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Pillow Life — Nearly Finished

August 14, 2013 by 4dancers

by Ashley David
Who would have thought this suburban/city born and raised girl could have made it for 10 weeks in the woods? I certainly would have never thought so, but it looks like I have! I am more than halfway through my Press/Editorial Internship at Jacob’s Pillow Dance, America’s longest running international dance festival, and I can sufficiently say I am a “Pillow Person.”

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Ashley at work; photo by Christopher Duggan.

For six days a week and on average somewhere between 8-12 hours a day, I am hard at work writing and editing programs and press releases, sending heaps of emails, meeting with journalists, giving tours, and selling tickets at the box office. All of this was in the job description and what I knew would be happening before I arrived here. What I didn’t realize would become such a large part of the experience is all of the other, incredible opportunities of working where the New York Times calls “the dance center of the nation.”

Let me give you just a few of my favorite experiences from Pillow life so far:

  • Dancing at the Jacob’s Pillow Gala next to New York City Ballet legend Wendy Whelan and tap-goddess Michelle Dorrance.
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Michelle Dorrance at Gala 2013; photo Karli Cadel, courtesy Jacob’s Pillow Dance.
  • Eating breakfast, lunch, and dinner with every artist that comes here to perform in the historic Stone Dining Room. I mean, seriously, I casually said good morning to former Batsheva in-house choreographer Barak Marshall, and his mother the legendary artist Margalit Oved every day the week they were at the Pillow.
  • Walking down the stairs of my second floor office to peek into the attached Bakalar Studio (the same studio that Ted Shawn and His Men Dancers used to rehearse and perform in the 1930s) to watch awe-struck as Cedar Lake Contemporary Ballet does a ballet barre.
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Cedar Lake Contemporary Ballet; photo Christopher Duggan, courtesy Jacob’s Pillow Dance.
  • Working in the box office and selling tickets to some of our patrons who have been “coming to the Pillow since the days of Ted Shawn.” I once even had a woman tell me she has a picture of herself sitting on Ted Shawn’s knee from when she was a young girl.
  • Having access to the most comprehensive dance archives in the world. I was doing research to design a Pillow tour specifically for kids and decided to ask for some advice from the Director of Preservation on what to look for in the vast archives. He directed me to a children’s book written about a young girl’s adventure at the Pillow. I opened the front cover and what did I find? A handwritten note from the author to Ted Shawn in 1956.
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Front cover with note for “Janey and the Summer Dance Camp.”
  • Meeting acclaimed dance critics such as Deborah Jowitt, Janine Parker of The Boston Globe, and Brian Seibert of The New York Times. Soon I will also be meeting legendary New York Times dance critic Alastair Macaulay and editor-in-chief of Dance Magazine, Wendy Perron.
  • Spending 45 minutes talking to Kina Poon, the Associate Editor of Dance Magazine, about my experience at the Pillow, her background in dance, and our favorite dance companies—including my obsession with Keigwin + Company.
  • Designing and implementing the kid’s tour to more than 100 children and parents as well as creating a special “Pillow Passport” for kids to bring with them during the tour.
Leading a kid's tour; photo by Em Watson.
Leading a kid’s tour; photo by Em Watson.
  • Hanging out at the Pillow pub after a performance and looking at the table next to me to find none other than the award-winning musician Toshi Reagon, who performed live original compositions for Dorrance Dance’s world premiere of The Blues Project.
  • Taking an hour and half master class with every artist who performs in the Doris Duke Theatre including such artists as Shantala Shivalingappa, Brian Brooks, Tere O’Connor, Michelle Dorrance, and Kyle Abraham.
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Pillow interns with Shantala Shivalingappa and her mother, Savitry Nair.

The list could really go on and on, but this is just a snapshot into what is every day, normal life inside of the Pillow bubble. Most important of all, I am surrounded by staff and interns who are passionate about the same thing I am, and want to share that passion with me. I don’t feel like I am the stereotypical intern doing mindless, unnecessary tasks. What I do matters and what I do would not be completed if I was not here. This sense of responsibility and worth is a priceless part of the experience and something I truly cherish. Not only am I completing my tasks, but also I am learning throughout the entire process. Special intern seminars to teach us about the ins and outs of arts administration are held every other week as well as “lunchtime learning sessions” with various staff members on other topics in the field. If I still feel like I have a specific question, I am encouraged to explore my curiosities and seek answers.

