Dancers rehearsing Joshua L. Peugh’s new creation Aimless Young Man for our Fall Series OCT 9-11
Tickets are on sale NOW for our 2015/16 Season!
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“Hang around in Dallas for Dark Circles Contemporary Dance Fall series, Sept. 4-6, at Hardy & Betty Sanders Theatre in Fort Worth. Dark Circles premieres artistic director Joshua L. Peugh’s Beautiful Knuckleheads, set to the music of 1980’s pop duo Daryl Hall & John Oates.”
“Guest choreographer Mike Esperanza, of New York City-based BARE Dance, will create a new work, along with a company premiere of Words in Motion by emerging choreographer Chadi El-Khoury, set to an original score composed by Hunter Long.”
http://artsandculturetx.com/top-ten-september-dance-shows-in-texas/
Our dancers, Artistic Director, and half of our Board of Directors at AFFD - The Asian Film Festival of Dallas Opening Night
Listening to Silent Words
“Make this last run-through all about listening.” On a Monday night after three hours of rehearsal, listening while trying to turn, slide, and balance seemed impossible. We are currently in the process of learning “Words in Motion” by choreographer Chadi El-Khoury, and I am learning how to listen.
Yes, the dance itself is very physically demanding. Yoga-like in approach, the piece requires challenging headstands, body-knotting contortion, and one-legged balances. And in the first few days of rehearsal, this movement material felt foreign to us all. We readily shared dumbfounded looks as we watched master Chadi mount into single shoulder stands that seemed to levitate. After the shock subsided, a light laughter almost always followed because we knew that somehow someway, we had to learn just how to execute that exact move. Needless to say, my arms have never felt so sore!
But now after about a week with Chadi, I am learning that the dance is not about the body and its soreness, but rather about the mind. Like swimming in thick ooze, the group slowly floats into movement with the goal of synchronizing so that each stroke is in perfect unison. And more so than the dance’s demanding physicality, it is a mental test, challenging our eyes and ears to remain sensitive and aware to the group’s space and timing during the twelve-minute piece.
Chadi reminds us to listen. At first it sounded simple, but I soon learned that listening, much like mastering a headstand, takes time. Fortunately, working with Chadi has made this listening test a little easier. He teaches by example: having patience in the process by giving us the time we need to really understand the movement but more importantly, to understand and listen to each other.
So in our last run on Monday night, I ignored the soreness in my arms, put my meticulous attention to detail aside, and instead focused on listening to the group. And the things I heard as a result reminded me why I love to dance.
In working with Chadi, my ears are growing. I am starting to listen to my fellow dancers—waiting or speeding up so that we all meet and meditate together. And as we finish up “Words in Motion,” I am eager to keep practicing how to listen to the words my peers say—even if these words are not spoken but instead danced.
Kelsey Rohr
Dancer, Dark Circles Contemporary Dance
Dancer Alex Karigan Farrior rehearsing Chadi El-Khoury’s ‘Words in Motion’ for our Fall Series at the Sanders Theatre Sept 4-6
Dancer Alex Karigan Farrior and Artistic Director Joshua L. Peugh rehearsing ’Cosmic Sword’ for our Germany Tour this week
Rehearsing Joshua L. Peugh’s new work ‘Beautiful Knuckleheads’ for our Fall Series at the Sanders
Get to know the Dancer // Kelsey Rohr
Get to know the dancers of DCCD, their inspirations, and where their training began. We would like to introduce Kelsey Rohr!
1. How long have you been dancing?
About 17 years.
2. Why did you start dancing?
As a three year old, I started ballet because I needed to be a fairy princess. But around ten years old, Richmond Ballet’s outreach program, Minds in Motion, came and taught a different, pedestrian-based movement style to my fourth grade class, and I fell in love. After the first performance with about 1,000 students dancing together on stage, the experience was enough to know that I had to keep performing and really begin to study dance.
3. Who or what is your biggest dancing inspiration?
There’s a moment when the music turns on and you can feel everyone in the room start to listen and groove. That high when everything comes together—the music, the movement, the energy—is what keeps me inspired.
4. What is your proudest dance achievement so far?
I am proud and so grateful to be where I’m at right now as a company member with Dark Circles and a dance major at SMU (Southern Methodist University).
5. Tell us about your hobbies outside of dance.
I like to travel, eat good food, and hang out with friends.
6. Choose one word to describe your dancing.
One of my mentors once told me that if there’s one thing you cannot be as a dancer, it’s ungenerous. So I try to be as generous as I can.
7. What is your favorite dance quote?
“Yet we are the movers and shakers/Of the world for ever, it seems.” “Ode” by Arthur O'Shaughnessy
Backstage at last night’s Fort Worth Premiere of ’Slump’
A moment from Joshua L. Peugh’s new creation premiering September 2014
Photo by dancer Hailey Harding
Dark Circles Contemporary Dance USA joins Avant Chamber Ballet, Dallas Neo-Classical Ballet, and other local companies one week from today at DANCERS AGAINST CANCER benefit performance
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Photo by Ok Sang Hoon