Tuesday, September 17, 2013

Recipe for Dance: Andrea Roberts on Stages

Jennifer Dallas and Michael Caldwell 
in Thirst by Tedd Robinson | Photo by Omer Yukseker

I have been working with Andrea Roberts for a number of years now. She is a gifted artistic advisor and rehearsal director. I have asked her to share some thoughts on her experience.
-- Jennifer Dallas, Artistic Director

Andrea Roberts on Time Now:
I’ve been spending a great deal of time in the kitchen lately. It’s a lot like being in the studio. I’ve been thinking about process, and direction/directing ... about intention, finding balance, and end results. Recipes are like choreography. They give us a base from which to start, but the choices we make about how to interpret the instructions are what defines us as performers (or chefs/bakers, as the case may be). There’s a line between dramatic and indulgent, between the perfect tasty blend and the tragically over-spiced. Sometimes the tiniest amount can make a huge difference to the end result.

Technical rehearsal for Stages | setting up the Winchester Street Theatre

I’ve also been thinking about travelling. More specifically, I’ve been making travel plans with other people. This too is a lot like being in the studio. Recipes are just maps written in words and measurements. It’s all choreography, so this travel metaphor is useful going the other way, to think about our work as dancers as a kind of group journey. For me as a director it’s about finding a common language, a way to talk about where we have been, where we want to end up, and how we’re going to get there. How do you make sure you take care of your own needs and desires, while taking into account the interests of those who have committed to take the ride with you? What happens when only one of you wants to stop in that small town for lunch, or when only one person wants to dance the last section really slowly? Negotiating these kinds of problems is what fascinates me.

Technical rehearsal for Stages | preparing at the Winchester Street Theatre 

Finally, I’ve been thinking about connections – about making them, missing them, and knowing when we’re supposed to have them! In rehearsal we take things apart so that we can put them back together again, hopefully somehow more whole and more meaningful. It’s not always easy or clear which way to go. Stages ... there’s a double meaning for me in the title of this production. It’s about points on a path, and also (literally) the place where we perform. It’s about growth, about checking in to see where you’re at, while standing and being right where you are. This show for me is about all of these things – about finding common ground with both my mentors and my former students, about shifting relationships in art and in life. It’s about learning how to be an open and generous storyteller. In the end, if we’re successful, this show is an excellent adventure and a satisfying meal. Enjoy!

About Andrea Roberts

Andrea Roberts has worked as both an administrator and rehearsal director at The School of Toronto Dance Theatre since her graduation from the Professional Training Program some years ago. She has spent the majority of her professional career exploring her artistic voice through improvisation and theatre training, and has performed in works by Peggy Baker, Sonya Biernath, Murray Darroch, Terrill Maguire, Sharon Moore, and Julia Sasso. As a rehearsal director/assistant, Roberts has been involved in the creative process for both new works and remounts by more than twenty choreographers. She has acted as Rehearsal Director and Artistic Advisor for Jennifer Dallas / Kemi Contemporary Dance Projects since the company’s inception. Roberts holds a master’s degree in dance studies from York University, and she maintains an active interest in the conversations around performance archives. She has presented several papers throughout North America that investigate various aspects of creation, preservation, and (re)interpretation.



STAGES
September 18-21, 2013 | 8pm nightly
The Winchester Street Theatre, 80 Winchester Street, Toronto
Tickets $15/$20 | Gala performance September 18th, tickets $40



Thursday, September 12, 2013

Dancers' Thoughts : Ana Groppler on Time Now


Ana Groppler in Time Now by Jennifer Dallas | Photo by Omer Yukesker

I have been working with three gifted women for just over two years on the creation and incubation of my new dance work Time Now. I have asked each of them to share some thoughts on their experience.
-- Jennifer Dallas, Artistic Director

Anna Groppler on Time Now:
When you go deeply into an artistic project, you get into each others sweat, frustrations, epiphanies, struggles, injuries, blood, joy, connection, vibrancy. It’s an amazing journey, one of the reasons why I love my job.

Working with this group of women is quite a treat. I am honoured to be in a room with Jennifer Dallas, Emma Kerson and Joanie Audet; they never fail to excited me, push and inspire me. What an experience to be working with so much estrogen in the room! It is quite magical that I get to spend this time with two of my great friends, dance colleagues and School of Toronto Dance Theatre graduate classmates, Joanie and Emma. I enjoy being in their presence, playing and bouncing off one another's energy. They are both brilliant artists and open, wonderful people. 

Jennifer Dallas is vibrant flowing energy. She has a beautiful mind, a unique movement vocabulary. Her work has a sense of dynamic musicality that shakes the body internally and turns on your senses. The opportunity to work with her and sink my teeth into her dance has been fulfilling. To explore her world of movement over the course of a number of years now gives new meaning to learning ones essence, to understanding how to encompass the space fully as an interpreter.

(L to R) Joanie Audet, Ana Groppler, Emma Kerson 
in Trinity by Jennifer Dallas Photo by Jennifer Dallas

We began this process in the fall of 2011 fresh from graduation. Two years later, we are about to perform the third incarnation, the culmination of all the work and process. I am finding my adult woman shoes, I am much more aware of things around me, about me. Much has developed for all of us dancers in our personal lives and artistic lives during the years of dance creation, it has been an interesting experience coming together sporadically over those years, jumping in and out of creation. 

