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10 Questions With…Renee Beauvais

January 12, 2011 by 4dancers

Renee Beauvais

1. How did you become involved in dance?

Our house was musical, my father was a semi-pro musician and always played his guitar (alone and jamming with friends).  The natural response to music is to move, so I always danced around the house as a child.  I couldn’t sit still.  I learned social dances by imitating dancers I saw on American Bandstand.  When I grew older I was lucky enough to find dance in the public schools.  I had my first formal dance classes, modern dance, in the 7th grade – it was love at first bison leap!

2. What are you currently doing in the field?

I changed my artistic focus from modern dance to ballet. I’m getting Beauvais Ballet, a small, neoclassical company, off the ground, pardon the pun.  I choreographed modern dance for 30 years. Then, in 2003 I started to choreograph ballets here and there along with my modern dance works.  In 2010 I decided to explore and choreograph solely ballet – with modern sensibilities of course :).

3. Can you share a special moment from your career?

As a dancer –  I was a member of Nancy Karp + Dancers (a San Francisco based company) and we were on tour in what was then Yugoslavia.  A short time after we returned home their civil war broke out and some of the cities we performed in were destroyed.  I realized I was a global citizen with a responsibility to do good not just for myself but for the greater good of the world. As a result I conserve, take care of the natural environment, and get involved in social issues.

As a choreographer – Mark Morris is my choreographic hero, his work is consistently excellent.  I studied with him for a bit and in 2000 he and his company came to Maui to perform.  I had the chance to socialize with him and it was fabulous to talk shop with my idol. He gave me advice on how to treat a difficult piece of music I was working with (I was commissioned to use this music, I didn’t choose it).

4. What advice would you offer other dancers?

The dance industry is difficult but so much of dancers’ limitations are self imposed.  Often what dancers believe is opinion (someone else’s or your own)which is subjective or based on untruths, not fact.  So, I would say to dancers, know what your strengths are and exploit them. Know what your limitations are and learn from them, if they can’t be changed, accept them, discover how they can help you despite the fact they are limitations.    Examine your beliefs on a regular basis, are they based on fact? You will find you can do much more than you thought you could.

5. What have you had to struggle against in dance?

Maui is rural and provincial, an unlikely place for a ballet company. No one has ever brought contemporary ballet to the island, incorporated it into the local culture and then shared it with the world. I find that very enriching and inspiring.  I aim to bring an understanding and appreciation of ballet that enhances the local culture and inspires others.

Renee Beauvais

6. Do you have a favorite dancer or choreographer? If so, what is it about them that makes them stand out?

Mark Morris is still my favorite modern choreographer with Nacho Duato a close second.  Both of them are superbly musical and great at movement invention.  Matthew Bourne has a unique perspective.  I love his re-workings, he is great at turning traditional works on their head.

As far as dancers go, there are many gorgeous dancers out there, but I have to say my favorite is Daniil Simkin.  I’ve only seen him on video not live.  But, his movement quality and personae are stunning.  He reminds me of Nureyev but with way more technique!

7. What is the best advice you have ever received regarding dance?

“If you want to be a choreographer, you have to choreograph.” – Mark Morris
In other words, don’t wait to be invited, don’t wait to be asked, don’t wait to be paid, get out there and do the work.

8. Where do you think dance is going as an art form?

Ballet needs a new face, one for the 21st century and that’s what I’m trying to create.


9. What is it about dance that you love so much?

It’s rich, complex, and fun!  Dance is part music, part visual design (shape, color, perspective), and sometimes tells a story. As both a performer and an audience member, dance touches the deepest part of my being.

10. What is next for you?

I recently choreographed a ballet titled Holo Mai Pele.   It’s based on a traditional story of the Hawaiian goddess Pele expressed in totally contemporary ways – neoclassical ballet, original costumes and Western music (Shostakovich).  Upcoming performances are at the GWS Invitational Festival on February 18 & 19 in Huntington Beach, CA and again on February 25 & 26 at the sjDANCEco’s choreography festival in San Jose, CA.  You can find out more about the project or get involved by visiting indigogo.com/Holo-Mai-Pele-Here-Comes-Pele-Ballet?a=58514&i=addr

BIO: Dancer and choreographer Renée Beauvais is the founder and artistic director of Beauvais Ballet and the former TILT Dance Company.  Beauvais has been performing, teaching and choreographing dance for 33 years.  She danced with the Elayne Neuman Dance Co., San Francisco’s Nancy Karp & Dancers, and Janlyn Dance Company.  She worked with ODC San Francisco, Kenneth Rinker, Laura Dean, Karl Schaffer and Eric Stern, Helen Dannenberg, Christopher Beck, and Ellen Bromberg.  She performed faculty works with the repertory companies of both Arizona State University and Mills College.

