Sunday, March 21, 2010

Texas Dance Theatre Offers Open Company Classes



Texas Dance Theatre is offering open company classes on Tuesday and Thursday evenings at 7 p.m., and on Saturdays at 12 noon. $15 per class. Location: Fort Worth Community Arts Center's Scott Theatre (Garber Hall Studio) 1300 Gendy St. Fort Worth, TX 76107. 817-676-1514. email: wil@texasdancetheatre.com

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Moody Moves


Moody Moves
Texas Dance Theatre makes a strong showing in its second performance of the season. Margaret Putnam reviews.
by Margaret Putnam
Published Saturday, November 14, 2009


Apparently, no one told Wil McKnight that creating a new dance company is a risky business. But that he did, and his newly sprung Texas Dance Theatre made a credible appearance Friday night at Fort Worth's Scott Theatre.

It was the second of the four programs scheduled for its 2009-'10 season, and gave us a taste of where the company is headed. Semi-classical ballet dominated, either of the moody, dreamy variety, or the astringent. This time it added a dollop of jazz.


The dreamy came in Emily Hunter's Dreamers, set to the moody music of Ryuichi Sakamoto, and featured Hunter in simple gray dress and a shirtless Brandon Addicks in gray pants. The subtle interplay between the couple involved their keeping separate distances, but always aware of the other, followed by lifts where Addicks revolves Hunter in slow, lush arches. The support was mutual, with Addicks leaning on Hunter’s back as she carefully lifts him and just as carefully brings him to the floor.

Mel Tomlinson (of Dance Theater of Harlem, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater and New York City Ballet fame) capitalized on nine women adept on pointe and a single masculine Dan Westfield. Slight hints of Balanchine’s influence surfaced occasionally in A Notte, mainly in the simplicity of structure, the taste for a bare stage and black leotards and tights. But Mr. Tomlinson had his own fish to fry. At the center were a stunning Lauren Collier and Westfield, flanked from time to time by twos, threes and fours. When the couple are alone, they mirror each others movements with curving arms and gentle sways. In one arresting sequence, they lie flat with backs to the audience, and lift legs upward to form a sharp diamond.

The mood throughout is sober and intense, whether it is the graceful revolving lifts, rows of women stepping purposely forward and back, or the ending, where Collier rolls to the back, curled up in sleep, and Westfield follows.

Except for erratic lighting and a certain tentativeness on the ensemble’s part, the fact that A Notte was put together in just two days says something about the caliber of dance.

The program ended on a giddy note with Krista Jennings Langford’s Lift Your Spirits. Set to the lively music of Esquivel, Joe Bucci Trio, Nat King Cole and Ray Charles, three women in black party dress and three in white frolic in a party mood, managing to have fun without men. And then Westfield shows up, sitting on a stool, reading the newspaper. Every once in a while he glimpse at the women, distracted by their antics, gives a frown, and goes back to reading. The women, however, aren’t about to give up, and in turn, either vamp, slink, saunter bravely to touching distance, and shyly skitter away. Westfield had the least to do, but his looks of alarm, annoyance, perplexity, and indifference liven up what was a party with no direction.

A 50-minute pile-up on Interstate 35 prevented me from seeing Mr. McKnight’s opening work, New World, set to the music of Philip Glass and Yo-Yo Ma.

The program will be repeated at Richardson's Eisemann Center on Sunday.

►Margaret Putnam has been writing about dance since 1980, with works published in D Magazine, The Dallas Observer, The Dallas Times Herald, The Dallas Morning News, The New York Times, Playbill, Stagebill and Dance Magazine.

Hunter's Dreamers

Former NYCB Soloist Mel Tomlinson Creates New Work for Texas Dance Theatre


Mel Tomlinson stages his A Notte a work created for Texas Dance Theatre to be premiered at Scott Theatre on November 13, 2009.

