The Rebirth of NINE: Praize Productions flourishes with their first movie premiere

Numerology tells us that numbers carry significant energy.  They guide us on our sacred path and lead us to our inner and outer work. Nine, the multi-hyphenate number that represents birthing, enlightenment, love, forgiveness and awakening, has also taken another role serving as the fitting title for Praize Productions Inc’s first motion picture.

A “Silver Lining” without a cloud in sight—the Evanston Dance Ensemble celebrates 25 years.

This weekend marks a major milestone for the Evanston Dance Ensemble (EDE) as they celebrate their quadricentennial anniversary with “Silver Lining: Celebrating 25 Years of Dance,” a review of popular selections from the company’s long presentation history.

Joffrey Ballet’s “Winning Works:” A Win-Win For The Arts And For Social Justice

The crucial need for diversity and racial equality in the performing arts inspired The Joffrey Ballet to create The Winning Works Choreographic Competition in 2011 to promote talented and emerging ALAANA choreographers (African, Latinx, Asian, Arab, and Native American), whose access to professional exposure has typically been limited in the predominantly white male concert dance industry.

Four choreographers in the South Loop Spark Plug prove that Chicago dance post-COVID is not a monolith.

The South Loop Spark Plug is an arts incubation series for dance commissioned by the Chicago Artists Performance Platform (CAPP) with support from the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation and hosted by The Dance Centre of Columbia College Chicago. Four choreographers—Vershawn Sanders-Ward, Orlando “juice” De León Jr., Keyierra Collins, and Keisha Janae—took part in a six-month residency with Bebe Miller, acclaimed choreographer, dancer and artistic director of the Solo/Duo Dancing Project, and Dance Center faculty member Darrell Jones.

“Interwoven” winds together the various voices of the Still Inspired dance company into an evening of joy, introspection and relief.

As the snow melts and the ice thaws, dance companies and audiences are warming up to the idea of returning to live performances. This March saw live shows by large companies like Chicago Tap Theatre and Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, and the return of companies like Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre. Chicago’s smaller black box theatres are also opening back up, housing performances by the community-driven, hard-working independent dance companies in abundance pre-COVID.

Hubbard Street Dance Chicago performs for the love of dance in spring series double bill RE/CONNECT

With a brand new rehearsal space couched in the famed Water Tower Place and the one-year-anniversary celebration of hiring Artistic Director Linda-Denise Fisher-Harrell, excitement is in abundance at Hubbard Street Dance Chicago. Our city can expect big things from the beloved, 44-year-old dance company. Re/Connect, Hubbard’s spring concert series, rises to the occasion with two programs spanning two extended weekends.
 

Akram Kahn’s “Creature” is a chilling premonition of a dystopian future, where we look to monsters to rediscover our own humanity.

Like Prometheus of Greek lore, interdisciplinary choreographer Akram Kahn once again brings the fire to Chicago with “Creature,” a dystopian ballet that made its international premiere Thursday night at the Harris Theatre for Music and Dance. Kahn, a natural collaborator, once again teams up with the English National Ballet, whose previous collaboration, a reimagined “Giselle,” was met with critical acclaim when it performed here in 2019.