She studied dance at Arizona Sate University and Mills College (BA) and at NYU Tisch School of the Arts and Jacob’s Pillow.  She studied choreography with  choreographers Mark Morris, Lucas Hoving, Lila York, Murray Louis, and Bella Lewitsky.

The Maui Symphony Orchestra, Moving Arts Dance, Ebb & Flow Arts Ensemble, Instinct DanceCorps and Arts Education for Children have commissioned her choreography.  Beauvais’ works were performed by her previous company, Beau Danse Compagnie, at numerous venues in San Francisco, Berkeley, and Oakland, California. Her choreography was also showcased in a performance sponsored by the Bella Lewitsky Dance Company. She was an interim dance instructor at Maui Community College, was on the state Artist-in-the Schools Registry for 10 years and was the state director for National Dance Week.

Filed Under: 10 Questions With..., 4dancers, 4teachers, Studios

Setting Your Dance Goals For 2011

January 2, 2011 by 4dancers

Catherine L. TullyIt may seem like extra work, but goal setting is actually quite effective. Have you set any dance goals for yourself in 2011? If not, there’s still time…

Goal setting can be tricky. You’ll want to make sure that when you set one that it has the following characteristics:

It is reachable. If you are just starting out in dance, setting a goal of being in a company before the end of the year may not be realistic. Take a good look at where you are and look at what the next steps would be terms of improving your current situation. Then, set a goal based on that. It may not be as exciting–but you won’t be setting yourself up for disappointment.

It can be broken down into steps. In order to reach a goal, you’ll need a “road map” for achieving it. This consists of a series of steps you can take to make it happen. Be sure to think that through as well. [Read more…]

Filed Under: 4dancers, 4teachers, Editorial, Studios Tagged With: dance goals

10 Questions With…Claire Bataille

December 8, 2010 by 4dancers

Today’s “10 Questions With…” features a woman that I have a great deal of respect for. Claire Bataille was someone that I looked up to in my days at Hubbard Street Dance Company’s school, the Lou Conte Dance Studio. She was a powerful dancer with amazing technique and I loved taking her class. I’m thrilled to have her on the site with us today… 

1. How did you become involved with dance? 

Claire Bataille (with Ron De Jesus)

I started taking ballet lessons when I was 3 years old and never stopped.  

2. What are you currently doing in the field?

I am director of the Lou Conte Dance Studio and teach ballet and Pilates.  

3. Would you share a special moment or two from your career? 

HSDC’s first public performance in the tiny theater at the Cultural Center. We felt like we were at the Met. 

Our first day in the studio with Twyla Tharp. I was in awe and it was so much fun! 

The feeling I had being on stage again after my son was born. Performing was the only time I felt like I had time to myself and my only job was to focus on what I had to do. It was ironic. And at the same time becoming a mom put it all in perspective. 

4. What is the best advice you have ever received regarding dance? 

Lou Conte taught me how to really work. We had to give 100% every day. His rules were pretty simple: be on time, take the full ballet class everyday, take corrections, pay attention to details, be responsible.  

As a choreographer and director he always made you look into the heart of the movement, no matter how simple. When he was disappointed in you he let you know and when he was moved you felt great, like you could do anything. I would not have had a career without Lou in my life. Definitely not like the one I had. 

5. Do you have any advice for those who would like to dance professionally? 

You have to physically and mentally strong, be prepared to stand tough against rejection, study ballet, jazz, modern, tap and any other discipline that’s interesting, take class every day, audition for everything and maintain a life away from dance. Read the newspaper, go to the movies, keep good friends close. 

6. What advice can you offer for dance teachers? 

Besides teaching a clean, strong technique combined with musicality and fluid movement quality, good teachers are much like good parents. You have to be willing to tell young dancers the truth and be ready to listen with compassion and heart. 