Born one of six siblings in Raleigh, North Carolina, Mel Tomlinson became interested in dance after studying high school gymnastics. When he was 17, he began formal dance study at the North Carolina School of the Arts. Tomlinson received his B.F.A. degree in only two years, while he also toured as a principal dancer in Agnes De Mille's Heritage Dance Theatre and switched from a modern dance concentration to ballet. In 1974 he moved to New York to join the Dance Theater of Harlem (DTH), where his powerful build, crystalline articulation of line, and supple flexibility propelled him to soloist, most notably as the snake in Arthur Mitchell's "Manifestations" (1975). In 1976 he took a leave of absence to perform with the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, where he took over the male role in Ailey's "Pas de Duke" with Judith Jamison and premiered the revival of Lar Lubovitch's "The Time Before the Time After" ("After the Time Before") with Sara Yarborough. Discouraged by the heavy touring responsibilities of the Ailey company, Tomlinson returned to the DTH in 1978 to perform principal roles in "Swan Lake" and "Scheherazade" .

In 1981 he joined the New York City Ballet as its only African-American member. He was quickly promoted to the rank of soloist, and his performance in George Balanchine's "Agon" was called "dynamic and electric" by the NEW YORK TIMES. Tomlinson left that company in 1987 to join the faculty at the North Carolina School of Arts. In 1991 he joined the Boston Ballet as a dancer and master teacher in the CITYDANCE program, bringing classical dance to public school children in the Boston area.

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

'Prayer' makes dramatic season opener for Texas Dance Theatre


Dance review: 'Prayer' makes dramatic season opener for Texas Dance Theatre

03:06 PM CDT on Saturday, September 26, 2009

By MANUEL MENDOZA / Special Contributor


FORT WORTH — Bruce Wood’s elegant new dance, A Prayer for Mary Catherine, was the highlight of Texas Dance Theatre’s season-opening performance Friday at Scott Theatre.

Prayer is the first piece created by the Fort Worth choreographer since he closed down his world-class company three years ago. It began with ballet mistress Emily Hunter en pointe, shuffling upstage with her back to the audience. Hunter and the other female dancers wore gauzy white gowns as they executed Wood’s mingling of traditional ballet vocabulary and inventive modern movement.

The first section featured an inward-outward dichotomy. Hunter would fold into herself like a woman in distress, then suddenly burst open her body as if she had found some relief. The 10-minute piece ended as dramatically as it began, with Hunter again facing away while another dancer flitted across the stage under fading light.

Artistic director Wil McKnight has assembled a crack company of classically trained dancers who showed crisp technique throughout the night’s four pieces, even the less successful ones.

Penny Askew’s Vigil failed to build emotional momentum despite the mournful Rachmaninoff music and the black smocks worn by Hunter, Lauren Collier, Josie Baldree and Julie DuBois. Props rarely work in dance, and the umbrellas carried by the dancers limited their movement. Occasionally an arresting moment emerged, as when the four women echoed one another in a beautifully timed series of staggered pirouettes.

Like Vigil and Prayer, McKnight’s Eight Lines was performed en pointe. McKnight, a veteran dancer new to choreography, showed a command of ballet language and an eye for taking advantage of his dancers’ skills. Dressed in simple red slip-dresses, Collier, DuBois, Hunter and Rebecca McManus appeared to defy gravity as they bounced on their toes to circular Steve Reich music.

Hunter’s Marimba x 4 was the evening’s most dissimilar dance and as inventive as Wood’s. The dancers wore black body suits while enacting a playful ritual of leg slaps and hip and shoulder sways while giving one another the thumbs up.

Monday, March 8, 2010

Bruce Wood and Texas Dance Theatre


Texas Dance Theatre (TDT), a classically trained company with a contemporary flair, opened its first season on September 25, 2009 with a new work by celebrated Fort Worth choreographer Bruce Wood. The company was founded by TDT Artistic Director Wil McKnight.

Manny Mendoza caught up with Wood in September for a story about Texas Dance Theatre and the premiere of his A Prayer for Mary Catherine at Scott Theatre. He and TDT artistic director Wil McKnight met at the Sundance Square boot store where Wood works.

