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Sustaining legacy is no simple task, especially when considering the arts.  How do you preserve continuity of spirit while simultaneously establishing artistic harmony with the past, present and future?  Knowledge, skill and vision at the top are always critical.  But there are other intangibles that ultimately determine long term success.

When Robert Battle unexpectedly announced he could no longer act as artistic director for Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater in 2023 for health reasons, one of the most accomplished and revered dance companies in the United States began a search to fill a pair of epic shoes. Since its inception in 1958, nearly 70 years ago, the company has only had three artistic directors, Mr. Ailey himself, his designated successor and former principal Ailey dancer, Judith Jamison, and Mr. Battle whose initial association with the Ailey company was that of a guest choreographer. He’d go on to distinguish himself as a master in his field.

Late in 2024, Alvin Ailey Dance Theater chose Alicia Graf Mack, at the time director of the dance division at Juilliard, to become its fourth artistic director.  She began her tenure as Ailey’s new artistic director in July last year. 

Mack’s background and credentials are all exemplary and on their own portend a fruitful stewardship.  Born in California and raised in Columbia Maryland, her parents, one Jewish the other African-American, were socially engaged academics who encouraged their children’s creative interests.  Mack trained in ballet and by 17 was accepted into Dance Theater of Harlem where, at nearly 6’ tall and willowy, her height and grace contributed to building her celebrity.  Consequential injuries necessitated that she quit dance, leading her to acquire a History degree at Columbia University. 

After finishing Columbia, Mack returned to the Dance Theater of Harlem where the company’s financial difficulties made her homecoming brief. Applying to the American Ballet Theater and being rejected because of her height, she approached the Ailey company where she was not only accepted into the company, but she was also “embraced” in her totality. 

Artistic Director Alicia Graf Mack. Photo by Andrew Eccles.

Her initial time with Ailey, from 2005 and 2008, allowed Mack to explore and hone other dance styles more deeply and to intellectually mature as a dancer.  After leaving the company to obtain a degree in non-profit management at Washington University in St. Louis, she returned to Ailey in 2011 where she enjoyed notable success as one of its premier dancers until 2014.   Mack then redirected her career and devoted it to education.

At a luncheon held in her honor at Chicago’s Auditorium Theater earlier this year, Mack talked about the people and experiences that led her from being an aspiring teenage dance professional to heading one of the world’s leading dance organizations. As she recounted her past, the emotional intelligence and natural humility she’s noted for were readily apparent.  In her remarks, the new artistic director recognized the wealth of experience, knowledge and talent resident in the Ailey staff and stated she would be relying on those resources to help her fulfill her mission.  She also credited the mentorship she received from dance titans, including Ms. Jamison, pioneering Black ballerina Lorraine Graves and the legendary Carmen de Lavallade.  The advice and counsel they all shared will prove valuable assets for the future.

Just as she balanced the need to adapt to tomorrow while respecting heritage at Juilliard, Mack addressed doing much the same in her new role with Ailey.  Not only is she mindful in honoring the “Ailey aesthetic”, but she also shared her interest in bringing in new choreographic voices to complement, expand and enhance the principles and values Mr. Ailey displayed in his work and that of the choreographers he admired.

Providing avenues for dancers to achieve fulfillment in their craft is also central to Mack’s mission.  One she’s shown to advance through an ethos of affirmation. 

As the climax to the Auditorium’s 2025-2026 Celebrating Women in Dance season later this month, the Alvin Ailey Dance Theater engagement at the theater is a welcome to Ms. Mack.  The three-day run will see two programs performed.  In addition to Alvin Ailey’s classic Revelations and an excerpt from Judith Jamison’s 2005 Reminiscin’, the remaining five dances are contemporary creations of pioneering luminaries in choreography.  All five works saw their world premieres in 2025.

Published in BCS Spotlight

World renowned ambassadors of Dance and Culture, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater returns to its Chicago home – The Auditorium, Chicago’s Landmark stage at 50 E. Ida B. Wells Drive – with four dynamic performances debuting six new works, April 24-26, 2026.  Marking its 57th Chicago engagement at The Auditorium, the company will perform two distinct programs, each featuring Chicago premieres and a finale of the must-see Alvin Ailey masterpiece Revelations. Tickets start at $46 and are now available at auditoriumtheatre.org, by calling 312.341.2300, or at the Box Office at 50 E Ida B Wells Drive in Chicago.  