One of my favorite quotes by Edgar Winter states, “I can’t imagine anything more worthwhile than doing what I most love, and they pay me for it.” While I don’t necessarily get paid as an intern right now (although I do get free room and board, performances, and classes) this internship encompasses what I love–in the industry I would like to be a part of in the future. While there have been the occasional bumps along the road, there is nowhere I would have rather spent my summer. My eyes are open to the world around me, and my hunger to succeed in the dance industry as an administrator, performer, educator, etc. is stronger than ever. I only hope that my final weeks here do not completely fly by because I am not so sure I am ready yet for the bittersweet goodbye!

 

Ashley DavidIntern Ashley David is a senior at the University of Maryland, College Park where she double majors in communication-public relations and dance. Her ultimate career goals are to perform dance, teach dance and combine her public relations skills with her passion for dance and become a well-rounded arts administrator.

Currently, Ashley is spending her sumer at Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival as  a Press and Editorial Intern with Jacob’s Pillow Dance during their 2013 Festival Season. She is responsible for conducting media relations with all artists performing in the Doris Duke Theatre, one of two theaters at the Pillow. She will write press releases, show programs, pitches, and media advisories,  maintain a media archive, and create press packets.  She will also be gaining experience working in the box office and giving tours, including a specially designed kid’s tour.

In summer 2012, she had her first experience in the Washington D.C. arts management world as a PR/Marketing intern for the nonprofit organization, CityDance. She spearheaded many marketing, design and public relations projects in the administrative office and worked at the conservatory. In September 2012 she had the privilege of dancing with the amazing CityDance faculty in the first annual faculty show, FRESH VISIONS: under one umbrella. 

During the school year she is the Undergraduate Assistant to the Director of Marketing and Communications for the College of Arts and Humanities at the University of Maryland, College Park. She focuses on managing the website and marketing news and events through digital and social media.

In her spare time, she is the President of  UM UnBound Dance Team, Internal Development Morale Captain for Terp Thon, Event Coordinator and Dance Instructor for the UMD Chapter of Delta Chi Xi-Honorary Dance Fraternity Inc., a member of the Maryland Dance Ensemble, a Student Ambassador for UMD College of Arts and Humanities, a Tour Guide for Maryland Images and a member of Maryland Students for the Arts.

Ashley couldn’t be more excited for the opportunity to intern with 4dancers! Her responsibilities include maintaining, formatting and updating the 4dancers website. Additionally, she writes blog posts, manages social media and link builds with other blogs.

For more information about Ashley, please visit: http://ashleymdavid.wordpress.com/

Filed Under: Editorial Tagged With: ashley david, jacob's pillow, ted shawn

Changing The Field of Dreams: How America And England Can Cultivate More Homegrown Ballerinas

August 4, 2013 by Risa Kaplowitz

Dancer: Jillian Davis Photo: Michael Kendrick
Dancer: Jillian Davis Photo: Michael Kendrick

by Risa Gary Kaplowitz

Last month, New York Times dance critic, Alastair Macaulay, wrote an article on the dearth of American ballerinas. Some dancers felt that his ruminations were unfounded and the article caused an uproar on Facebook feeds and blogs. But, a few weeks later, from across the pond, came an article featuring Carlos Acosta,  Royal Ballet’s principal guest artist and his feelings about the lack of British ballerinas. Since this article was written by one of their own, dancers did more head scratching than head banging when they read it.

In the article, Mr. Acosta says, “If you don’t have talent in your own backyard, you must go and find it.” Certainly it appears that many companies in the United States and England are already doing so. For example, at American Ballet Theatre, christened in 2006 as “America’s National Ballet Company,”  only two of its ten female principal dancers are American. The others are South American (two), Russian (five) and a South Korean. Similarly, in the Royal Ballet, this recent article points out that only one of its female principals is British even as its writer offers up a “who cares” attitude about the lack of homegrown ballerinas.

 

So why are the United States and England losing the ballerina game so severely to countries like Russia and those in Latin America?  There are differences in training but all of these countries possess stellar schools. While Mr. Macaulay never explores the reasons for the problem, Mr. Acosta is on the right track when he ponders, “Maybe it’s because their parents don’t know how to educate them in this [ballet] world?”

 

In fact, parents don’t know how to educate their budding ballerina because they have no idea such potential exists right under their feet. Like any other prodigy, a ballerina is born and then trained. No school can create a ballerina if certain attributes don’t already exist. Yet, if the attributes are not recognized, how can they flourish? Somehow, someway, we must educate parents to understand what a budding ballerina looks and acts like. And it’s probably not what they think.

