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Tuesday, December 1, 2015

December 2015 APPLAUSE


BREAKING NEWS...

Re-Imagining Theatre

Marcus Dilliard, Theatre Arts & Dance chair and Tom Burrup, Arts & Cultural Leadership Program director announce a very special event bringing together four artistic directors for a public conversation: Re-Imagining Theatre, December 11 in the Rarig Center’s Stoll Thrust Theatre.

Sarah Bellamy, Joseph Haj, Sara Rasmussen, and Randy Reyes

Artistic Directors: Sarah Bellamy, Joe Haj, Sarah Rasmussen, Randy Reyes

This spirited conversation with the new generation of Twin Cities’ theatrical leaders Sarah Bellamy, Penumbra Theatre; Joe Haj, Guthrie Theater; Sarah Rasmussen, Jungle Theater and Randy Reyes, Mu Performing Arts will be moderated by Minnesota Public Radio’s Arts correspondent, Marianne Combs. A recent New York Times article identifying these four theatre artists as harbingers of change indicates they “are reconsidering what words like collaboration and equity mean, and how they play out, both onstage and offstage.” The conversation will also explore questions about diversity, and who frames the story in interpreting the classics.  The evening’s discussion on compelling theatre, to be recorded by Minnesota Public Radio, will include an opportunity for questions from the audience. The Re-Imagining Theatre conversation will be presented December 11, 2015 at 7:00pm in the Rarig Center’s Stoll Thrust Theatre. General admission tickets are available for $5; no charge for students with valid ID cards.  
For tickets and information call: U of M Arts /Events Ticket Office at 612 624-2345 or visit: theatre.umn.edu (click BUY TICKETS). Tickets are also available at the door one hour prior to performance.  

IN PERFORMANCE @ RARIG...



University Dance Theatre’s Dance Revolutions takes center stage presenting a dazzling collection of four cutting-edge pieces, including a premiere, December 10 -13 at the Rarig Center. Performed by U of M students, this exciting program includes "Two Pieces of One: Green" by the internationally acclaimed Tony Award winning choreographer Garth Fagan, a leading force in the contemporary modern dance world, Gerald Casel’s highly praised Proxima, and artistic director Joanie Smith re-imagines her work Pat A Cake from Shapiro & Smith Dance's repertoire. The premiere of The People’s Circus, created by McKnight Fellow Wynn Fricke concludes the program.

Directed by USA Knight Award-winner Toni Pierce-Sands(see related news below),   artistic director of TU Dance and member of Theatre Arts & Dance faculty Dance Revolutions performs December 10, 11, 12 at 7:30 pm and December 13 at 2:00 pm. Tickets are now available by visiting: dance.umn.edu or by calling (612) 624-2345.


Toni Pierce-Sands &Uri Sands of TU Dance: Winners of                                  USA Knight Fellowship!

                                           Toni Pierce-Sands & Uri Sands  Photo: Ingrid Werthmann

                   Congratuations UMTAD faculty member Toni Pierce-Sands and Uri Sands of TU Dance  on the USA Knight Fellowship! The news arrived just a few weeks ago; the USA Knight press release explains, “Each year, United States Artists (USA) awards $50,000 fellowships to the country’s most accomplished and innovative artists working in the fields of Architecture & Design, Crafts, Dance, Literature, Media, Music, Theater & Performance, Traditional Arts and Visual Arts.”

“Toni Pierce-Sands and Uri Sands are founders and artistic directors of TU Dance, a Minnesota-based dance company recognized for its diverse repertory, versatile artists, and for performances that are engaging, dynamic and generous. Modern dance, classical ballet, African based and urban vernacular movements are combined in inventive and unpredictable ways to provide opportunities to experience the connective power of dance. In 2011, Toni and Uri expanded TU Dance with the opening of TU Dance Center and The School at TU Dance Center, realizing their vision of a welcoming hub for dance education and training in Saint Paul. Now in its fourth year, the vibrant TU Dance Center—home to the performing company—also offers year-round educational programming for dance students of all ages and abilities. Through Toni and Uri’s leadership in cultivating public and private funding to support access, TU Dance Center provides world-class dance training to students regardless of financial status. Toni directs educational programming and teaches classes at TU Dance Center in Saint Paul and at the University of Minnesota, where she is also the Director of University Dance Theater.”