"He said he was a choreographer and was trying to start a dance company," Wood says. "The girl who he was with told him that I had had a dance company. I said we should talk, and that maybe I could give him some advice as to avoid making the same mistakes I had made. So we met some time later and it turned out that our professional backgrounds were similar, so it was easy to talk to him."

Here are excerpts from an email response to Mendoza's questions:

What experience did you bring to the conversation with Wil?

I know how hard it is to start something like a dance company, and I wished I would have had someone like me help me out. Because when I started my company, no one in the performing arts community was very supportive. Fort Worth is a very turf-protective kind of place, and everyone is seen as competition as opposed to colleagues. It's a different mindset here than had been my professional experience, as it was Wil's. I hadn't choreographed since I closed the company. I honestly couldn't get any work in the area. So when Wil and I talked, I told him that I could do a small piece for his company and that may help with getting some attention for his own work. I was just trying to help a fellow artist out. So after their initial premiere last spring, it worked out that I could do a small piece for the beginning of their new season.

Tell me about the new piece.

The new dance I am doing is called A Prayer for Mary Catherine.

The music is Patrick Doyle and Leonard Cohen. It's a very small dance in three sections. The dance came about because I was trying to find a vocabulary for the dance that seemed to fit the dancers in the company. I also noticed that the rest of the program was going to be contemporary in style and music, so I thought I would do something that would show off another side to the company, something feminine, lyrical and emotional. I also decided that I would do it on pointe, as opposed to my usual vocabulary of doing it either in bare feet or some other kind of shoes.

My work is based on feels and emotions. All of my dance vocabulary comes from that beginning. I never plan, and I never predetermine what a dance will be. I always start with some kind of emotional experience that I want to create and everything stems from that. With this dance, my friend Mary Catherine is a beautiful soul, and I have known her for a long time, so I thought it would be a sweet thing to make a dance for and about her. She has a feeling that she emanates while you are with her that is feminine, emotional and lyrical. I just kept that feeling in my head and body and heart as I choreographed. It's really that simple. That's how I choreograph. The piece is small and short, but I have learned after many years that once you have created whatever you wanted to accomplish in a dance, the dance needs to end. And for some reason this particular dance ended up being shorter than I initially thought, but there you go.

What have you and Wil talked about?

Wil and I have met several times, and he has asked a lot of questions about the dynamics of having a company. There is his personal aesthetic, the dancers, the money aspect, vision, the planning and all kinds of other things that go into to creating a company from nothing. It's a much larger task than one might think, and I have been there to answer any questions or concerns that he might have.

I believe that the more art out there the better it is for everyone. This idea that a community can only have one dance company, one opera company, etc., does all artists a disservice. It limits creativity as opposed to opening it up. When a single aesthetic is all there is, it is no better than dogma, and all of our bright and creative minds move to communities where aesthetic diversity is appreciated and even insisted on. We become better artists when we have other artists around us doing all kinds of different and interesting things. Serious dance has lost its way, and we need to encourage as many serious artists as we can to revive it and embolden it.

You will often hear that dance is hard to support, and the basic reason for that has been that in the past dance has not pushed itself. It has gotten comfortable in doing the same thing over and over, constantly underestimating its audience. (An example would be that there are probably over 25 different Nutcrackers around the area during Christmas, but the rest of the year tends to be dead empty for new and original work.) As a result, I believe the audience has gotten smaller. Then the resources get smaller, and then there comes the competition for a smaller pie. Then only the biggest survives. It becomes a vicious cycle.

As with my former company, and now with Wil's new company, he is trying to widen the audience for dance, and I am all for that. I will support anyone who is making a serious attempt to enlarge our dance repertory and consequently broaden our overall audience and the support that that garners. The only other person I know that is also making serious attempts to bring new and exciting things to the community is Charles Santos at TITAS. And I want to wish them both well, and will do all I can to support both of them.

