View Press Release
Richmond Ballet Announces Choreographers for the 2009 New Works Festival
9/2/2009
RICHMOND BALLET ANNOUNCES CHOREOGRAPHERS FOR THE 2009 NEW WORKS FESTIVAL
RICHMOND
- Richmond Ballet has invited four new choreographers to participate in its
second New Works Festival September 29 - October 4. Each
choreographer has two weeks to create a new 10 to 15 minute work for the
professional company, which may be a complete work unto itself or a part of a
larger piece envisioned by the artist. The four works will be presented in the
Studio Theatre at the Richmond Ballet building on Canal Street. The
participating choreographers--Jacqulyn Buglisi, Ma Cong, James Frazier and
Julie Job Smithson - bring impressive and varied backgrounds to the
event, providing an evening of excitement for Ballet patrons.
Launched
in April 2008, the New Works Festival furthers the Ballet’s goal to “foster new
works” and also allows Richmond Ballet the opportunity to introduce the work of
several new choreographers in a workshop setting. “The entire building on Canal
Street was bursting with energy as the new works came to life during our first
New Works Festival in the Spring of 2008,” said Artistic Director Stoner
Winslett. “We are already beginning to see the creative sparks and intensity
from the 2009 New Works Festival artists. It is an exciting time at Richmond
Ballet.”
According
to Winslett, the goal of the Festival is to allow choreographers the
opportunity to investigate something new - a new group of dancers, a new idea,
a new movement style - or something that will be valuable in their artistic
growth. It is also a chance for the Richmond Ballet audience to see beginning
stages of future works and to witness the dancers in a wide array of movement
styles all in one evening. The Festival may also lead to future collaborations
between the Ballet and participating choreographers. Two of the 2008 New Works
Festival participants, Gina Patterson and Todd Rosenlieb, were
invited to return to the Ballet to create fully-produced works for the 2008-09
Season.
More
about the choreographers…
Jacqulyn
Buglisi is currently the director of
Buglisi Dance Theatre, chair of the modern dance department at the Alvin Ailey
School in New York. Prior to forming her own company, Ms. Buglisi performed as
a principal dancer with the Martha Graham Dance Company for thirteen years. She
developed and taught her unique Techniques of Performance class at the
Interlochen Academy, the Alvin Ailey School, the Shankar Performing Arts Center
in India and the Shanghai Ensemble in China. She also participated in numerous
educational residencies and collaborations with Purchase College Conservatory
of Dance. Ms. Buglisi serves on the faculties of the Juilliard School and the
Martha Graham School.
Ma
Cong is a principal dancer and resident
choreographer at Tulsa Ballet. Previously he danced with the National Ballet of
China, after graduating with honors from the Beijing Dance Academy. He was
awarded the Silver Medal at the All China Dance Competition in 1994 and was a
finalist at the prestigious Paris International Dance Competition in 1998. Cong
has worked with choreographers and directors from Royal Ballet, Kirov Ballet,
American Ballet Theatre, New York City Ballet, Boston Ballet and San Francisco
Ballet; and has performed leading roles in Swan Lake, The Sleeping Beauty,
Giselle, Don Quixote, Le Corsaire and Romeo & Juliet, among
others. In January 2006, Cong was named one of the “25 to Watch” by Dance
Magazine for both his dancing and choreography. Cong has created many works for
Tulsa Ballet including a brand new Carmina Burana for Tulsa Ballet’s
50th Anniversary celebration. In 2008, he was chosen to be one of four
choreographers for the National Choreographer Initiative.
James
Frazier is currently the chairperson of the
VCU Department of Dance and Choreography. In addition to performing with Kokuma
Dance Theatre Company (Birmingham, England), Dallas Black Dance Theatre (Texas)
and Edgeworks Dance Theatre (Washington, D.C.), Frazier earned an M.F.A. in
Dance from Florida State University and a Doctorate in Dance Education from
Temple University. He has created dance works for a number of companies across
the U.S. and his work has been presented at the Kennedy Center in Washington,
D.C. In addition to teaching and choreographing at VCU, Frazier has worked with
Chris Burnside and Dancers, Starr Foster Dance Project and Ground Zero Dance.
He also teaches for the School of Richmond Ballet.
Julie
Job Smithson began her ballet training at the
Flint Institute of Music and graduated from the North Carolina School of the
Arts. She has performed with several U.S. companies, including Ballet Met,
Washington Ballet, Cleveland Ballet and Minnesota Dance Theatre. She also
toured with the Scottish Ballet. A School of Richmond Ballet Faculty member for
ten years, Smithson has taught in Europe, Asia and the United States. She
received the Presidential Citation for Outstanding Educator by the Governor’s
School for Humanities and Visual Performing Arts held at the University of
Richmond.
###
Richmond Ballet, The State Ballet of Virginia,
is dedicated to the education, promotion, preservation and continuing evolution
of the art form of ballet. Richmond Ballet strives to keep meaningful works of
dance alive and to produce and foster new works that remain true to these
values. Entering the 26th professional season, Richmond Ballet's mission is to
“awaken and uplift the human spirit, both for audiences and artists.”
***