially notable for his direction and leadership skills during the performances. His attentiveness and interaction with cast members was outstanding, as well as the way he kept everyone on the same page, so to speak.
As a performer, I felt well guided and "taken care of." I was always aware of the time, and of where my costume pieces were. It was most helpful in staying focused for the show. I thought every night progressively became more organized and relaxed. I received excellent feedback from family and friends as well. "One of the best we have seen so far..."
--Diane Skerbec (BFA Dance Major)
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Open Thread for Dance 10: TranscenDANCE
Preparing for Dance 2010
In these photographs are some of the Rainbow Concerto dancers preparing for our rehearsal on the Sunday of tech week for Dance 2010.
--Jessica Kinsey (BFA Dance Major)
Space and Opportunity
--LaRonica Southerland (BFA Dance Major)
Monday, December 6, 2010
Masterclass Benefits
So after seeing the email about this masterclass I thought to myself why not try it, it could be fun! On Sunday I went to the Music and Speech building and went to the dance studios on the first floor. There I met a local choreographer, Desmond Beasley. He had contemporary and hip hop routines ready for us to learn.
First we stretched out our bodies so we were nice and warm. Then he got right to work teaching the contemporary routine first. It was a very interesting contemporary piece. For me I have been doing contemporary for a couple years and never encountered this style before. I would say it had an afro-jazz flair to it. We learned the whole routine then Desmond broke us up into two groups so we could practice it full out, since there were many dancers who showed up. After that we broke up into smaller groups so we each could strut our stuff.
Next was hip hop, which was great fun. The piece was very diverse-- there were spots where you had to hit everything hard and make it powerful and then parts where you could make it playful and flirty. I really enjoyed this dance, and I just wanted to keep dancing! I even remember now and run it in my head whenever I hear the music because I love it so much. With all of these styles in the hip hop routine it really allowed the dancers to show off their different styles and we got to be creative with it also. We also broke off in two groups and then in smaller groups to showcase what you can do.
Masterclasses are just one way you can make yourself a better dancer. Learning different choreography can help you learn how to pick up routines faster in auditions, and they also let you see different choreography that you have never experienced before. That’s why you should take every opportunity given to you. You can always learn new styles, become more diverse, and maybe even get your name out there someday.
--Samantha Bertolino
Dance '10
Check out this picture that has almost all the performers involved in Dance '10 TranscenDANCE.
Until next time...
--Katie Naso (BFA Dance Major)
Verlezza Dance Concert
The concert that I am referring to is the Verlezza Dance concert, which took place in September for DisAbility Awareness Month. This particular concert was performed by the Verlezza Dance Company, consisting of dancers of all types, including those with physical and mental handicaps. Because my modern dance instructor, Barbara Verlezza, was one of the founders of Verlezza Dance, I had the opportunity to dance in a piece, not knowing exactly what to expect.
The performance was absolutely stunning…it began with a duet between Sabatino Verlezza, the co-founder of the company, and a girl who was confined to a wheelchair. They twirled around the stage with such grace that by the end of the dance, I forgot that she even had a disability. This piece was followed by an ensemble that included woman with cerebral palsy dancing as Lady Gaga. It was uplifting to see that these people were able to overcome their so-called limitations to dance for us.
The piece that I had the privilege to be a part of was a large group number comprised of elderly dancers. It incorporated sign language and audience participation, to a song entitled “Angel.” This piece was dedicated to the members of the company who had passed away that year. I was especially moved by the brilliance of the choreography and the power of the movements. I was personally affected by this concert, as my aunt passed away from cerebral palsy this past year. She had never had the chance to dance, or walk for that matter, but I was honored and amazed to see just what those we perceive as disabled have the ability to do.
One elderly disabled gentleman had an important message: just because he has a disability, doesn’t mean that he doesn’t have dance in his heart. This statement moved the majority of the audience, as well as me, to tears. The Verlezza Dance Concert was an eye-opener for all involved, and was nothing like what I expected to experience through Kent State’s Dance program.
I recently changed my major to Psychology, and combined with my dance minor, I plan to pursue a career in dance therapy. I had always been uncertain as to what I want to do with my life, but those dancers were my inspiration. If I can change one life with the power of dance, or make one person feel what I did the night of that concert, then I will have had a successful life.
--Shayna Fischer (Dance Minor)
Wednesday, December 1, 2010
You’re the One That I Want?
This audition was run differently from past KSU auditions. The style was closer to a professional cattle call; everyone danced first, then they were divided into groups to sing. It was strange to see how nervous the change in routine made everyone. There were rumors that Mac, the director, was going to cut people before they would be allowed to sing, and that only superior dancers would be looked at. Everyone looked terrified as they entered the dance call, but the choreographer, Todd, was amazing at making everyone feel at ease. My favorite quote? “Okay. You’ve learned the choreography…now screw the choreography! Entertain us! ... If you’re going to fall on your face, fall with panache!” My main duties during callbacks were to keep headshots and resumes straight, and occasionally offer my opinion. It was interesting to see the way I saw auditions from the people I knew, in many cases my friends, and they way they were looked at by an outsider.
