In her Stride, Alicia Graf Mack
Once referred to as the “Rolls-Royce of American dance,” Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, founded in 1958 by Alvin Ailey, continues to live up to that plaudit.
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World-class review of ballet and dance.
Have they started or are they just practicing?” asks a gentleman sitting in the row behind me. It’s a fair question: students from Rambert School of Ballet nonchalantly execute their own sequences of repeated movements as the audience filters in, taking their seats on all four sides of the vast performance space. Accompanied by jolly live piano, their motions range from traditionally balletic—whipping chainé turns and pointed feet beating at ankles—to the geometric and contemporary—popped heels and off-kilter leans. Wearing a gym-kit-like combination of burgundy football shorts and light pink vest tops, the dancers look as if they could be in class or rehearsal, perfecting movements they will need to execute in the performance to come.
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Once referred to as the “Rolls-Royce of American dance,” Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, founded in 1958 by Alvin Ailey, continues to live up to that plaudit.
Continue ReadingRanjini Nair wears a few hats. Trained as a classical dancer in her native New Delhi by gurus Seetha Nagajothy, Jayarama Rao, and Vanashree Rao, she later found herself deep within the world of academia.
Continue ReadingIt's with great sadness that we learned a couple of nights ago of the untimely passing of dance artist Iona Kewney.
Continue ReadingLooking down into the rotunda from the spiral ramp of New York’s Guggenheim Museum can be dizzying. My perch tonight is located two-thirds of the way to the top—and it’s the best view in the house for Lucinda Childs’ Early Works program.
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