2022 is the #YearofChicagoDance

 

See Chicago Dance is excited to announce our involvement with Department of Cultural Affairs and Special Events in 2022's #YearofChicagoDance!

This citywide focus on dance is the first-of-its-kind in the U.S. and will address critical issues facing dancers and the Chicago dance industry at large including funding, space and capacity building — not to mention PLENTY of chances to watch the pros and get moving yourself!

Screendance Club: Where Water is Not Thirsty

 

Artist & Filmmaker Millicent Johnnie 
Conversation Moderated by Surinder Martignetti 

 

Millicent Johnnie produces different forms of storytelling using various mediums and platforms, centering Black and Indigenous cultural communities. Where Water is Not Thirsty is a short film that follows a seventy-year-old woman, who returns to the magical world of her mind, where she reunites with her mystic self and learns of her true unbridled nature.

Lauren Warnecke is Moving On

 

“My first ever professional review was of River North Dance Chicago’s performance at the Auditorium Theatre in April 2013,” Lauren Warnecke said in a recent email. “I remember staying up all night, terrified about Sid [Smith]’s noon deadline. I don’t know if he really wanted me to continue on after Dance Month was over, but I kept pitching and he kept saying yes.”

Hip hop crew Boom Crack!, transformed for black-box theater, channels mind, body and soul in ‘Three’

On Dec 4, Boom Crack! Dance Company (BCDC) celebrated their fundraising gala at the Den Theatre with two hour-long performances that showcased the company’s variety of artistic talents, including hip hop technical execution, consistent theme development and community building between audience and performers. “Three” was a collaborative creation between artistic director Trae Turner and the company members that engaged the sold-out audience in nuanced movement and full-bodied expression of an R&B and hip hop score that explored the connection between mind, body and soul.

Review: Finally back at the Harris, Ragamala's 'Fires of Varanasi' comes full circle

En route to the Harris Theater on Thursday night it briefly occurred to me that I might have seen Ragamala Dance Company perform when they came to Chicago in 2018.  After a brief Google search, it was confirmed.  “Written In Water” was deeply supported by Harris Theater’s former President and CEO Patricia Barretto.

Visions of sugar plums dance on for Joffrey 'Nutcracker' children's cast

For countless people around the world, “The Nutcracker” is synonymous with the holiday season. Be it the tale of Marie or Clara and Fritz or Franz, the story has been choreographed and re-choreographed, told in myriad ways. The Joffrey Ballet of Chicago’s 2016 iteration transports spectators young and old back to the World’s Fair, circa 1893. Christopher Wheeldon may swap the Sugar Plum Fairy for a Golden Statue and Russian Trepak for Buffalo Bill, but the essence of this holiday ballet remains the same.

Critical Context: Ragamala Dance Company explores life, death and rebirth at the Harris

The below piece is part of Critical Context, a paid writing residency created in partnership with the Harris Theater. The initiative engages past SCD Critical Dance Writing Fellows in a three- to six-month residency in mentorship, research, and deep exploration of Harris Theater Presents dance programming.