Throughout the whole process, I was so nervous I was shaking occasionally. Nervous for the show, for the actors, everything. I looked at Mac partway though auditions to ask if he still got nervous too… and he told me he was a wreck. Maybe some things never change…
--Sarah Coon (Assistant Director, Grease)
Hair, Make up, Costumes, Lights...Showtime!
One thing that amazes me about concerts (and musicals) is that a week before tech week everything seems to be far from ready. The pieces are either not finished or far from perfect, the costumes have yet to be fitted, and the space is far from everyone's mind. But during tech week a miracle occurs: everything falls into place. The piece is now finished and ready for the audience, the costumes are fitted and beautiful, and the stage is lit and ready for the dancers. Every production goes through the same steps and falls into place the same way. This procedure just adds to the magic and stresses of live performance.
-Jessica Kraft (BFA Dance Major)
Freshman Reflections: Elizabeth Kneiss
--Elizabeth Kneiss (BFA Dance Major)
Art & Movement in the Museum
This was a new experience for both of us and we were not sure what to expect. We were a little early for the workshop so walked around the museum for a bit. One exhibit utilized multi-media and was the combination of different pieces of art. The work showed black and white video footage of a man investigating the site of a serial killer. It was silent so there would be a few seconds of footage followed by text describing the situation. Also in this exhibit were drawings, sculptures, and clothing from the footage. It was very eerie, but I hoped that we would be able to explore it further through the workshop.
There were about fifteen of us. Most were dancers, but a few were artists or dancers dabbling in art. We began our study with Jill in the back room. This room contained artwork that could be touched, which was a relief. There were two walls and two pillars covered in a wallpaper style graphic art that had many shapes and colors. This piece really livened the senses and imagination. Along the wall on the other end of the room were four pieces of art created by students from four different universities, including Kent State University. When dancing “with” the Kent State artwork, I felt a sense of cameraderie because the dance program and art program were being connected in some way. We explored different structured improvisations before joining in groups and creating a short study that we showed everyone. We formed multiple groups and multiple studies with interaction with artwork and dancing “cinematically.”
After a short break, we moved into the exhibit I described earlier and created another short study that exemplified the atmosphere of the piece. There were four groups of 4-5 people and each study was no longer than 3 minutes. One group including the audience, and another used a curtain as a means of controlling what we saw. Because the exhibit featured such a heavy topic, every study was mysterious and melancholy. After this final activity, we had a short discussion before ending the workshop.
The opportunity to observe art in a museum and dance how it makes me feel is so rare, and I’m very grateful I went to the MOCA workshop. Experiences like that are not common and Jill was such a wonderful leader and guide. I would recommend a workshop like this to any pre-professional or professional modern artist.
--Jessica Kraft (BFA Dance Major)
Pilobolus Summer Intensive
There were approximately 30 individuals who participated in the Intensive. The participants came from all over the world – Texas, California, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, Maine, Mexico, Canada – with a variety of “movement” backgrounds – professional dancers, college dance students, Pilobolus dancers, martial artists, theatre professors, college theatre students, acrobats, athletes, and many more. The diversity of this group was amazing and everyone contributed a wealth of knowledge.
The five day intensive focused on Pilobolian technique utilizing both individual and partnering work. The individual work included endurance exercises such as running exercises, individual improvisation, spatial awareness exercises, and many other movement explorations. A former Pilobolus dancer also conducted a “rolling” workshop that included techniques for getting into a roll from standing as well as rolling forwards and backwards across the floor smoothly. The partnering work was extensive and challenging. Throughout the workshop we changed partners to learn to work with different bodies. We learned over 15 different lifts and weight-sharing movements. All of these lifts and weight-sharing movements are a part of Pilobolus repertory. The partnering work was particularly eye-opening for me. I have a new understanding of my own body as well as how to share my body weight with others. We also separated into four groups to address choreography. The second piece of choreography that we created aimed at employing what we learned throughout the workshop and was presented in a showing on the last day.
The Pilobolus Intensive was a life-changing experience. I met extremely talented and inspiring individuals, a number of whom have become life-long friends. I discovered new muscles that I never knew existed and gained a new understanding of my body. This truly was one of the greatest experiences of my life and I plan to attend the Intensive again next summer!
--Jessica Mego (BFA Dance Performance Major)
My Time In Arizona: NDEO Conference
I also, for my second time, got to participate in the Passing on the Legacy workshop in which I got to work with renowned dance educator and choreographer Bill Evans. We worked with self made compositions as well as repertory Bill gave us and put them together into one large piece. The workshop culminated in a performance which was presented at the closing reception for the entire conference. It was truly an exciting experience and I met many other wonderful students from colleges and universities around the nation. I would truly suggest anyone interested in the elements of dance education to attend this conference. The organization does a great job of bringing so many wonderful master artists from around the country into one location. Below is a photo of the closing reception performance where I had the chance to partner with a student from Brigham Young University in Utah.
--Sabatino A. Verlezza (BFA Dance Major)
SDF Student Director: My Experience Thus Far...
My main focus for the semester was to set up and produce the audition, in which anyone enrolled in a KSU School of Theatre and Dance studio dance technique class (majors and non-majors) could attend. Going into the process I was unaware of how difficult it could be to organize and find 28 different rehearsal times (2 per choreographer) that fit into the Spring 2011 studio schedules. However, the audition, which took place on October 27, 2010, went extremely well and every choreographer was able to choose a suitable cast that worked with everyone’s schedule.