7. What is it that you love so much about dance? 

I love the dancer mentality. There is a dedication and emotional connection to the business that makes dancers good people no matter where their careers and life take them. A good dancer is a well balanced person.  

8. What was it like to dance with Hubbard Street Dance Company? 

Being in the company for the first 15 years, during the time of complete realization of what this company would become, was thrilling. Difficult and challenging at times but so good both in the rep that we did, the way a company could tour in those years and absolutely in the community we formed. That is what I miss the most. The dressing rooms, the hotel bar after a show, the open minded, love you no matter what, kind of people dancers are. I have good memories of what I did on stage but the best ones are backstage.

 9. You have also choreographed. Can you talk a bit about that process? 

I choreographed a few pieces, had some good ideas but it’s not where my strength is. I much prefer being a guide.  

10. What is next for you? 

I’m 58. At this point I just hope to be able to continue to help young dancers navigate their way into and through this difficult and glorious business. 

BIO:  CLAIRE BATAILLE was a leading dancer with Hubbard Street Dance Chicago (HSDC) from 1977-1992 performing works created by Lou Conte, Twyla Tharp, Lynne Taylor-Corbett, Daniel Ezralow, John McFall and Margo Sappington. She received the Ruth Page Award for Outstanding Dancer in 1992. Between the years of 1977 and 2001 Claire also served the company as assistant artistic director, ballet mistress and rehearsal director. As a resident choreographer she created 5 works for HSDC between 1978 and 1985.  Claire toured internationally with HSDC and has performed and taught throughout the US, Canada, South America and Europe. 

As a choreographer, Claire has created works for HSDC, Spectrum Dance Theater in Seattle, Akasha Dance Company in Chicago, Dancers in Company in Iowa, Point Park Dance Ensemble in Pittsburgh and the Tennessee Children’s Dance Ensemble. In 1993 Claire conceived, choreographed and directed “Lifetimes” for the WTTW (Chicago’s Public Television) production of “Love in 4 Acts” featuring 4 Chicago choreographers. She has restaged Lou Conte’s works for many companies including HSDC, Dublin City Ballet, Spectrum Dance Theater, Point Park, Western Michigan University, Civic Ballet of Chicago and the University of Georgia. 

Claire began teaching at the Lou Conte Dance Studio in 1975 and has been teaching dance in Chicago ever since.  She has been on the faculty of The Chicago Academy for the Arts, Gus Giordano Dance Center, Columbia College, Melissa Thodos and Dancers, Cirqua/Rivera Dance Theatre, The Ruth Page Foundation and HSDC.  Currently she is on the faculty of the Lou Conte Dance Studio and River North Chicago Dance Co. and is a guest teacher for several Chicago companies. In 2003 she earned her certification in the Pilates Method in New York with Romana’s Pilates. In Sept. 2005, she was appointed associate director of the Lou Conte Dance Studio at the Hubbard St. Dance Center. In Sept. 2008 she was promoted to director. 

The best job of all is being mom to her 2 sons, Isaac and Jack. 

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Filed Under: 10 Questions With..., 4dancers, 4teachers, Studios Tagged With: claire bataille, hubbard street dance company, lou conte, lou conte dance studio, twyla tharp

10 Questions With…JR Glover

December 1, 2010 by 4dancers

Fans of Jacob’s Pillow will be pleased to see that we have JR Glover with us today on “10 Questions With…” read and enjoy!

1. How did you become involved with dance?

I insisted I wanted to dance as early as 3 years old; much to my parents bewilderment.  We lived in rural southside Virginia where towns rarely offered dance, and some years there were no dance classes available within a 30-mile radius. When I begin elementary school the whole sit-in-your-seat/walk-in-a-straight-line situation seemed odd to me.  I wasn’t particularly interested in the subjects being presented.  My dad’s response to my mother’s concern about this was, “support her in what she wants to do and it’ll work out.”

Despite not knowing where hauling me all over the county would lead, my mother made sure I was involved in dance as much as possible; some years this included driving to 3 different towns weekly.  When I decided to major in dance at college, my parents were nervous yet also very supportive of me as a person.  I can still vividly hear my dad’s incredulous and happy exclamation when I phoned him from Texas to say that I had a full-time job, with benefits, teaching dance.