“Fellows are selected through a rigorous, highly competitive process involving hundreds of experts, scholars, administrators and artists. USA Fellows spotlight the importance of originality across every creative discipline, celebrating the broad diversity of American artistic practices from coast to coast, cultivating a creative ecology that is diverse in age, race, religion, gender, and sexual orientation. United States Artists believes in risk-taking as central to promoting the power of art in American life and creatively impacting the world. The support that USA Fellows receive each year clears the way for unburdened artistic innovation and unleashes creative expression.  

Also Showing   December 5 -7 only...                     

Glimpse down dark alleys and slip into smoke filled rooms - where finance meets romance, and criminals become bankers - as you discover The Threepenny Opera’s deeper story in A Penny for Brecht, a creative collaboration. Framed as an open “rehearsal” with Brecht actively imagining his work with his actors, A Penny for Brecht offers a critically engaging look into Brecht’s struggle to stage capitalism.

Directed by theatre artist and faculty member Kym Longhi, this showing in the Nolte Xperimental Theatre is free, but requires advance reservations for general admission due to limited seating. Visit theatre.umn.edu under UPCOMING EVENTS to obtain tickets to one of four showings December 5-7.

                                                                     



 Mark your Calendar … 

Offstage Voices: Life in Twin Cities Theater

Author Peg Guilfoyle at U Bookstore / December 3 

 “The Twin Cities theater community is one of the most vibrant in the nation. These stories from our most significant artists are an excellent resource for students (and their parents).”                     
--Marcus Dilliard, Chair, Department of Theatre Arts & Dance

“ Captures the pulse and temperature of our theater world.” 
-- Sally Wingert, Artist of the Year 2013, (StarTribune), Best Actress in 2014, (City Pages)        U of M alumna.

Local author and theater director and producer, Peg Guilfoyle, discusses her book Offstage Voices: Life in Twin Cities Theater on Thursday, December 3 at 4:00 p.m. at the University of Minnesota Bookstore in Coffman Memorial Union, 300 Washington Ave SE Minneapolis.
Get an in-depth look at the vibrant theatrical offerings in the Twin Cities including insights into what it takes to put on a production, from first script to closing night, and what it takes to make a living in Twin Cities theater. Offstage Voices delivers firsthand stories from theater professionals that take you behind the scenes of a wide range of theaters including the Guthrie, Park Square, Mixed Blood, Penumbra and many more. Explore why the Twin Cities have established such a strong and well-regarded theatrical community over the last four decades.
Guilfoyle will sign copies of her book following the discussion. This event is free and open to the public. For more information, or to order a signed copy visit www.bookstore.umn.edu/genref/authors.html Learn more >


STUDENT NEWS


Following the shooting of five Black Lives Matter protesters by three assailants at the Minneapolis Police Department’s 4th Precinct, 150 University of Minnesota students called for a fundamental change to law enforcement in front of Northrop Auditorium Tuesday, November 24.

Dance program majors responded to the protest with an improvised dance on the Northrop stairs, expressing their individual and collective feelings. Click link: 



Brian Grossman (BA ‘16) worked assisting director Joel Sass on the current production of Conor McPhersons’s The Night Alive which continues through December 20.   

Megan Winter (MFA ’16) in Theatre Design and Technology has been gaining professional experience as a lighting designer, electrician and programmer this fall semester.  Her credits as an electrician include Sweeney Todd (Theatre Latte Da); The Night Alive (Jungle Theatre); An Octoroon (Mixed Blood) Daughter of the Regiment (Mill City Summer Opera); as lighting designer for “Pat A Cake” one of the pieces in UDT: Dance Revolutions opening December 10 at Rarig Center. 
 
ALUMNI SPOTLIGHTS 


Grant Sorrenson (B.A. ’12) has written a new musical, with music and lyrics by David Darrow. Together they co-direct the premiere of The Great Work, for The 7th House Theater presented at the Guthrie’s Dowling Studio December 20-January 3. Spanning sixty years, The Great Work follows the world’s most renowned living pianist on a journey into his past where deep love and unparalleled genius converged to shape two lives forever. 


Nate Stanger (B.A.’13) is making his professional debut at assistant stage manager for 
Ordway Center’s Sound of Music while humming “My Favorite Things”, December 10- January 2. On the Showboat served as deck manager (The Vampire! ’12) and and the following summer stage manager (Sweet Revenge! ’13).   




Paul Hackenmueller, (MFA) knows how to light up the holidays. He created the lighting design for Children’s Theatre Company’s Wizard of Oz which is winning high praise from the local press -- “will take you by storm” and “massively entertaining.”   For the Dallas Opera, he will light-up Becoming Santa, the world premiere of a holiday opera with Scottish director Paul Curran; Paul will be featured in January’s issue of Applause. 