This wonderful leadership opportunity has already taught me so much, and we haven’t even got into the thick of things yet. Next semester I will be working on other projects such as writing the press release for the concert and creating my premiere piece to contribute to the concert. Again, this position has been great and challenging all at the same time and I look forward to seeing it through to opening night!
--Sabatino A. Verlezza (BFA Dance Major/SDF Student Artistic Director)
Grand Opening at KSU Tuscarawas
The Kent Dance Ensemble backstage and ready to perform Rainbow Concerto!
---Jordan Deckert (Dance Performance Major/Kent Dance Ensemble member)
Tuesday, November 30, 2010
KDE at Performing Arts Center Grand Opening
It was a truly memorable experience for us! The day started at 11:30 AM when 13 company members and guests drove south an hour and 15 minutes to the campus. After settling costumes and dance bags in the chorus dressing room, the dancers explored the facility, checking out the view from the stage (the theatre seats 1,100 people!) and the stairway on which they would be performing. Student Director Katie Naso lead the company in an hour long warm-up and then the real work began.
We had one hour to re-choreography Kim Karpanty’s showpiece “There’s No Business Like Show Business” down two flights of stairs in the lobby, then an hour to rehearse and set the lighting for my own “Rainbow Concerto” on the stage itself. What a joy to dance on a stage with a “sprung” floor! The P.A. Center is intended to draw musicians, comedians, actors, dance companies and even Broadway shows, so the theatre was designed to be attractive to touring groups. Resilient flooring is found in few theatres but what a treat for the lucky performers who find themselves standing (and moving) on this one!
School of Theatre and Dance Director Cynthia Stillings volunteered to accompany us and set lighting for the piece...in an hour...in an unfamiliar space...on new equipment. The result was another Stillings tour de force, as she made the most of the time she had to produce beautiful effects.
Right before the first dance, a photographer, Sean Palmer, from Solid Rock photos, was setting up his equipment to provide complimentary photographs to the guests. We grabbed the opportunity to take a company portrait. Ten minutes later, the dancers were on the staircase, much to the surprise of the 600+ guests in attendance in the theatre lobby!
But there was much more in store for them. The guests proceeded into the theatre where KSU President Lester Lefton, Dean Andrews of the Tuscarawas campus, the Mayor and various state and local dignitaries welcomed everyone and thanked the community whose support made the performing arts center a reality. They stressed that the center would be an engine driving the local economy forward, as people come to the region to enjoy performances, have dinner and visit the surrounding Amish countryside. At a time when so many people see the arts as a “frill” that can be cut from schools, grants and life itself, this came as a refreshing ray of true vision.
School of Music faculty member Jerry Wong performed several pieces by Frederic Chopin on the facility’s new Steinway piano and then it was our turn again.
To the music of Antonio Vivaldi, the 13 KDE members flew across the space as if this was their home theatre. The audience responded with extended applause and throughout the rest of the evening, dancers received many well deserved compliments on their performance. A mere 11 1/2 hours later, we were back in Kent, OH, and several of the dancers got just enough sleep to return to campus for a 9:30 rehearsal the next morning.
Many people think that going to college is “hiding out” from real life, but this day at the KSU-Tuscarawas Performing Arts Center was a very “real world” experience as far as dance is concerned. As a professional, you have little time to adapt to new theatre spaces; you just have to go in and get the job done and do it well. And that is exactly what the Kent Dance Ensemble members did on Nov. 19.
Thanks to Cindy and all of the people who made this performance possible: to the fine faculty members who contribute so much to all the students in the Dance Division; to Dave Burrington and the costume area who had to push to get the costumes ready; to the staff members who helped facilitate the transportation arrangements; and especially the folks at the Tuscarawas Campus, who were so helpful to us in rehearsals and backstage and provided food for the dancers. And my deepest appreciation goes to the dancers themselves—their hard work over the entire semester paid off with a beautiful realization of the choreography.
We get three more chances this semester to “dance the rainbow” at the Dance ’10: TranscenDANCE concert in Stump Theatre on the Kent Campus Dec. 3-5.
--Andrea Shearer (Assoc. Prof./Dance Division Director)
Stump Stage Welcomes Back Dancers
Spacing rehearsals on stage are a very important part of the performance process so that we, as dancers, can reconfigure our movement patterns to the stage space before adding costumes and lighting.
I was thankful that I remembered how cold such a large theatre could get and brought lots of layers to warm up in. Thankfully warming up did not take much time as we run through the dance several times in order to work out pathways and patterns of movement to more appropriately fit this space.
Being that it was our first time on stage this season I was very impressed how little effort we had to put in when it came to changes of staging. This is probably due to the fact that our dance studios are now so much larger in our new space, so we did not have that much extra length to add to our previous movement patterns.
Please come see what we have been working on over this semester in Dance 2010: TranscenDANCE on December 3-5. It will be a very entertaining concert!