 

Contrary to the intuition of non-dancers, potential ballerinas are not young girly-girls. Rather, a ballerina usually comes out of the womb with wiry limbs, coordination beyond her years, and a restlessness of body, mind, and spirit. She is a tomboy.

 

In fact, time and again, ballerinas have said that they were tomboys in their youth. They climbed trees, took risks, and played any number of sports very, very well. They may have played dress up, but they wielded a sword while wearing their tiara.

Since we can safely presume that Russian and Latin American parents do not give birth to more beautiful tomboys than American and English parents do, we can also presume that it is what they do with their rambunctious girls that makes them win the ballerina number game. Russian and Latin American parents are more likely to take their athletic daughters to dance schools in order to tame their wild side with lessons filled with discipline and grace. Meanwhile, our sports and gender-equality obsessed countrymen and women are more likely to ferry them to sports teams.

 

Let’s face it, few typical non-dancer parents in the United States would look at their daughter jumping to get her Nerf ball down from the inside of a light fixture and say, “Wow, that high natural jump would be great for ballet!” They would much more likely shout, “Woohoo, we’ve got the next UConn Girl’s Basketball team star right here!”

 

Over the years, I have seen many interviews with American ballerinas who have said that they were tomboys when they were young. The first article that I remember reading on the topic was decades ago when I was a hopeful ballerina myself. It was in 1981, and the People Magazine article on the then New York City Ballet’s wunderkind, Darci Kistler was titled, “At 17, a California Tomboy Becomes Balanchine’s Newest Baby Ballerina”

 

Two of America’s ballerinas whom Mr. Macaulay agrees should be called ballerinas, Gillian Murphy and Sterling Hyltin are both self-proclaimed former tomboys. And a tomboy, too, was Darcy Bussell, the British ballerina that Carlos Acosta so wishes was still dancing so that he could have a Brit “of a sufficient stature for him to perform opposite” in his new production of Don Quixote.

And, while both Ms. Murphy and Ms. Bussell had been avid soccer players in their youth, Royal Ballet’s only current British principal dancer, Lauren Cuthbertson doesn’t “look very different from the skinny, freckled kid from Devon who was taken to ballet classes by her mum in order to burn off her tomboy restlessness” when she is offstage according to this Guardian article. Lucky for Ms. Cuthbertson and the others above that they had moms and mums who thought differently than most.

The quest for the American and English ballerinas could be over within a decade if only active girls with the ballet goods were guided to the barre rather than to the field. However, this requires broader opportunities for dance education and awareness such as public schools embracing dance as either an option or supplement to physical education.

 

Perhaps we need a rescue plan much like those used for near extinct animals, a “Save the Ballerina,” initiative. We must spread the word that while ballet lessons are great for any girl (certainly many who were not former tomboys succeed in having wonderful dance careers), the ones who are the most athletic will have a greater opportunity to be true ballerinas–those female principal dancers possessing enough strength, precision and physical and artistic courage to move mountains let alone audiences. 

In the meanwhile, the next time you see a lanky girl kicking the you-know-what out of her soccer ball, tell her parents to take her to a good ballet school.

Risa Kaplowitz
Risa Gary Kaplowitz

Contributor Risa Gary Kaplowitz is a former principal dancer with Dayton Ballet and member of Houston Ballet and Manhattan Ballet. She has also performed with Pennsylvania Ballet and Metropolitan Opera Ballet and as a guest artist with many companies nationwide.

She was originally trained at Maryland Youth Ballet by Tensia Fonseca, Roy Gean, and Michelle Lees. She spent summers as a teen studying on scholarship at American Ballet Theater, Joffrey Ballet, Pennsylvania Ballet, and Houston Ballet. As a professional, her most influential teachers were Maggie Black, Marjorie Mussman, Stuart Sebastian, Lupe Serrano, Benjamin Harkarvy, and Ben Stevenson. She has performed the repertoire of many choreographers including Fredrick Ashton, George Balanchine, Ben Stevenson, Stuart Sebastian, Dermot Burke, Billy Wilson, and Marjorie Mussman.

After spending ten years in a successful business career while building a family, Risa returned to the dance world and founded Princeton Dance and Theater Studio (www.princetondance.com) and DanceVision, Inc. (www.dancevisionnj.org) with Susan Jaffe, former ABT principal ballerina. Risa is now PDT’s Director, and the Artistic Director of DanceVision Inc. Risa also founded D.A.N.C.E. (Dance As a Necessary Component of Education), an outreach program that brings dance to New Jersey schools.