2. How did you wind up at Jacob’s Pillow?

“J.R.” Glover, Director of Education at Jacob’s Pillow Dance; courtesy of Jacob’s Pillow Dance

After 10 years of teaching dance and dancing with a fabulous company in Texas, I wanted a broader prospective on the field and entered the dance graduate program at American University in Washington, DC.  I also enrolled in the Arts Management Program which had an internship requirement.  I was a Jacob’s Pillow intern in 1988, rather older than my fellow interns who tended to be mostly juniors and seniors in college.  That internship remains one of my top 5 life-changing experiences and totally put me on the path of arts management.  When the Pillow phoned in 1993 about a full-time position, I was ready to move to Massachusetts and work in a place devoted to my own passion.

3. What is your current role there?

I am Director of Education, which includes overseeing a series of professional advancement programs in The School, a year-round Intern Program, and a number of Community Programs for the public to experience dance and dance-making during the Festival on site and during the academic year in our area public schools.

4. What is it about your job that you love the most?

I frequently say that I’m a matchmaker and casting director. I love putting people or organizations together that either didn’t know about one another before or likely would not have found one another without my involvement.  I love working with artists and dancers!  Designing and overseeing programs that are meaningful and truly helpful to their desires and goals, at all points along their career paths, is rewarding.

5. What is the most challenging aspect of your job?

One challenge is the quantity of work required for the number of different programs the Pillow offers given our small staff and budget.  Procedures and resources are constantly changing, shifting, disappearing, or re-configuring themselves while funding, staffing, and time remain extremely limited.  Another challenge, though far more fun, is maintaining tabs on the many different worlds of dance – ballet, contemporary, jazz/musical theatre, African, flamenco, hip-hop, Indian, tap, and other cultural forms – in order to create programs that serve different populations within these worlds each and every year.

6. Can you talk a bit about what makes Jacob’s Pillow so unique?

How long is this article?!  I could talk a long, long time about this.  Many factors converge to create a place and atmosphere where dance can be created, learned, researched, performed, observed, appreciated, and experienced.  The energy and creativity here is immediately felt on the exquisitely beautiful and peaceful grounds. Artists from around the world are working one building away from each other or collaborating on new projects.

The School convenes a small group of dancers, each recommended by an artist or hand-selected from auditions, to learn what is expected of them as working artists from the field’s leading teachers and choreographers.  How deep you plunge into the intellectual, physical, emotional and spiritual world of dance is up to you at the Pillow, but you will be moved in a delightful way.  The Pillow is empowering, transformative, restorative, edgy, compassionate, and passionate.  Students and interns always say, “It’s life changing.”  Audiences and the public say, “Wow, I never thought about that; this is amazing!”

7. As Director of Education you must see some pretty interesting things happening with dance education. Can you share one or two that stand out?

“J.R.” Glover, Director of Education at Jacob’s Pillow Dance with a 2009 Hip-Hop student; photo Karli Cadel

The number of dance programs available to dancers now, whether during the academic year or for summer study, is impressive.  High quality training and experiences to work directly with full-time choreographers and artistic directors is more widespread, starting with very young dancers and continuing into higher education.  It is much more acceptable, and even encouraged, for dancers to study multiple dance forms and art disciplines, as well as to use dance and choreographic skills to assist communities with non-dance goals.  Young dancers are taking on more program responsibility and leadership, and producing their own work. The cumulative impact of all this on the field is rather exhilarating.

I hope this next generation will be strong advocates for the specific and unique attributes that only dance can bring to the table and that they can deepen acceptance of dance, outside of the dance industry, as a powerful and transformative way to think, imagine, create, and implement ideas.

8. Can you talk a little about the Intern Program there?

Pillow interns are integral and vital members of our staff.  We hand over jobs and responsibilities to them that are absolutely essential to run our programs effectively and productively.  They assist artists, faculty, scholars, press visitors, funders, students, and audiences.  We offer training, supervision, and motivation so that their experiences and projects are successful.  We have 33 interns from all over the world living and working with us during the Festival.

From September to May we have a much smaller group assisting us in preparing for the upcoming Festival.  Some are career-changers, commuters, off-site interns, work/study or graduate/doctoral thesis candidates.  Most are juniors and seniors in colleges and universities who live on our campus during their internship. All are able to get very close to the people and infrastructures that make the presentation, education, preservation, and creative development of dance possible.