--Colleen Weiher (BFA Dance Performance Major)
Tamara Landry: Reflections
--Tamara Landry (BFA Dance Performance Major)
Kent Dance Ensemble at the Roe Green Center Opening
--Jessica Kinsey (Dance Performance Major)
Thursday, November 4, 2010
Reflection: Hosting our First Audition
Also, for a select few of us, we had to create movement phrases that were simple enough to teach quickly but had elements that could show us what the dancers could do. Some elements used in the phrases were speaking, improvisation, both slow and fast movement, movement across the floor, movement on the floor, and some very basic partnering. Jessica Mego and I created a phrase that used a lot of movement on the floor and abdominal control.
Our phrase was only four 8 counts long but included an improvisation at the beginning and end. By both creating and teaching this phrase we had to learn to be both succinct and accurate in demonstrating what we wanted from the dancers, both in the choreography and improvisation sections.
Having this whole experience as part of our journey towards a degree is extremely helpful to my future. Whether I become a choreographer and use this beginning knowledge to build upon for future auditions, or at least to understand what all goes into the audition and selection process for a cast or company.
-Colleen Weiher (Junior BFA Dance Major/2011 SDF Choreographer)
Tuesday, November 2, 2010
Kent Dance Association Masterclass with Desmond Beasley
Desmond Beasley's technical dance history began in Fall 2005, when he first enrolled at the University of Akron where he majored in Dance and Business. Originally from Cleveland, Desmond began dancing is his middle school and high school show choir. Desmond won many awards at various show choir competitions in and out of Ohio, including outstanding performer, most dynamite performer, and best male soloist. In spring of 2007 at the University Desmond was awarded a dance scholarship from one of the dance faculty members. Desmond’s first self-choreographed piece "State of Circumstances" was chosen to be part of The University of Akron’s Dance Company Fall performances. The piece was modern/contemporary dance, and was about everyday emotions, and breaking points in life. Each fall semester faculty members choose a student's work which they feel will fit best in the faculty show. Akron News Now.com wrote, " Once intermission started, the crowd looked and found that it was a student who choreographed the dance. The audience was surprised that a student could create something so professional. "State of Circumstances" was perfect." While in college Desmond has performed with the University of Akron Dance Company and various students works. He is also a member of the Akron based hip-hop group ILL’U’SYN. This group performs all around the Akron, Canton, and Cleveland area but has also traveled to New York, Florida, and Nashville for various hip-hop competitions. ILL’U’SYN has been seen on BET’s 106 & Park, BET’s Spring Bling, and BET’s Blaze the Stage. Desmond specializes in Hip-Hop but also studies ballet, modern, tap, jazz, african dance, and jazz phunk. Desmond was given the title of Artistic Director at his studio in Canton, Ohio, "The Turning Pointe School of Dance." Just recently moved back from Las Vegas, Desmond now does some choreography for the University of Akron's Dance Team and also Marietta College Dance Team and teaches dance at various studios and cities across the state of Ohio.
--Amanda Black (BFA Dance Major/ KDA President)
Monday, November 1, 2010
Student Dance Festival
This past Wednesday, October 27th, our group of fourteen choreographers conducted our first audition to cast for SDF. We have all been anticipating this experience for a long time! Many talented dance students attended the audition, and we felt very lucky with how many were interested in being a part of the performance. After the audition concluded, we chose our casts of dancers in an organized and successful fashion. Each choreographer, including myself, was more than pleased with the results. I personally cannot wait until January 2011, when we are able to begin rehearsing. Words can neither express my thanks to everyone who is involved in this process, nor describe my excitement for what is to come next. I hope to see everyone at the performance this spring!
--Jordan Deckert (Junior Dance Performance Major)
Kent Dance Association's Hula Masterclass
We learned a series of five different combinations. Each and every hula dance had a story line with hand gestures that mimicked the words. In Hula the hands tell the story. One of my favorite combinations was called "keep your eyes on the hands." This hula dance was rather humorous. The story was, whenever you're watching a hula girl dance, don't keep your eyes on her hips, just keep your eyes on her hands.
In hula there are names for every step. The main one is the Kaholo, which is: step together, then step together to the right and left with swaying of the hips. Another one is Ami, which is rotation of the hips from the right, to the back, to the left and back to the right or vis versa. The main hula movement is a Kaholo with one arm straight and the other bent. Both hands move like you are petting a very tiny kitten. The motion is very gentle and soft. If you are moving to the right, the right arm is straight and if moving to the left, the left arm is straight. The head always followed the hands in the direction you are moving.
This class was an amazing experience, and I don't know when the next time will be when I can take a hula class. Vicki made the class fun and very interesting to learn about. We had a great time and I would recommend taking new styles of dance to everyone because it gives you more variety and makes you a better dancer!
-- Amanda Black (BFA Dance Major/KDA President)
Thursday, October 28, 2010
A Message from the Kent Dance Ensemble
We have many exciting events throughout the year. This year we have already provided a Lecture/Demonstration at Twinsburg High School. We will be traveling back to Twinsburg next week to teach a jazz and hip hop master class. If you are planning to attend the Roe Green Center Grand Opening you just might get a glimpse of the talented Kent Dance Ensemble. You have to look closely though because at first glance you might miss us :)
Keep checking back throughout the year for more Kent Dance Ensemble news. Below you will find a picture of us...sadly one of our dancers was not present in the picture. If you come to one of our events you can figure out which dancer is missing!!
See you soon!