FORMER WOBT DANCER EMILY HUNTER PERFORMING & CHOREOGRAPHING FOR TEXAS DANCE THEATRE



Former Western Oklahoma Ballet Theatre dancer Emily (Price) Hunter is very involved in the development of new Ft. Worth-area company Texas Dance Theatre. Hunter is dancing and choreographing for TDT, in addition to serving as the troupe’s ballet mistress. “Artistic Director Wil McKnight has developed a classically-trained ballet company with a contemporary flair,” said Hunter. “I’m personally drawn to the company because of its strong commitment to providing both quality public performances and educational outreach programs to the community.”

TDT held its Gala Kick-off Performance April 17, 2009 and has a four-performance “Season of Choreographers” planned for 2009-2010. Each performance will feature original works by Hunter, McKnight, and a special guest choreographer.

“I’m fortunate enough to be able to create new works of choreography on the company in addition to performing high-caliber works by Mr. McKnight and esteemed guest choreographers, such as Bruce Wood and Mel Tomlinson,” Hunter enthused. “I feel privileged to have a hand in the emergence of TDT as a unique voice in the dance community. Pinch me!” she laughed.

Hunter received her primary training from Penny Askew, and was a company dancer with WOBT for six seasons, 1993-1999, before attending the University of Iowa with a Dance Department scholarship. She has performed with the UI Dance Company, Dancers In Company, Duarte Dance Works, Charlotte Adams & Dancers, and Contemporary Dance/Fort Worth.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Choreographer Wil McKnight puts down roots in Fort Worth with his Texas Dance Theatre



By MANUEL MENDOZA / Special Contributor to The Dallas Morning News
Manuel Mendoza is a Dallas freelance writer.


Before settling down in Fort Worth, choreographer Wil McKnight was like a confirmed bachelor who couldn't stop moving from relationship to relationship. Training in New York, San Francisco and Houston. Performing with professional companies in Dallas, Long Island and Colorado.

"I kept going from place to place because I was so curious," McKnight says while preparing for opening night of his contemporary ballet troupe's first season.

His attitude changed during April's debut of the company, Texas Dance Theatre, which he calls "my wedding gig." "I thought, 'I'm marrying this company.' When you get to a certain age, I guess the instinct for stability kicks in."

Friday's program includes McKnight's Eight Lines, ballet mistress Emily Hunter's Marimba x 4, Western Oklahoma Ballet Theatre artistic director Penny Askew's Vigil and a premiere by celebrated Fort Worth choreographer Bruce Wood, A Prayer for Mary Catherine.

"I will support anyone who is making a serious attempt to enlarge our dance repertory and consequently broaden our overall audience and the support that that garners," says Wood, who hadn't made a dance since folding his own company in 2006.

McKnight was born in the small town of Clinton, La., and couldn't wait to get out. He never really wanted to be a dancer. Searching for an acting school for her son, McKnight's mother was advised that ballet would be a good foundation and enrolled him in classes at Baton Rouge Ballet Theatre. He was 10.

"I didn't know what ballet was," McKnight recalls. "They said I refused to wear tights. They had to get these pants for me made of plastic."

A year later, he was discovered at a Boston Ballet audition in New Orleans. By the time he was 15, McKnight was living in New York and attending the prestigious School of American Ballet. But restlessness set in.

He eventually wound up in the dance program at Texas Christian University – for a semester. He never graduated, and started teaching in local studios. Then two years ago, he and a friend formed a company, Push Comes to Shove, which evolved into Texas Dance Theatre.

McKnight is artistic director of the nonprofit company. So far, it is receiving support from the Amon G. Carter Foundation and makes money putting on lecture-demonstrations for the Fort Worth school district. McKnight is shooting for an annual budget of $500,000, similar to what Bruce Wood Dance Company was spending.

It's early, though. TDT rehearses at two different studios, offices at a third location, performs at a fourth. "One day, I'm going to have my own building," McKnight says. "I'm not playing around. I'm in this for the long haul."