Risa has choreographed more than twenty pieces, and her original full-length ballets, The Secret Garden and The Snow Queen, premiered with DanceVision Performance Company in 2008 and 2011, respectively. Additionally, she has choreographed for several New Jersey Symphony Orchestra family and school outreach concerts.

Risa is an ABT® Affiliate Teacher, who has successfully completed the ABT® Teacher Training Intensive in Primary through Level 7 and Partnering of the ABT® National Training Curriculum, and has successfully presented students for examinations.

She has lectured the ABT/NYU Master candidates on starting a dance studio. She is most grateful for her teachers who gave and (in the case of ABT® Curriculum) give her the exceptional tools necessary to have had a performance career and the opportunity to train others in authentically. She also feels fortunate to have had the opportunity to dance with and learn from many exceptional dancers.

 

Filed Under: Editorial Tagged With: american ballerinas, american ballet theatre, carlos acosta, royal ballet

Favorite Photos From Inside/Out At Jacob’s Pillow

July 31, 2013 by 4dancers

by Christopher Duggan

You all know by now that Inside/Out – the outdoor festival stage at Jacob’s Pillow – is my absolute favorite place to photograph dancers. The Pillow’s outdoor stage is magical. The trees, the mountains, the sky. Everything is perfect – as long as the weather cooperates!

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Peridance

The festival has already reached the halfway point, so I wanted to share some of my favorites from Inside/Out so far. I’ll let the photos speak for themselves…

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Art of Motion
Tina Croll
Tina Croll
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Art of Motion
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Jeremy McQueen

Contributor Christopher Duggan is the founder and principal photographer of Christopher Duggan Photography, a New York City-based wedding and dance photography studio. Duggan has been the Festival Photographer for Jacob’s Pillow Dance since 2006. In this capacity, and as a respected New York-based dance photographer, he has worked with renowned choreographers and performers of international acclaim as well as upstarts in the city’s diverse performance scene.

Christopher Duggan, Photo by Julia Newman
Christopher Duggan, Photo by Julia Newman

 

He has created studio shots of Gallim Dance, Skybetter +  Associates and Zvidance, among others, and in 2011 alone, he has photographed WestFest at Cunningham Studios, Dance From the Heart for Dancers Responding to Aids, The Gotham Dance Festival at The Joyce Theater, and assisted Nel Shelby Productions in filming Vail International Dance Festival.

Duggan often teams up with his talented wife and Pillow videographer Nel Shelby (http://nelshelby.com). A New York City-based husband and wife dance documentation team, they are equipped to document performances, create and edit marketing videos and choreography reels, and much more.

Christopher Duggan Photography also covers Manhattan’s finest wedding venues, the Metropolitan and Tri-State areas, and frequently travels to destination weddings.  The company’s mission is straightforward and heartfelt – create timeless, memorable images of brides, grooms, their families and friends, and capture special moments of shared love, laughter and joy.

His photographs appear in The New York Times, Destination I Do, Photo District News, Boston Globe, Financial Times, Dance Magazine, Munaluchi Bridal, and Bride & Bloom, among other esteemed publications and popular wedding blogs. One of his images of Bruce Springsteen was added to the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame’s celebrated photography collection in 2010. His company has been selected for inclusion in “The Listings” in New York Weddings magazine.

Filed Under: Dance Photography, Finis Tagged With: christopher duggan, inside out, jacob's pillow

PSA For Small Dance Companies: Why You Aren’t Getting The Press You Want

July 15, 2013 by 4dancers

by Lauren Warnecke, MS

photoI’ve had several conversations lately with small-scale choreographers and company directors who are frustrated by the dance press. The little guys have a hard time getting exposure among the big companies, who always seem to make it into the papers. Since I play both sides of the coin as a freelance choreographer and freelance dance writer, I am intimately acquainted with the dilemma of fighting for press over the heavy-hitting companies.

Commonly heard complaints:

“It’s not fair.”
“It’s always the same people getting reviews.”
“The big companies don’t even need the help from the press.”
“I don’t even bother to read reviews anymore because they just don’t get it.”

Trust me. I get it. But within these statements are a couple of grievous mistakes that aren’t helping your cause.

1. You’re barking up the wrong tree. Time spent researching your press list is well spent. Working your own press isn’t rocket science — it just takes time, persistence, and Google. Sending impersonal releases to editor@bigtimenewspaper.com will get you nowhere fast. If you don’t have the time and the desire to seek out and form relationships with the individuals who are actually going to write about you, then hire someone.