-Katie Naso (Dance Major/KDE Student Director)
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
E-Inside Profile of Dr. Yuko Kurahashi
--Bill Sallak (Asst. Prof./Dance Music Director/Moderator)
Tuesday, October 5, 2010
Student Perspectives: Emily Perrott
I've only been here a little over a month, but I'm already beginning to learn so much about myself as a dancer. One of the most amazing things I've witnessed thus far is the growth of my Modern I class on Fridays during Improvisation. At first, we each seemed a little bit unsure about putting themselves out there in front of the class. As the weeks went by, the class began to feel more comfortable, dancing from their heart in front of their peers. It's been a wonderful experience watching our class grow and find ways to use each other to create our own individual movement. This class was a great way to begin my journey at Kent State and help all of us to come out of our shells in this new and sometimes scary environment.
Friday, October 1, 2010
Upcoming Production: Cloud 9
Make sure you get your tickets for the upcoming performances of Cloud 9! The box office phone number is (330) 672-2497.
You can read Director Eric van Baars' thoughts on the production here.
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Guest Artist Spotlight: Melanie George
Last week the Dance Division welcomed back Guest Artist and former KSU Faculty member Melanie George for a Sept. 21-25 Choreography Residency. Now running the Dance Minor program at American University in Washington, D.C., Melanie taught a Modern and Jazz class and worked every night (and all day Saturday) creating a new jazz work on members of the Kent Dance Ensemble.
With Student Artistic Director/Rehearsal Director Katie Naso taking notes, the cast includes Amanda Black, Jessica Kraft, Sharon Kriz, LaRonica Southerland and Sabatino A. Verlezza. Images of smoke, Audrey Hepburn and Leslie Caron, Edie Sedgwick, the Velvet Underground and beat chicks all contributed to the development of the work, which will be performed April 1-3 as part of the Kent Dance Ensemble concert.
Melanie was thrilled with (and a little jealous of ) the spaciousness of the new Roe Green Center dance studios, the proximity of the dance offices and our location with Theatre and Music just down the hall! A Friday night dinner with Dance faculty members gave a chance for us to catch up with one another and compare ideas about where our dance departments are heading. There was lots of laughter and wishes to get together more often.
In return for Melanie’s work on our students, Associate Professor Kimberly Karpanty will be creating a work on Melanie’s students this coming spring for their dance concert.
I guess we should now consider the Dance Department at American University a “sister (and brother) school!” Certainly we send out our thanks to them and again to Melanie George for all it took to get away and work with the Kent State dancers.
Note to Melanie: See you in April!
--Andrea Shearer (Assoc. Prof./Dance Division Director)
Saturday, September 25, 2010
AOT Students: Cloud Nine Study Guide
http://dl.dropbox.com/u/361541/Study%20GuideCloud%209%20final%20draft.docx
--Bill Sallak (Asst. Prof./Dance Music Director/Moderator)
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Director’s Statement about the Kent State production of Cloud Nine: How far Have We Come?
This summer, I enjoyed the film The Kids Are Alright, written and directed by Lisa Cholodenko. The main plot concerns two teenagers finding their biological father, who was a sperm donor. The kids have been raised by their mothers, a lesbian couple. I caught a bargain matinee and sat among the retirees and the thrifty folks who enjoy bargain matinees. In looking around me while the previews played, I contemplated just how a middle aged, fairly conservative movie audience would receive the film.
Here is what I discovered: The central relationship, that a lesbian couple raising two children, is just not shocking in 2010. During the sex scene between Annette Bening and Julianne Moore, not one of the senior citizens got up and left or even voiced shock. It has become rather commonplace to see same sex couples engaged in sexual acts in mainstream film, from Showgirls to Brokeback Mountain. Yet, I was intrigued by the comic relief aspect of a sex scene between two major stars and how graphic sex, specifically cunnilingus, was used for humorous effect. The message I took away from this was simple: Laughter = Acceptance.
That reminded me of Carol Burnett’s quote: comedy is tragedy plus time.
Experiencing this film caused me to reflect on Cloud Nine and specifically the relationships between Betty and Ellen in Act I and Lin and Victoria in Act II. If the play uses these two same-sex relationships to illustrate how far we had come in 1979, then shouldn’t we be a lot further along by 2010? Or is just making progress the goal?
Regarding sexual repression: how important is it to one’s psyche to be sexually liberated? How important is our gender, to our identity? How much control does society have over sexual expression/repression?
There are many themes in Cloud Nine. While I do not see it as being primarily a feminist play, I do enjoy the way gender role-play is both reinforced and slapped around for fun. I think the comedy of the play results from how Caryl Churchill blurs the lines of identity. The ambiguity of gender and the one-dimensionality of relationships is both entertaining and unsettling. I envision the design of the show highlighting that ambiguity.
It is a play about identity and the challenges of fulfilling the roles we are given in life, i.e., sexless mother, all-providing father, dutiful child, and faithful servant. The characters in Cloud Nine are identified by only one aspect. For instance Betty is regarded as a dutiful wife, so she is the dutiful wife. Why must we be just one thing to all parties?
I am intrigued with the layers of the relationships in Cloud Nine. There is a pervasive ambiguity that allows the world of the play to bend both time and the nature of relationships. Both Acts contain acts of violence and are overtly sexual. Kiss Kiss, Bang Bang!