You’ll meet more U of M theatre alums on the yellow brick road to Oz at Children’s Theater.  Reed Sigmund (BA. Minneapolis) plays the Cowardly Lion along with Mary Fox (BA, Duluth) who plays the Wicked Witch of the West.

Jesse Cogswell (MFA ‘14) is a lighting designer unafraid of a challenge. This being the darkest month of the year, Cogswell takes on Walking Shadow’s productions of A Mid-Winter’s Night’s Revel playing December 4-30 at Red Eye Theater in Minneapolis.

Santino Fontana, (BFA ‘04) starred in ACT ONE,on the Live from Lincoln Center’s broadcast on PBS television stations last month. Lincoln Center Theater's presentation of James Lapine's vivid play about the great playwright Moss Hart, re-imagined from Hart's memoir also starred Tony Shalhoub, and Andrea Martin.  Check out his interview with scene inserts from the Broadway show click  http://video.pbs.org/video/2365604164/





Park Square Theater’s The Snow Queen plays through December 27 and features alums Elyse Edelman (BFA ‘12) and current BFA seniors Michael Liebhauser and Silas Sellnow.  Anita Killing (BA’10) provides sound design. For more information, visit: http://parksquaretheatre.org/box-office/shows/2015-16/the-snow-queen/

Note: Snow Queen Director Doug Scholz-Carlson, who is also artistic director at Great River Shakespeare Festival, will be a visiting artist on campus. He will co-direct Shakespeare’s Henry IV, performed by the University of Minnesota/Guthrie Theatre Actor’s Training Sophomore class in the spring. For information and tickets visit: theatre.umn.edu

Bear Brummel (BFA ‘15), Virginia Burke (BA) Eleonore Dendy( BFA ‘11), Stuart Gates, (BFA), Summer Hagan (BFA), Katie Kleiger ( BFA’15) Suzane Warmanen (BFA, MFA) are enjoying a dickens of a holiday season playing in Guthrie’s A Christmas Carol. The costumes for this holiday favorite were designed by faculty member and 2015 Ivey Award winner Mathew LeFevbre.

FACULTY 

Engaging: from Minneapolis, to Addis Ababa, to London 



See YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qU5weENMupA 


(Minneapolis)—After a five year hiatus, The Holiday Pageant created by faculty member Michael Sommer returns December 10, marking 30 years since the first Holiday Pageant was staged in the living room of Open Eye founders Michael Sommers and Susan Haas. Growing from that venue and several others (including the Southern Theatre) through the years, The Holiday Pageant is ready to conjure its magic one last time in this farewell production on the Open Eye Figure Theatre stage. This “delightful and original retelling of the Mystery Plays and the Second Shepherds's Play, the stage fills with angels and devils, Mary and Joseph, the shepherds, and Fluffsie the lamb.”  

Written and directed by Sommers, who also plays Lucifer, this production reassembles many of its original cast including faculty member Luverne Seifert and actor/playwright  Kevin Kling, plus Sarah Agnew, and Liz Schachterle (B.A.‘06). The Holiday Pageant is presented plays December 10- 21.  More information and tickets




 Ananya Dance Theatre  AT CROSSING BOUNDARIES FESTIVAL OPENING CEREMONY,
SEPT. 24, 2015. PHOTO BY CROSSING BOUNDARIES ETHIOPIA
(Addis Ababa) -- Dance faculty member Professor Ananya Chatterjea, founder and artistic director of Ananya Dance Theatre (ADT), enjoyed a very rich harvest of experiences this autumn. Awarded the Sage Award as the year’s Outstanding Dance Educator, Dr. Chatterjea also was creating her latest dance work bringing audiences to their feet in St. Paul and Addis Ababa, Ethiopia. On September 18th ADT presented the world premiere of Roktim: Nurture Incarnadine in the O’Shaughnessy Auditorium at St. Catherine University and just a week later was performing it in Africa. 
 
