This site has limited support for your browser. We recommend switching to Edge, Chrome, Safari, or Firefox.

Latest

Tanz Your Heart Out
REVIEWS | Karen Hildebrand

Tanz Your Heart Out

“Tanz” opens on a ballet class like none I’ve ever attended. Onstage are two portable barres and four dancers in rehearsal clothes stretching and warming up. Eighty-three year old ballerina Beatrice Cordua teaches from a wheelchair, naked.

Continue Reading
Begin Anywhere
REVIEWS | Cecilia Whalen

Begin Anywhere

John Scott Dance's “Begin Anywhere” started in the middle. A dancer walked to the center of the Irish Arts Center's JL Greene Theatre holding a discman, placed it on the floor, and pressed play.

Continue Reading
Lucia Field, Family Ties
TALKING POINTES | Claudia Lawson

Lucia Field, Family Ties

Today I have the immense privilege of speaking with Lucia Field. Lucia grew up with her family in Sydney, but with her dad, Anthony, as the original Blue Wiggle. It's not the childhood you might imagine. As the Wiggles became global superstars, Lucia didn't see her dad for nearly nine months a year. Instead, Lucia grew up alongside her mom, her brother, and her sister, dancing and dreaming of becoming a ballerina. And it was not just a dream. Lucia's star was already on the rise. And by 13, she was accepted into the Australian Ballet School. In this exceptionally...

Continue Reading
A Collective Act of Storytelling
REVIEWS | Karen Greenspan

A Collective Act of Storytelling

The story began with an impulse to go back and give something back—to the performing arts traditions of India. Acclaimed British dancer and choreographer of Bangladeshi descent, Akram Khan, long known for dancing between worlds—contemporary dance and classical Kathak, decided to return to his roots.

Continue Reading

Looking Back to See Forward

Looking Back to See Forward

I step off the elevator onto the 5th floor of the Whitney Museum and I am awed by the spectacle, vastness, and ground shifting power of the “Edges of Ailey”...

Performance

Okwui Okpokwasili and Peter Born: “Let Slip, Hold Sway”

Place

Whitney Museum, New York, NY, February 6, 2025

Words

Karen Greenspan

Continue Reading

Gift Subscription

$69.95

Gift a year of world-class dance journalism. Recipients will receive full access to Fjord's wide diversity of reviews, interviews, articles & podcasts.

Adrift
REVIEWS | Victoria Looseleaf

Adrift

While Kendrick Lamar performed “Humble,” during his Super Bowl halftime set and was surrounded by dancers clad in red, white and blue—and in the process assumed the formation of the American flag (choreographed by Charm La’Donna)—so, too, did Faye Driscoll use performers who created slews of shapes/sculptures in her astonishing work, “Weathering,” seen at REDCAT on February 8, the last of three sold-out performances.

Continue Reading
Timeless Twyla
REVIEWS | Rachel Howard

Timeless Twyla

Let’s start with the obvious, or maybe to some this notion will be highly disputable, even offensive. OK, then, let’s start with what kept repeating in my head as I walked out of UC Berkeley’s Zellerbach Hall, synapses abuzz with the wonders of Twyla Tharp Dance’s 60th anniversary “Diamond Jubilee” program: My God, Twyla Tharp really is the most brilliantly inventive choreographer now alive on the planet.

Continue Reading

Beyond the Stage

Beyond the Stage

In Maldonne, French filmmakers Leila KA and Josselin Carré pose eleven women side by side on a barren stage. They’re dressed in floral patterns that hearken to the 1950s. The...

Performance

Dance on Camera Festival

Place

Symphony Space, New York, NY, February 21-24, 2025

Words

Karen Hildebrand

Continue Reading
Riley Lapham, the Come Back
TALKING POINTES | Claudia Lawson

Riley Lapham, the Come Back

Today I have the immense privilege of speaking with Riley Lapham. Riley started dancing early in her home town of Wollongong, and by age 14, she had joined the Australian Ballet School. But from here, Riley's journey takes twists and turns. In her graduation year, Riley missed her final performance due to injury. But in a Center Stage-like moment, the then artistic director David McAllister offered her a contract with the company. In this brave and vulnerable conversation, Riley and I talk about what it's like to join a company while injured, and what it was like to deal with...