2. You assume we get paid to write reviews. If you’d like to supplement your dance income with something other than waiting tables, I wouldn’t recommend writing. We don’t write for the money, but rather because we love it and want to serve and support the dance community. Like any other artistic endeavor, there just isn’t enough money or time to go around. Many, if not most, independent writers and bloggers are writing for free, making pennies per posts, or have to put sufficient time and effort behind selling advertisements and endorsements on their sites. Page views can also impact our income, which is one reason why it can be beneficial to write about the big companies. Page views to a writer are butts in seats to a choreographer. The network of readers outside the dance community is larger for the big companies, so the review is likely to have a greater impact. Yes, this is a backhanded excuse, but I would argue that small companies who do receive press could have the same impact by sharing copiously with their networks and engaging in the ongoing discussions on publications from which they want support.

3. Butts in seats are not necessarily directly correlated with press reviews. Reviews for dance shows don’t often promote the show reviewed. Let me explain: with the typical one-weekend, 2-3 show format, a review will likely have minimal impact on ticket sales because there isn’t enough time for it to land with readers. The point of getting reviews is not so much driving new audience members to this show, but rather the next one. That’s not to say you shouldn’t share reviews and leverage them to try and persuade people to come, but the real benefit of reviews is in your marketing materials and grant applications for future projects. If the goal is butts in seats now, you should seek previews rather than reviews, or run your show for two weekends and invite reviews to the first. Invite members of the press to view an open rehearsal or request an interview. Use previews in your e-blasts and supporting arguments for why people should come see your show next weekend.

Note: Press comps should be extended to preview-ers as well as potential reviewers. They may not bite (especially after seeing a rehearsal), but it’s good form to offer a comp as a courtesy. Recall #1: we don’t get paid very much and seeing free dance is sometimes our only source of income. And, p.s., I won’t review a show I had to pay for.

4. You may not believe this, but we don’t enjoy writing negative reviews. It’s not pleasant to criticize something that I know has taken a lot of time, effort, and passion to create, but I’m also not interested in lying. To pad a review with unnecessary or unwarranted compliments, in the end, does a disservice to the readers and to the company at hand. If your company has something they could do better, I’m going to say so, and I expect you to take it like a (wo)man. Here’s the thing: at the end of the day, anything a dance critic writes is the singular viewpoint of one person. As much as we try to dissuade our biases and opinions, a review is just that: an opinion. You can take it or leave it. You can put it on your website or not. To banter on about how horrible the press is, or to stop inviting a critic who wrote a negative review isn’t a fast track to success.

5. Big companies need press just as much as you do. Sure, they might have more money and a dedicated person hired or contracted to take care of media relations, but they are also tasked with filling massive houses, thousands of seats, often in multiple cities. The argument should not be to stop writing about them and start writing about you, but instead to bolster the dance writers so we can cover everybody.

Long story short, if you want better press for your company, here’s the bottom line (or two, actually): [Read more…]

Filed Under: Editorial, Making Dances, The Business Of Dance Tagged With: choreographer, dance companies, press

Three Training “Jewels” For Dancers

July 11, 2013 by 4dancers

Photo by Catherine L. Tully
Photo by Catherine L. Tully

by Emily Kate Long

I was reminded recently of a Zen saying about the three “jewels” of training: great faith, great doubt, and great effort. None of these attributes alone is enough to make an artist—all three must work together in harmony. This month’s post is a look at what happens when the three elements fall out of balance and ways to restore them.

Call it a rut, call it a plateau, call it a crisis—every artist has been in one. It can be as minor as a bad class or as major as utter creative paralysis lasting weeks or more. Whatever the extent, the feelings of being stuck, going backwards, or wandering aimlessly are frustrating. Frustration often begets negative self-talk, and negativity is anything but productive! What’s a dancer to do? Checking in with each of the three jewels is a great place to start when trying to get out of a stuck place.

Every dancer (heck, every person) has strengths and weaknesses. Some dancers love to examine technique but have a hard time opening up onstage. Some are natural performers but find it difficult to pick up or master steps. Yet, an artist needs a well-rounded set of skills, and he or she needs to be able to call on those skills as required. The good news is that we can tap into creativity systematically. We don’t have to be at the mercy of the muse…it just takes a little self-knowledge and self-listening.

Let’s examine the makeup of the three Zen jewels and how each can work in the dancer’s life.

Great Faith [Read more…]

Filed Under: Career, Finding Balance Tagged With: dance career, dance training, dancer, finding balance

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