I respond to the duality of the characters, not only in how they transform from Act I to Act II, but in how they relate to other characters in their time. Sexual repression is also a big theme in Cloud Nine. I’d like to play with the visualization of sexual repression in the architecture of the characters.
--Eric van Baars (Assoc. Professor/Director, Cloud Nine)
Saturday, September 4, 2010
Auditions for Dance '10: TranscenDANCE
It is always a marvelous opportunity for the faculty to see the new Dance Majors and Minors (AND one of our post-secondary option students), in the audition situation and this group threw themselves into the experience with a determination and enthusiasm that was palpable. I can't wait to see where these talented dancers are four years from now!
But what struck me the most was the growth and development of the dancers from last year to this. I remember the disappointment of some of the dancers last year when they weren't chosen for this experience. The faculty would say he/she "wasn't quite ready." What a difference a year makes!
The progress in technique, maturity, artistry and even just audition skills in these same individuals gave me chills. Truly we all advance in our own time, but it is sometimes hurtful when we don't quite keep pace with our peers. Then to see this beautiful leap past some of those same peers (in certain areas)...well, the dance faculty teaches for moments like these.
I think all of the returning dancers participated in either last year's Faculty concert, joint BFA Senior Concert/Student Dance Festival, Kent Dance Ensemble or "Oklahoma" last year and those experiences were obvious last night. Performing inspires and feeds the dancer's soul, fueling the desire to improve in the classroom throughout the rest of the year. The auditions are like a report card, marking progress.
Of course, we simply could not cast every dancer who auditioned simply because of rehearsal time conflicts. That's always frustrating to the faculty, but we have to cope with that just as the dancers do. Thankfully, at Kent State, there will be ample opportunities for them to perform this year.
The dancers truly inspired us and I look forward to the journey to December 3!
--Andrea Shearer (Assoc. Prof/Dance Division Director)
Sunday, August 29, 2010
Edinburgh Fringe Festival Post #5
My father continually asks me, “Stevie, if anyone would have told you in ninth grade what you would be doing right now, would you have believed them?” My response is always, “...Heheh.” Today, I asked myself that question: Would I have believed them? The answer today was a resounding “NO!” which I shouted from about 250 ft. up on the top of a mountain we hiked today overlooking all of Edinburgh. From there I could see the coast, Edinburgh Castle, and the much larger mountains behind me, making me feel simultaneously small and huge. I got the chance to think, atop the mountain, about what got me here and about the people who helped me do it. Sometimes, in the course of duty in the states, when I’m climbing 20 ft. in the air to fix some widget that absolutely must work for the show to go up, I think about the same question in my head. How did I end up here? I don’t think I want to tell you about it though, because I think I’d rather you thought about it yourself. Not about my experiences, of course, but about your own. I don’t want to turn this into some sort of self-help cathartic blog like PostSecret.com or anything, but here is an opportunity for self-reflection. What got you here? Are you happy here? What can you do to get yourself where you want to be? I know that had I not attended school, this opportunity would never have presented itself and I would not have been qualified to take it. I also know that if I want to achieve more in this career, I need to pursue more opportunities. This one has opened my eyes to a lot of possibilities and new experiences, and I am left wondering what new experiences I will find with opportunities in the future.
It’s difficult to believe we’ve only two more performances left! My apologies for not posting more frequently, but frankly I’ve been too tired! I mentioned that the Fringe is no cakewalk and I was not kidding! With over 2,000 individual theatre companies, some bringing more than one show, the audiences here are not in want of more choice. This makes things very difficult when you consider that we are only a four person team with one show. The advertising is never ending! Every day we walk the streets, handing out postcards to people we think might want to come to see our show. Occasionally, I instead install huge numbers of posters in the windows of friendly shop owners. Then, when a review comes out, I revisit every site like a squirrel revisiting it’s acorn cache, and post strips of paper over all of our posters with selections from the review and the number of stars that we received from them. I’ve worked out the numbers recently, and it looks like I’ve been walking approximately 6 miles every day!
Of course, the entire process would have been much easier in the beginning had I had my tools and office supplies available to me. I did not, however, for the first three days as both of my bags were lost somewhere in Amsterdam! So, unfortunately, we opened the show without the essential supplies that I had packed to rig a projection screen in the theatre, and we did what all theatre people seem to have taken coursework in: we improvised. Our wrinkled screen was ironed in the middle of our apartment and took up more floor space than we actually had! A broom handle briefly became a stiffening rod! Finally, three days later, I was reunited with my bags (containing all of my clothes)! And now I’m very tired. Although it is 9:00 PM in Ohio, it is 2:00 AM here. Until next time, Annyounghasseyo!