FREE ARTICLE
Notes of Black Joy
REVIEWS | Karen Hildebrand

Notes of Black Joy

I can’t remember seeing the Joyce Theater as full of energy. With the hour long “I Am,” Camille A. Brown & Dancers opens the tent of Black joy for all to enter, raising goosebumps and heat on a cold February night.

Continue Reading
Going with the Flow
REVIEWS | Cecilia Whalen

Going with the Flow

Allison Miller, the acclaimed drummer and band leader of the group Boom Tic Boom, presented her multi-media performance, “Rivers in Our Veins,” for a one-matinee-only performance at 92NY on February 2nd.

Continue Reading
Super Nothing
FIELD NOTES | Candice Thompson

Super Nothing

In the world premiere of Miguel Gutierrez’s “Super Nothing,” the quartet of performers fly through the vast, empty black box theater at New York Live Arts, small forms cast out like particles of light.

Continue Reading

Beauty goes Big

Beauty goes Big

“Well, it’s big,” Seattle ballet fans were saying as they headed into McCaw Hall’s sleek sanctuary of velvet settees and shiny metal staircases.

Performance

Pacific Northwest Ballet: “Sleeping Beauty”

Place

McCaw Hall, Seattle, WA, January 31 and February 1, 2025

Words

Rachel Howard

Continue Reading
Kid Zone
REVIEWS | Faye Arthurs

Kid Zone

Who says choreography can’t be taught? Not Ellen Robbins, a modern dance educator who has been teaching the art of choreography to young people in Soho for decades.

Continue Reading
Never Forget
REVIEWS | Victoria Looseleaf

Never Forget

Never forget!” With the 80th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz and International Holocaust Remembrance Day both having been recognized last month, these words, although unspoken, coursed through Melissa Barak’s first evening-length ballet, “Memoryhouse.”

Continue Reading
A Muted Malpaso
REVIEWS | Karen Hildebrand

A Muted Malpaso

Translated, “malpaso” means misstep, suggesting clumsiness. In the case of Havana based Malpaso Dance Company, the name is a clever misdirection, pointing to a sense of humor often present with this versatile and highly trained troupe.

Continue Reading

Winter Lake Effects 

Winter Lake Effects 

On the eve of George Balanchine’s birthday, the New York City Ballet opened its Winter Season with a killer all-Balanchine program: “Concerto Barocco,” “Allegro Brillante,” and “Brahms-Schoenberg Quartet.”

Performance

New York City Ballet: “Concerto Barocco,” “Allegro Brillante,” and “Brahms-Schoenberg Quartet” by George Balanchine

Place

David H. Koch Theater, Lincoln Center, New York, NY, January 21, 2025

Words

Faye Arthurs

Continue Reading

subscribe to THE LATEST IN DANCE

“Uncommonly intelligent, substantial coverage.”


  • Weekly articles from the world of dance
  • Wide diversity of reviews, interviews, articles & more
  • Support for quality art journalism

Already a paid subscriber? Login

"This extraordinary little magazine has grown to become a cultural mainstay, not just a valued critical source, but a cultural communicator, critic, review, booster and historian."

Brenda Way
ODC/Dance

frequent questions

What's the difference between a physical and digital subscription?

With a physical subscription you'll get a physical magazine twice a year along with full site access. With a digital subscription, you'll only get access to articles and podcasts.

Will I get access to podcast content with a subscription?

Yes.

With either a physical or digital subscription, you'll get access to podcast content.

How do I get full access to articles?

With either a physical or digital subscription.

You just need a subscription to get full access to articles.

Good Subscription Agency