9. What is The School itself like?

Physically it is located at the Pillow, with a beautiful garden and green lawn outside its studio door.  Inside, it’s all wood, with a grand piano in one corner and space for the public to observe in another.  Classes run six-days a week, with Master Classes led by Festival artists on the seventh day.  Morning sessions focus on various dance techniques and afternoons are spent in rehearsal with exceptional choreographers who create work on the dancers.  Every Saturday, the dancers perform for Pillow audiences on the outdoor stage and Mondays feature audition, music, or other career-building seminars.  We prepare them as deeply as possible to work successfully in a professional company.

The faculty are artists from around the world who work as artistic directors, choreographers, directors, and master teachers.  The international student body comprises an equal number of men and women; many are apprentices with companies or auditioning for company work.  It’s a remarkable environment and opportunity!

10. What is next for you?

Planning for The School’s 2011 programs and auditions is well underway.  Artists are agreeing to be on faculty, recommending dancers to study here, and proposing new programs for the future.  There are residencies in our area schools where students are choreographing work about academic topics and teachers are being coached in kinesthetic teaching strategies for the classroom.  Intern recruitment for the Festival is about to begin in full force since the priority deadline is in February.  I’m fully immersed in planning and preparing for our exciting and meaningful 2011 programs!

BIO:

BIO: “J.R.” Glover is Director of Education at Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival.  Initially an intern in arts administration at the Pillow, she returned as staff in 1993 and since 1997 has served as Director of Education, overseeing The School, The Intern Program, and year-round Community Dance Programs.  Prior to stepping onto the Pillow grounds, she performed with the cross-cultural contemporary dance company directed by Myrna Renaud in Texas and developed dance programs in magnet schools, alternative schools, dance studios, and community centers in North Carolina, Texas, Virginia, and Washington, D.C.   In D.C., she was adjunct professor of dance at American University and the volunteer program director for the Smithsonian Institution’s Festival of American Folklife and its programming for the ’93 Inaugural Celebration on the Mall.  She holds a M.A. in Dance from American University, a B.S. in Dance Education from the University of North Carolina-Greensboro, and a certificate in Arts Management from American University.  She is a member of the International Association of Blacks in Dance, Massachusetts Alliance for Arts Education, and the National Dance Education Organization.  She has been an evaluator for the National Evaluation Systems Educator Licensure Tests in dance education, a panelist for the National Foundation for Advancement in the Arts, an adjudicator for Prince George’s Arts and Cultural Heritage Division Choreographer Showcase, an advisor/board member to Pepatián, Sonia Dawkins/Segue, Circle of World Arts, and is on the steering committee for the African American Cultural and Heritage Celebration in Pittsfield, MA.  As an arts educator, director, or colleague in the field, she strives to assist dance artists in realizing their goals and desires, wherever they are in the spectrum of their careers.

Filed Under: 10 Questions With..., 4dancers, 4teachers, Editorial, Studios, Uncategorized Tagged With: jacob's pillow, jr glover

On Teaching Dance…

November 29, 2010 by 4dancers

I don’t think my students know how much I love teaching.

There is something almost magical about imparting your knowledge in a way that it comes out in someone else’s technique. It is an amazing feeling that is hard to describe. When you are a dancer, you are self-focused. When you are a teacher, you are other focused. Different mindset.

Catherine L. Tully, 1987

It is both challenging and freeing to have this shift in focus. The challenge is in figuring out how to take what is in your head, heart and muscles and translate that into something that makes sense to your students. Not having to focus on your own technique is the “freeing” aspect. You are free to spend that energy helping someone else perfect theirs. It’s a wonderful thing!

I always thought I would love dancing more than teaching. Truth is, I love them both, but teaching is the perfect fit for me at this point in my life. I’m older, and quite frankly, it hurts to do much of what I enjoyed doing in dance. Now I get more joy out of helping others reach their potential–whatever that means for them as an individual.

I love teaching for so many reasons, but probably the biggest one is its similarity to performance in terms of concentration. When I was on stage, I couldn’t concentrate on anything other than what I was doing. I never was aware of the audience–I never saw the conductor. Much like that, when I am teaching, the outside world drops off for me. The only thing that exists for that hour and a half is my students and the music.

And there’s nothing quite like that feeling.

And I’d love to know if anyone out there can relate to that.

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Filed Under: 4teachers, Studios, Uncategorized Tagged With: students, teaching dance

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