Thursday, August 12, 2010
Edinburgh Fringe Festival Post #4
But when I left you, I was talking about hand signals and the fact that they totally worked...for the most part. I hold up my hand and put up either one, two, or three fingers. One finger means projections, two fingers means sound, and three fingers means both together. Then when I extend my arm, they push their respective buttons. Of course, I’ve never called a show this way, so it was a bit of a learning process for myself as well as my crew, and professor Jakyung Seo was instrumental in her role as translator while I explained and rehearsed the system. But we quickly realized that we needed a system in case there was a problem. What happens if they miss a cue? What happens if the actor jumps a line? And out of necessity, the emergency post-it system was born. If an operator believes there is a problem, they raise their hand. I then write on a post-it the number of the cue that I wish to be taken next and hand it to them. Then, the next time that I put my hand down, they execute that cue. Whew! And if I believe there is a problem, I just hand them a post-it with the number of the cue that I want to go next. Thank heavens both of my operators can quickly read numbers in English! The Korean language does not write the same numerals as we do. They have their own entirely unique numerical characters. They are “dok dok ke”, very smart.
The whole process would have been much easier, however, if I didn’t have to cope with having to locate my lost baggage containing all of my tools and supplies while simultaneously trying run and prepare for the tech and dress rehearsals! But that is a story for another time. Until next time, goodbye! Annyounghasseyo!
Monday, August 9, 2010
Very exciting!
Edinburgh Fringe Festival Post #3
These things have something in common: Korean food is extremely spicy, luggage insurance is a good idea, and the Fringe Festival is no cakewalk. Give up? I’ve learned all of these things in...drumroll please...Hello from Scotland! I arrived on the 1st of August actually, but I’ve been so busy that this is the first time that I’ve been able to sit down and write. Even now it is 1AM Scotland time! So, my plan is to split up my experiences from my first few days into a multi-part blog that I will end with a cliffhanger, because I can.
Indeed we have all been very busy, all 7 of us. I joined an already-existing team of South Korean theatre students and teachers, along with Kent State’s own lighting design professor, Jakyung Seo and we have all been living in a flat in Edinburgh about a mile from the theatre that we rehearse and perform in. The day after I arrived - without my bags containing all of my tools and supplies, I might add - we went to the venue, called C Soco, to complete our tech rehearsal. A tech rehearsal, traditionally, is a rehearsal during which we add things like lights, sound, and projections to an already rehearsed show. Usually, theaters will take at least three days to complete this process. We were given four hours...yeah.
Some of the many responsibilities of a stage manager include organizing and conducting these rehearsals as efficiently as possible, and “calling” the show. Calling refers to the responsibility of the stage manager to instruct the various operators of the show - lights, sound, projections, scenery, lasers, pyrotechnics, pneumatic squirrel cannons, etc. - on what to do and when to do it during the show, usually via a headset system. I do not have the benefit of a headset system as our technical booth is open to the audience, and they would hear me talking. Not that it matters, because I do not speak Korean! Instead, I developed a hand signal system. Which totally worked...for the most part...
Also, I told you that I would set up a special email address that you can use to send me feedback, suggestions, or just to comment on a post. You can reach me at steveatthefringe@gmail.com. Until next time, so long from the Edinburgh Fringe Festival!
Wednesday, August 4, 2010
A Message from Dance Division Director Andrea Shearer
With the beginning of August, we are only weeks away from the start of the 2010-11 school year. The date brings on a sense of urgency for faculty and staff as we scramble to prepare for your arrival on campus.
The Dance Division’s move to the new office and studio spaces in Music and Speech is complete, more or less. We are deeply grateful to Ms. Roe Green whose financial support made this move possible and whose love of Theatre and Dance continues to sustain and inspire us.
The studio space is huge, the sprung floors are more resilient than those we have had in the past and the whole place has a feeling of power and energy. Details such as sound systems, projection screens and projectors, a piano and bulletin boards still aren’t quite there yet, but for the most part, we are ready for YOU! DO remember to come to Music and Speech for your classes!
Just one reminder about the Dance Majors/Minors Meeting on Wednesday, September 1 at 6:15 PM in MSP 303. PLEASE NOTE: That is MSP 303, and not the Faculty lounge in the Annex! As usual, there will be pizza and beverages prior to the meeting.
Also, please pencil in Sept. 2 when Dance Majors and Minors are requested to meet in the Black Box Theatre at 6:30 PM. More info on that at our Sept. 1 meeting.
And, while you are at it, reserve Friday, Sept. 3 from 4:15-6:15 for Dance 2010: TranscenDANCE auditions. (Let your parents know you won’t be home for the long Labor Day weekend until a little later!)
This is a unique and special time for Theatre and Dance at KSU; I am so looking forward to sharing this momentous year with all of you.
See you real soon!
—Andrea Shearer (Associate Professor/Dance Division Director)
Monday, August 2, 2010
Edinburgh Fringe Festival Post #2
Hello from Amsterdam! After a six hour flight from New York, I have arrived in Amsterdam and am waiting to board my final flight to Scotland. I am already having an excellent time! Let me tell you, KLM international flights are top notch...apparently. And of course, they are even better when you sit in an exit row. I could have swung a cat over my head in my seat and not hit anyone, had I remembered to bring my cat. And the airport! Oh, man the airport! Coolest airport I’ve ever seen! I’ll upload some pictures if I can figure it out. It’s like a Mall Of America in here! I’ve just returned from eating my honest-to-goodness Dutch Haagen-Daas, while viewing paintings from famous Dutch Masters in the airport art gallery. There’s a library here, where you can choose to read either via iPad or a real paper and glue book in plush 1970s style spherical lounge chairs hanging from the ceiling. Or perhaps you’d like to lounge around or sleep in front of a fire in a nice leather gentleman’s armchair, of which there are several. Or you can get an aqua-massage, where you lay inside of a plastic tarp and they pelt your back with high pressure water. Or...I was thinking on the plane about how bored I would be during my four hour layover, but now we’re forty minutes from scheduled boarding, and I have yet to begin the work I should be doing!