The company of 10 performers and a stage production manager travelled to East Africa to represent the United States and Minnesota for two unique events in Ethiopia’s capital of approximately 3.4 million. Sponsored by the U.S. State Department, Ananya Dance Theatre arrived days before they took center stage at National Theatre to present the festival’s keynote performance, Roktim: Nurture Incarnadine a transformative, interdisciplinary food story that honors the work of women in the agricultural sector of global societies and how it influences the food system. “People were so surprised to experience an American dance company comprised totally of women of color,” commented one of the ADT performers.
In addition the U.S. Embassy sponsored a reception for alumni of educational and cultural exchanges between the United States and Ethiopia, as part of a month-long series of activities honoring 75 years of the two nations working together through cross-cultural sharing. According to the Asian American Press, “Ambassador Patricia Haslach, delivered welcoming remarks, and Burnsville native Learned Dees, the embassy’s Cultural Affairs Officer, introduced Ananya Dance Theatre and its performance  which included a sung poem linking the Mississippi and Nile rivers, and dancers circulating throughout the ballroom.”

U.S.Congressman (Fifth District) Keith Ellison later remarked, “Ananya Dance Theatre traveled thousands of miles to Addis Ababa to help the U.S. embassy  celebrate 75 years of diplomatic relations between the US and Ethiopia. I can’t imagine a more fitting representative of my district than ADT, and I’m so proud that their hard work has given them the opportunity to share their craft with people all over the world.”  

The Minnesotan visitors also participated in numerous workshops with Addis Ababa Theatre and Culture Hall, and the Cultural Arts Center of Addis Ababa University. They also met with14 law students -- all young women who organized themselves as the Yellow Movement focusing on women’s issues – who accompanied the dance company members to a shelter for victims of domestic violence. Reaching out to the local community they participated in a joint workshop with members of the Destino Dance Company, an Ethiopian ensemble established to help underprivileged young people develop their potential through dance. At the Goethe Institute of Addis Ababa University, Dr. Chatterjea participated in a round-table discussion on “Movement, Ideas, and Bodies” with fellow academic scholars. The ADT company returned to the Twin Cities on September 29th.
With a focus on women of color, Chatterjea’s choreographic creation not only sought to educate people on the practices of female agricultural labor, but more importantly, sought to honor the women who invested their love, labor, and lives into the cultivation of the land for the utilitarian sake of sustaining communities of people. “I tell stories through dance and try to express social issues with audiences through personal stories which are partly remembered, partly researched, and partly imagined,” Dr. Chatterjea explained. Ananya Dance Theatre’s global journey demonstrates how the fine arts produce powerful social messages that know no borders, and create limitless opportunities.   

    Tate Modern 
(London) …. Professor Michal Kobialka, was invited to speak at London’s Tate Modern, home of the distinguished museum’s international modern and contemporary art collection, on October 30, 2015.  This speaking engagement was part of his lecture tour celebrating Tadeusz Kantor’s centennial.  His other lectures included a talk, “Why Kantor?” at the Royal Holloway College/University of London, a lecture, “Of Memory and History: Tadeusz Kantor’s Theatre of Minima Moralia,” the Goldsmiths’ College, and a presentation on “Late Style” at the University of London’s Senate House. In each venue, Kobialka explored different topics related to this Polish visual artist and theatre director’s artistic practice. “The breadth and diversity of his artistic endeavors align him with such diverse artists as, for example, Marcel Duchamp, Vsevelod Meyerhold, Oscar Schlemmer, Jackson Pollock, Jerzy Grotowski, Christo, Allan Kaprow, Robert Wilson, or Pina Bausch,” contends Kobialka. As a theatre artist, Kantor redefined performance space as he reflected upon and refracted the concept of memory.
In September, U of M students had the opportunity to learn about Kantor’s representational practices during a week-long course Professor Kobialka taught featuring a special guest actor Ludmila Ryba from Kantor’s Cricot 2 Theatre who provided rich and insightful commentary.
On December 7, 2015, Professor Kobialka will present “A Requiem for Tadeusz Kantor” at the Cricoteka in Kraków, Poland to close the centennial celebrations and to commemorate the twenty fifth anniversary of Kantor’s death on December 8, 1990.
At the Tate Modern during the year the BMW TateLive 2015: Staging Situations: Art and Theatre series selected artists, curators, actors, theatre directors and writers to create unique situations for the public to engage with ideas around the museum. Using its collection as a stage for performance, speech, choreography and dramatization, the museum then offered in response follow-up forums with artists, theatre-makers, and art historians to frame further questions and evoke discussions.  