In 1958, Alvin Ailey and a small group of dancers took the stage in New York and forever changed American dance and culture. One of the country’s groundbreaking greats, Ailey’s company earned a reputation as one of the finest international ambassadors of American culture, promoting the uniqueness of the African American cultural experience and the preservation and enrichment of American modern dance in a universal celebration of the human spirit.

The curtain has risen on AILEY’s next era under the leadership of new Artistic Director Alicia Graf Mack, the renowned dancer and educator, guided as ever by Alvin Ailey’s pioneering legacy. Ms. Graf Mack was introduced to Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater under the direction of Judith Jamison and became widely celebrated for her dance artistry. The Company’s 32 extraordinary dancers, renowned for their unrivaled artistry, technique, and spirit, include five from the Windy City area: Solomon Dumas (Chicago); Isaiah Day (Chicago); Donnie Duncan Jr. (Carrier Mills, IL);  Renaldo Maurice (Gary, IN); and Sarah Daley-Perdomo (South Elgin, IL). The two dynamic programs include the Chicago debuts of world premieres from the recent season launch at New York City Center by frequent AILEY collaborator Jamar Roberts, along with contemporary choreographers Maija García, Fredrick Earl Mosley, Matthew Neenan; a new production by the late Judith Jamison, former AILEY Artistic Director; and a company premiere by Medhi Walerski.

“The Auditorium welcomes Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater to our landmark stage each year with tremendous pride, privilege and gratitude.  This April, to conclude our 2025-26 Celebrating Women Leaders in Dance season, we look forward to showcasing AILEY under the company’s new Artistic Director, Alicia Graf Mack.  With two different programs over four performances comes the opportunity for our guests to experience works by many of the most important choreographers in the world of dance today.  This weekend is certain to be a special addition to Chicago’s Spring arts season!” said The Auditorium CEO Rich Regan

 “This monumental season draws deeply on Alvin Ailey’s legacy rooted in celebrating the resilience of the human spirit, while extending its truth and bold virtuosity to reflect this moment in time and our hopes for the future. It is an honor to be a caretaker of this ever-changing continuum of inspiration, which is a living testament to the vitality of the tradition Mr. Ailey gave us and the gifts of spirit that Judith Jamison so lovingly nurtured. Along with Matthew Rushing and the company of brilliant dancers whose artistry moves us all, I am proud and excited to be taking our next steps forward on The Auditorium stage, where I and generations of company members have cherished sharing Alvin Ailey’s gift to the world with Chicago audiences.” said AILEY Artistic Director Alicia Graf Mack.

The programs for the 2026 Chicago engagement of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater are as follows: 

FRIDAY, APRIL 24, AT 7:30 P.M. & SATURDAY, APRIL 25, AT 7:30 P.M.

Blink of an Eye (2025) In an intriguing piece that probes the relationship between dance and music, choreographer Medhi Walerski lays bare the strength and vulnerability inherent in the creative process. The timeless beauty of J.S. Bach’s violin sonatas and partita anchors the athletic movement that is both precise and expansive. 

A Case of You (2005) A new production of this sensual duet—an excerpt from Judith Jamison’s 2005 Reminiscin’—is an emotionally intense showstopper danced to Diana Krall’s sultry rendition of the classic Joni Mitchell song. 

Embrace (2025) Choreographer Fredrick Earl Mosley examines the ups and downs of human connections—messy, beautiful, and everything in between. Set to popular songs by Stevie Wonder, Kate Bush, Ed Sheeran, Des'ree, and Pink, this piece explores what it takes to love deeply, heal fully, and embrace the journey with open arms.  

Revelations (1960) Performed to African American spirituals, song-sermons, gospel songs, and holy blues, Alvin Ailey’s Revelations fervently explores the places of deepest grief and holiest joy in the soul. More than just a popular dance work, it has become a cultural treasure, beloved by generations of fans. 

SATURDAY, APRIL 25, AT 1:00 P.M. & SUNDAY, APRIL 26, AT 3:00 P.M.