Edinburgh Fringe Festival Post #1
(Moderator's Note: Steve Meshenberg is a KSU Theatre student who is working with Professor Jakyung Seo and the FACE Theatre Company at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival. Steve's agreed to write some blog posts about his experiences there-- we all can't wait to hear how it goes. Congratulations to Steve!)
Hello from the Cleveland Airport! I am sitting in the terminal, waiting to board the first of three planes scheduled to take me from Cleveland, Ohio to New York, then to Amsterdam, then finally to Edinburgh, Scotland some twenty three hours later. When I arrive in Scotland, I will take a black cab to an apartment in the center of the city, where I will live for one month. After finally arriving at my apartment, I will sit down with three theatrical designers and a director/actor and will systematically work through each page of the hour-long play which I will stage manage at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival for one month!
The catch(es): my crew of two, who will be doing the work of three, do not speak English as their first language. They, like the rest of the entire theatrical company - which will be one of over two thousand performing at the festival this month - are from South Korea. We will have one day to prepare, one day to rehearse, and we will open the next night! I have never seen the show and I do not speak Korean.
What I do have are experience and training, and I owe these to my experiences and professors in the Theatre Department at Kent State University. My name is Steve Meshenberg, I am an undergraduate senior theatre major at Kent State University, I am the Stage Manager for FACE, performing at the Edinburgh Fringe Festival during the month of August, I will be blogging about my experiences in working as a technician with an international crew in a foreign country, and I am so ready!
You can check back here for updates on my experiences. I’m not sure how often I will have internet access while I am away, but I will update as frequently as I can! Soon, I will post a special email address, where you can talk back, give suggestions and feedback, or ask questions about my experiences. I’m excited to undertake this experience, and I’m excited to share it with you. As our professor Terri Kent famously says, “Theatre is a communal art form, and our work is not complete until we share it with an audience.”
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
Theatre Alumna Publishes Book
Dr. Bennett received her PhD from Kent State, and taught for quite some time at Alderson-Broaddus College in West Virginia. The book is published by McFarland and will be available in the spring/summer of 2010. The publisher's webpage for the book is here, and you can also pre-order it from Amazon.
Congratulations to Dr. Bennett!
-Bill Sallak (Asst. Prof./Dance Music Director/Moderator)
Monday, February 15, 2010
Music For Dancers: Body Percussion
Body Percussion 1 from Bill Sallak on Vimeo.
Body Percussion 2 from Bill Sallak on Vimeo.
Body Percussion 3 from Bill Sallak on Vimeo.
Body Percussion 4 from Bill Sallak on Vimeo.
--Bill Sallak (Asst. Prof./Dance Music Director/Moderator)
Thursday, February 11, 2010
More great news from T&D alumni!
All,
Hello! I wanted to give everyone back in Kent an update. I was just hired at Lebo's Dancewear working in sales and marketing. It's a full time position with a lot of potential growth. I'm very excited about this position because aside from the desk job portion, it will allow me to travel to dance conventions (and possibly take classes and make connections), help during photo shoots with proper placement/technique of the models, and have a small say in costume designs. The best part is working in a field that is connected to dance.
I also have been dancing for Split Second Sound DJ Company. We do high end corporate events and weddings. We are gearing up for our "Sinatra" gig. We are doing 4 jazz dances for a several corporate events next weekend. Then in April we will be traveling to Richmond, Virginia to perform.
I'm still teaching here in Charlotte. I choreographed my dream dance. It's called "Poison Ivy." We had a costume designer come in and create the exact image I had in my head. The "dance dads" down here built a large cage-like pyramid for the dancers to crawl in, out, and around. The whole experience has been a lot of fun.
I hope everyone at KSU is doing well. I want to thank all the Theatre and Dance faculty at KSU. From "Intro to Dance" to the internship at Porthouse Theatre, and EVERYTHING in the middle, I've been given the tools to start a new and exciting career path on this journey of life. Thank you again!
Mary Vaccani
--Bill Sallak (Asst. Prof./Dance Music Director/Moderator)
Thursday, February 4, 2010
Exciting News from Alumna Kate Leishman
I just wanted to share a piece of exciting news with all of you. I will officially be joining the faculty of Kalamazoo College this spring! I will be teaching a jazz dance class through the P.E. Department. We do not have a dance program here at the College, and the only dance classes currently offered (both through P.E.) are ballet and ballroom dance. So, I proposed a class and it has been accepted.
I was also asked to advise our dance student organization, Frelon, this year. Frelon offers dance "workshops" which are like master classes throughout the year and produces a large dance concert each spring. I am choreographing a piece for their show that is scheduled for April.
It is really exciting for me to continue to work in Student Affairs/Student Activities, but still have an impact on the students through dance. Thank you for all you instilled in me in my four years at Kent. I am excited to carry on that legacy.
Kate Elizabeth Leishman
Assistant Director of Student Activities
Kalamazoo College