In September, artist Paulina Olowska presented a site-specific theatre performance within Tate Modern’s collection displays. ‘The Mother An Unsavoury Play in Two Acts and an Epilogue’ is an adaptation of avant-garde playwright Stanisław Ignacy Witkiewicz’s play from 1924. The story takes place in a bourgeois setting in which hallucinations, schizophrenia, alcoholism, madness and drug addiction turn into surrealist mayhem. Two professional actors played the role of the mother and the son, while Olowska’s friends and collaborators took on characters including the maid, the prostitute, the aristocratic party boy and the suspicious individual.

Olowska transformed a room in the Tate’s Poetry and Dream collection display into the theatre set which was open during the day as an installation. The room became a domestic interior inhabited by works by artists including Meredith Frampton, Dora Carrington and Henri Matisse and shows Olowska’s continued interest in the appropriation of histories and the function of painting as a fictional space.

To view an introduction and scenes from the piece click below: 
 http://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/performance-and-music/paulina-olowska-mother-unsavoury-play-two-acts-and

On October 30, artist Paulina Olowska, together with Professor Kobialka and Thomas Oberender, Director of Berliner Festspiel to participate in a program titled “On Stage/Off Stage: Performance and the Theatrical.”  They responded to this site-specific theatre performance and questions it provoked. The event was chaired by Professor Rebecca Schneider of Brown University.
The program explored questions that included: 

What is the relationship between art and theatre in relation to liveness, the audience and the site of the theatre/museum ? 

What role does performance and live art play in increasingly blurring the boundaries between art and theatre? 

How do discourses coming out of theatre performance studies, art history and related disciplines differently frame and understand these art practices ? 

To what extent can the artist be considered a dramaturge/actor or director? 

See the video of the introduction, Professor Kobialka’s presentation and panel discussion at the Tate Modern, click below.

                               



London's Tate Modern 



Sunday, November 1, 2015

November 2015 APPLAUSE

NOVEMBER 2015  APPLAUSE


 What’s on @ Rarig? 


DANCE REVOLUTIONS in the Wings
rehearsal photo: Brandon Stengel
 Dance Revolutions  takes center stage presenting a dazzling collection of four cutting- edge pieces, including a premiere, December 10 -13 at the Rarig Center. Performed by U of M students, this exciting program includes "Two Pieces of One: Green" by the internationally acclaimed Tony Award winning choreographer Garth Fagan, a leading force in the contemporary modern dance world, Gerald Casel’s highly praised Proxima, and artistic director Joanie Smith re-imagines her entertaining work Pat A Cake from Shapiro & Smith Dance's repertoire. The much anticipated premiere of The People’s Circus, created by McKnight Fellow Wynn Fricke concludes the program. Directed by Toni Pierce-Sands, artistic director of TU Dance and member of Theatre Arts & Dance faculty Dance Revolutions performs December 10, 11, 12 at 7:30 pm and December 13 at 2:00 pm. Tickets are now available by visiting dance.umn.edu or by calling (612) 624-2345.

Crticis have named Garth Fagan a true original,” “a genuine leader,” and “one of the great reformers of modern dance.”  Fagan is the founder and artistic director of the award-winning and internationally acclaimed Garth Fagan Dance, now celebrating its 45th season. A Tony and Olivier award winner for his extraordinary choreography of the musical hit The Lion King, Fagan continually renews his own distinctive dance vocabulary. “Originality has always been Mr. Fagan’s strong suit, not least in his transformation of recognizable idioms into a dance language that looks not only fresh but even idiosyncratic,” writes Anna Kisselgoff of the New York Times.                                              


Dance Revolutions begins with Gerald Casel’s piece Proxima. In reviewing his work Dance Magazine (May 2010) posed the question “What is it about just a few bodies moving in space that can hold an audience captive? Maybe it’s Casel’s endlessly inventive lexicon, lush yet quirky, that keeps you transfixed.” A first-generation Filipino-American who grew up in California before moving to New York to study dance at the Juilliard School, Casel has danced in the companies of Michael Clark, Sungsoo Ahn, Stanley Love, Zvi Gotheiner, the Metropolitan Opera Ballet, Lar Lubovitch and Stephen Petronio. Now a faculty member of Dance in the Theater Arts Department at the University of California-Santa Cruz, Casel says his current work is motivated by a desire to understand his personal history. 