It’s intriguing for my mind and body to remember the past performances of this work. To have the ability to create continuously and truly develop a work is a luxury, yet I wish it was more standard for small dance companies who work project to project. The first time we performed this work it was called Trinity, in September 2011. Trinity had a sense of womanship and femininity. Sexy and jazzy the it was filled with engaging feminine magnetism, with slivers of the 1920s world with Duke Ellington music and our 20s-style dresses.

Click Here for some footage of the woman I was in Trinity. 


Joanie Audet and Ana Groppler in Time Now by Jennifer Dallas Photo by Omer Yukesker

With the title change to 
Time Now we performed again in December 2012. The 1920s femininity was distilled and the discovery of a world of props grew. Prop props props!! What beautiful stimulating things … so many possibilities, for the world of Time Now. It has been thought-provoking to explore this world of props within work that already existed before … what do they mean to me? What are they? How do I interact with them? How do they interact with me? For me this version was an exploration period, even during the performance I was still deep in exploration as a performer.

Now we are in the present moment, a new version of
Time Now. We are in the Time Now. It's a mixture of the two development versions with its own dash of change and evolution. The characters are deeper and the world has been shifted into place. It is a place where three women experience a journey. A journey of play, of discovery, of relationship. A journey that I, we, invite you to come share. Be curious about what you see, I will be curious about what you might behold.

About Ana Groppler
Ana Claudette Groppler was born in Toronto. She discovered her love of dance at Rosedale Heights School of the Arts, and pursued her training further, graduating from The School of Toronto Dance Theatre in 2011. Since graduating Groppler has worked with Toronto Heritage Dance, Kemi Contemporary Dance Projects, Nancy Latoszewski, Signal Theatre, Fiona Griffiths, Parahumans, Pollux Dance, Social Growl Dance and she worked as a rehearsal assistant for Michael Caldwell’s Ash Unravel for Dance: Made in Canada. Groppler has performed her own work in shows with Dance Matters, the Parahumans and Magpie Dances. She is currently working with Find the Floor Dance Collective on a piece to be performed in July 2014 in DanceWorks CoWorks, as well as Signal Theatre on their new upcoming production A Soldiers Tale to be performed at The FleckDance Theatre in February 2014 as well as The Canada Dance Festival in June 2014.

Buy Tickets for Stages


STAGES
September 18-21, 2013 | 8pm nightly
The Winchester Street Theatre, 80 Winchester Street, Toronto
Tickets $15/$20 | Gala performance September 18th, tickets $40




Wednesday, September 4, 2013

Dancers' Thoughts: Emma Kerson on Time Now

(L to R) Ana Groppler, Emma Kerson and Joanie Audet 
in Time Now by Jennifer Dallas | Photo by Omer Yukesker

I have been working with three gifted women for just over two years on the creation and incubation of my new dance work Time Now. I have asked each of them to share some thoughts on their experience.
-- Jennifer Dallas, Artistic Director

Emma Kerson on Time Now:
When asked to reflect on my experience with Kemi and working on Time Now, I realized that the relationship I’ve been building with my fellow dancers, Joanie Audet and Ana Groppler, has been in the making for five years now. We first started our training at The School of Toronto Dance Theatre, and our time with Jen began in our second year when she came in to choreograph on our class.


Emma in Time Now by Jennifer Dallas | Photo Omer Yukesker

We started our professional work (or as Jen would say, play) together as soon as we graduated, and though as dancers we’ve worked both together and apart over the past two years, we all kept coming back to these creation periods with Kemi. I’m at the point where each stage of creation feels like an intimate reunion, or pulling on an old comfortable sweater, but noticing a new hole or a new stain and thinking, that’s interesting. We’ve morphed alongside the work through its many phases and different stages of existence. I love that each time we come together to dance we are bringing our newly gained knowledge with us and across the board though it may be, there is always the underlying history that we all share, that familiarity with each other and with Jen’s world and essence, that makes us one. 


Emma in Time Now by Jennifer Dallas | Photo Omer Yukesker

It is so incredibly satisfying and exciting to dance with these women. We know how to fit into a world together, and yet we are constantly being surprised and challenged by each other’s new propositions. Jen likes to work with a lot of open improvisation. There is a constant play with her material. She has given the three of us a gift: to discover and intimately grow together in the context of her world. I am thrilled to be a part of a work that is so unique in dynamic quality and essence, and is profoundly female. 

About Emma Kerson:
Kerson graduated The School of Toronto Dance Theatre in 2011. She is a recipient of a Millennium Excellence Award, the Kathryn Ash Leadership Award, and a Metcalf Foundation Performing Arts Internship grant. Independently, Kerson has had the pleasure of working with artists such as Sharon B. MoorePatricia Beatty, Elizabeth Chitty, Jennifer Dallas, and Mary Jo Mullins, and she continues to work with Kemi and Niagara Dance Company.



STAGES
September 18-21, 2013 | 8pm nightly
The Winchester Street Theatre, 80 Winchester Street, Toronto
Tickets $15/$20 | Gala performance September 18th, tickets $40