Joanie Smith’s Pat A Cake opens the second part of the Dance Revolutions program. Smith founded Shapiro & Smith Dance with Daniel Shapiro in 1987, developing a collaborative method to create their work. Danial Shapiro died in 2006 and now Joanie Smith serves as sole Artistic Director. Shapiro & Smith’s work has been commissioned by companies as diverse as the Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, and the PACT Company of South Africa. The Company has toured all over the U.S. and abroad including performing four times at The Joyce Theater in New York City, ten years at The Southern Theater in Minneapolis and now three seasons at The Cowles Center For Dance And The Performing Arts. Over 600 dancers have performed, To Have and to Hold, and Shapiro & Smith’s production of ANYTOWN has had more than 40 performances across the U.S., including New York City’s The Joyce Theater and Minneapolis’ The Guthrie Theater.

The premiere of Wynn Fricke’s The Peoples’ Circus concludes the program. Fricke has been called a “choreographic shaman” who creates “timeless works that comment on the human condition with muscular choreography and primordial power” (Star Tribune). Her choreography has been produced across the America, in Russia, and Micronesia. Her commissions include new works from Zenon Dance Company, Ragamala Dance, James Sewell Ballet, Ballet Arts Minnesota, and Frank Theatre. She served for two years as Resident Choreographer for Minnesota Dance Theatre, and is founder of Borrowed Bones Dance Theatre. Wynn is the recipient of seven McKnight Fellowships in Choreography and Performance, and two New York State-funded grants from Arts International and Trust for Mutual Understanding. She has been named “Best Choreographer” and one of the “Artists of the Year” by Minneapolis’ City Pages, and has been honored with two Sage Awards for “Outstanding Performance.” 
                                                           

A Penny for Brecht -- B.A. Creative Collaboration   
                                                                 


Glimpse down dark alleys and slip into smoke filled rooms where finance meets romance, and criminals become bankers - as you discover Threepenny Opera’s deeper story in A Penny for Brecht, a creative collaboration.

Framed as an open “rehearsal” with Brecht actively imagining his work with his actors, A Penny for Brecht offers a critically engaging look into Brecht’s struggle to stage capitalism. A Penny for Brecht directed by theatre artist and faculty member Kym Longhi, weaves together interdepartmental resources of the U of M German Department and Theatre guiding the student collaborators. The workshop explores the relationship between the Threepenny Opera and the economic forces that frayed the social fabric of the Weimar Republic - resulting in a crumbling government, corrupt police, syndicates, gangs, and spiraling unemployment.  Selected songs and highlights from Threepenny Opera will fuse with Brecht’s revisionist Threepenny Novel, and his Messingkauf Dialogues to create this highly provocative theatrical expose. 

This showing will be presented  December 5-7 (note: two showings  December 6) in Rarig Center’s Nolte Xperimental Theatre.  Admission is free to this showing. To reserve your general admission seat to a performance , click  http://z.umn.edu/umtad and print your pass.

 A Penny for Brecht, a creative collaboration workshop heralds the upcoming Weill & Brecht Festival presented by the Theatre Arts and Dance Department and the School of Music in the spring of 2016. Stay tuned for details. 

NEWS



The Theatre Arts & Dance Department is sadden to report Nicole Kopfmann (Theatre Arts '15) honor student, peer representative, performer passed away Oct 11,2015 after battling cancer. Deepest sympathy is extended to the Kopfmann family. Our department remembers Nicole’s indomitable spirit and joy of learning she shared with us all. --Faculty, staff and students. 


Devon Cox,  Warren Bowles and Cage Pierre
                  Park Square Theatre's  production of My Children! My Africa!  photo: Petronella J. Ytsma      
                                                         
                

My Children! My Africa! -- My Minnesota!


“Sometimes, it’s a very small world.”

Cage Pierre (BFA ‘16)  will soon perform the role of Thami Mbikwana in Athol Fugard’s My Children! My Africa!  in the regional premiere of this powerful three-person drama at Park Square Theatre’s Andy Boss Thrust stage, November 11-29. Thami is an 18-year-old black South African student in Mr. M's class at Zolile High School in 1984.

Six months ago, Cage  was introduced by chance to the stage, film and screen actor Courtney B. Vance as they were riding up a Guthrie Theatre elevator. They chatted for a moment as they exited. Mr. Vance advised the young actor about launching his professional career and choosing with care his roles and audition material. “Look at Fugard – Thami of in My Children!, My Africa! Great for part you,” he suggested. Vance played the role in My Children! My Africa! in his professional debut at the New York Theatre Workshop in the play's 1989 American premiere.  

Meanwhile, stars were aligning themselves.... James A. Williams, the professional Twin Cities actor who played Mr. M in the highly acclaimed 2012 Signature Theatre production in New York City, now was preparing to cast the play in St. Paul. Cage audtioned and “I guess it was just meant to be,” says the smiling senior.

Cage will play opposite the award-winning actor and playwright Warren C. Bowles, who is cast as Mr.M. Incidentally, Mr. Bowles also trained in the University of Minnesota Theatre department, as well as at the University of Notre Dame and Université Catholique de l'Ouest. He has been a member of the Mixed Blood Theatre company since 1977, and his theatrical credits span stages across the Twin Cities and nation. 

The U of M connections reach further. Lance Brockman, Professor Emeritus, creates set design for and props for the production, adding to his already impressive list of Park Square artistic contributions. Faculty member Lucinda Holshue, who teaches voice, speech, and text in the University of Minnesota/Guthrie Theater B.F.A. Actor Training Program, shares her expertise with the My Children! My Africa! company at Park Square.

Click below for 
Signature Theatre interview with Athol Fugard on the writing My Children My Africa! 
https://vimeo.com/39429858




 

SAGE Awards Honor Five Dance Faculty Members
Congrats to all the 2015 SAGE winners!  Kudos to the members of our TAD Department faculty and teaching staff  honored this year at the SAGE:

Ananya Chatterjea received a special citation for Outstanding Dance Educator for commitment and accomplishment in the dance education

Karla Grotting and Eclectic Edge Ensemble for Outstanding Dance Performance for Lost Voices in Jazz: Choreographers of the Minnesota Jazz Dance Company

Penelope Freeh and Joycelyn Hagen for Overall Design for Test Pilot

Dustin Maxwell for Outstanding Dance Ensemble for Fu-Ku-Shi-Ma with the Nenkin Butoh Dan Ensemble

The Minnesota SAGE Awards for Dance are given annually for outstanding achievement in six categories: Outstanding Performance, Performer, Ensemble, Design, Dance Educator, and Special Citation. This year marked the eleventh annual Minnesota SAGE Awards for Dance, which were held at The Cowles Center on Tuesday, October 13.

Congratulations to all the winners and nominees!  Thanks everyone for contributing to and cultivating the vibrant dance community in the Twin Cities.



STUDENTS 


Fiona Lotti (BA ’16) directed as a student classroom project Tom Stoppard’s Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead, in an all-student production performed free in the Nolte Xperimental Theatre in Rarig. 

Megan Burns (BFA ’15) performs in Mixed Blood Theatre’s provocative production of An Octoroon, by Brandeen Jacobs-Jenkins and directed by Nataki Garrett. Burns plays a “quietly combustible Zoe the tragic ‘mulatto’ in this production that leaves no archetype left behind." (StarTribune).  An Octoroon performs now through November 15. For more information, visit: https://app.arts-people.com/index.php?ticketing=mbt01



 Megan Burns left and Jamila Anderson in Mixed Blood Theatre’s  An Octoroon 
                                                   photo:Rich Ryan

Emily Grodzik (BFA’ 13) is pictured in the current issue of American Theatre's article about Minneapolis’ Playwrights' Center experimenting with its 32nd annual PlayLabs series. Ms. Grodzik recently appeared in a staged reading of “Small Town Values” by Kathryn Walat at PlayLabs 2015. 


H. Adams Harris (BFA’11) is currently performing multiple roles in the Children’s Theatre Company’s The Jungle Book. Harris was featured in the Star Tribune as a charismatic positive leader, as well as a talented actor and teaching artist at Penumbra, the Guthrie, and Ten Thousand Things. Harris plays Baloo, the big-hearted innocent bear, as well as Father Wolf and a monkey. Asked what the multi-role experience has taught him as a performer, Adam  responded simply, “I’m capable.”

During the summer, Harris serves as program manager for the Penumbra Summer Institute, a three-year leadership development program that trains teens to use their passion for the arts to promote social justice and equity. Forty-six young people participated in classes, workshops and devised performances hosted in Rarig Center for six weeks this summer. 
                                                                                                                                                        
 The Jungle Book at Children's Theatre Company photo: Dan Norman 
Casey Hoekstra (BFA ‘10) also performs as Shere Khan, the ravenous tiger in the Children Theatre Company’s production of The Jungle Book, playing now through December 15
as does...

Andrea San Miguel   (BFA ’12) who plays  Mowgile. Bagheera/ Kaa/ Mother Wolf / Monkey and Vulture Understudyin The Jungle Book at CTC. She has performed across the Twin Cities with Theatre Latte Da, History Theatre,  Walking Shadow, Illusions and the Public Theatre of Minnesota. She has aslo worked for Chicago Shakespeare.


Meghan Kreidler (BFA ‘13) plays a variety of characters in the amazing Ten Thousand Things Theatre Company’s all female staging of Henry IV Part 1, performed at Open Book  until November 2. “With riveting actor-driven storytelling, the 8-woman cast plays 20 roles, then literally and figuratively kicks butt [with fight choreography by adjunct faculty member Annie Enneking. The female production paradoxically illuminates masculinity and how it is constrained in the two primary worlds of the play,” reports Sonja Kuftinec, associate department chair.

ALUMS

                                                                           
Tovah Feldshuh                                                     photo: Tony Cenicola / NYTimes 

Tovah Feldshuh (MFA) actor singer, playwright  will be seen in a featured role in “Flesh and Bone,” a Starz mini-series set in the ballet world that debuts this month according to a interview appearing in the New York Times” Ms. Felshuh  who plays the former Ohio congresswoman Deanna Monroe on the AMC horror series “The Walking Dead”  is also performing her cabaret show “Aging is Optional” at Feinstein’s/54 Below. 


Sarah Brander (MFA’13) is the Lighting Designer on the artistic staff of Penumbra Theatre this season.  Her recent scenic and lighting designs include Penumbra’s The Particular Patriot, On the Way to Timbuktu , Jamaica Farewell. Her work has also included designs for Guthrie Theater Minnesota Opera, and The Acting Company.     

FACULTY 

 Michael Sommer prepares to bring back his highly popular Holiday Pageant, not seen at for a number of years at Open Eye Figure Theatre.  Opens December 11.
http://www.openeyetheatre.org/stage/2015-2016-season

Carl Flink, was among the host of other artists including choreographers Patrick Corbin, Larry Keigwin, James Sewell and Chris Yon as well as composer Jocelyn Hagen for an evening to raise funds for Minnesota AIDS Project  last month at the Southern Theatre.


MARK YOUR CALENDAR NOW…


New Dance Works by Penelope Freeh
November 6 and 7 at 7:00 pm and 9:00 pm both nights  
Four Seasons Dance Studio, 1637 Hennepin Avenue, Minneapolis 55403
(Facing Café Lurcat: go right, down the alley)
 For tickets and information contact: Penelopefree.com

Performers for New Dance Works Darwin Balck, Penelope Freeh,  Alejandra Iannone , Brittany Keefe,  Nic Lincoln, Sally Rousse , Hannah Sullivan, and  Erin Thompson will dance to the music of composer/instrumentalists Jocelyn Hagen,  Timothy Takach, Jeremy Verwys.



How to Make it to theDance Floor: A Salsa Guide for Women (Based on Actual Experiences)

Thursday, November 19, 2015, at 4:00pm Crosby Seminar Room, 2nd Floor East Side, 240 NorthropNo cost and open to the public
No cost and open to the public

A staged reading of a play by IAS Fellow Cindy Garcia and dramaturg Lucy Burns.

Cindy García is an Associate Professor, dance theorist, performance ethnographer, and playwright in the Department of Theatre Arts and Dance at the University of Minnesota. Her book Salsa Crossings: Dancing Latinidad in Los Angeles (Duke UP 2013) addresses the politics of social performances of Mexican-ness, latinidad, and migration in Los Angeles salsa clubs. Her research and teaching interests include the cultural politics of migration, race, and racialization, feminist ethnography, Chicana/o and Latin/o American Performance Studies, and the gendered performances of latinidad in urban libidinal economies. 

Lucy Mae San Pablo Burns is an Associate Professor at UCLA’s Asian American.Studies .  She is the author of Puro Arte: On the Filipino Performing Body, published by NYU Press. Current inquiries include representations of the future in performance through the figure of the robot, and “commonwealth” as an American identity. Burns is also a dramaturg,
whose recent collaborations include David Rousseve’s Stardust, and R. Zamora Linmark’s But, Beautiful, and TeAda Productions’Global Taxi Driver. She has participated in several projects focusing on Asian American theater and performance, including attending the 2007 World Social Forum as a member of a UCLA’s Asian American.S. artist delegation and as a reviewer for the National Asian American Theater Festival (2009, 2011).

This event is cosponsored by the Departments of Asian American Studies, Chicano and Latino Studies, Gender Women and Sexuality Studies, Immigration Studies, and Theatre Arts and Dance.
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