Jazz Island (2025) In Maija García’s first work for AILEY, a Caribbean folktale comes to life through ancestral rhythms and divine intervention. Inspired by Geoffrey Holder’s “Black Gods, Green Islands” and featuring an original score by Etienne Charles, this theatrical staging explores the spiritual dimensions of human drama and the connective force of love across the Afro-Caribbean diaspora.  Adapted from Black Gods, Green Islands by Geoffrey Holder. Created in collaboration with the artists of Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater. 

Difference Between (2025) Matthew Neenan’s choreographic debut with AILEY features his signature wild abandon and gestural playfulness. Acclaimed singer and composer Heather Christian (a 2025 MacArthur Foundation Fellow) contributes her raw power to an intricate world of strange tensions, potent griefs, and quiet loves.  

Song of the Anchorite (2025) Renowned Ailey choreographer Jamar Roberts gives a fresh take on the 1961 solo Hermit Songs, Alvin Ailey’s reaction to a set of medieval religious texts and the haunting song cycle by Samuel Barber that they inspired. The result is a powerful meditation on passion and devotion—both earthly and spiritual—danced to jazz trumpeter Avishai Cohen’s interpretation of a Ravel adagio. 

Revelations

In addition to these four public performances, the Company will present two student matinees at The Auditorium, reaching thousands of youths with an inspiring excerpt of Ronald K. Brown’s Gracea fervent tour-de-force depicting individuals on a journey to the promised land – on Thursday, April 23 and Friday, April 24, at 11 a.m.   

PERFORMANCE SCHEDULE AND TICKETS

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater performs at The Auditorium Friday, April 24, at 7:30 p.m.; Saturday, April 25, at 1 and 7:30 p.m.; and Sunday, April 26, at 3 p.m. Tickets start at $46 and are now  available at auditoriumtheatre.org/events, by calling 312.341.2300, or at the Box Office at 50 E Ida B Wells Drive in Chicago, IL.

About Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater
Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, recognized by US Congressional resolution as a vital American “Cultural Ambassador to the World,” grew from a now-fabled March 1958 performance in New York that changed forever the perception of American dance. Forged during a pivotal moment in the civil rights movement, the company was established to uplift the African American experience while transcending boundaries of race, faith, and nationality with its universal humanity. Before his untimely death in 1989, Mr. Ailey named Judith Jamison as his successor, and for 21 years she brought the company to unprecedented success. Alicia Graf Mack, widely celebrated for her dance artistry during her years with Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, was appointed Artistic Director of AILEY as of July 1, 2025. Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater has performed for an estimated 25 million people in 71 countries on six continents, promoting the uniqueness of the African American cultural experience and the preservation and enrichment of the American modern dance tradition. In addition to being the Principal Dance Company of New York City Center, where its performances have become a year-end holiday tradition, and its long Auditorium history, the Ailey company performs annually at The Fox Theatre in Atlanta, Zellerbach Hall in Berkeley, CA, and at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center in Newark (where it is the Principal Resident Affiliate), and appears frequently in other major theaters throughout the world during extensive tours. AILEY also includes Ailey II (1974), a second performing company of emerging young dancers and innovative choreographers; The Ailey School (1969), one of the most extensive dance training programs in the world; Ailey Arts In Education & Community Programs (1992), which brings dance into the classrooms, communities, and lives of people of all ages; and Ailey Extension (2005), a program offering dance and fitness classes to the general public, which began with the opening of Ailey’s permanent home— the largest building dedicated to dance in New York City, the dance capital of the world— named The Joan Weill Center for Dance, at 55th Street at 9th Avenue in New York City. For more information, visit ailey.org

Bank of America is Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater's Global Tour Sponsor

About The Auditorium

The Auditorium, located at 50 E. Ida B. Wells Drive in Chicago, is an Illinois not-for-profit organization committed to presenting the finest in international, cultural, community, and educational programming to all of Chicago and beyond as The Theatre for the People. The organization also is committed to the continued restoration and preservation of this National Historic Landmark that originally opened in 1889.

The Auditorium is grateful for the support of its 2025-26 Dance sponsors The Florian Fund, with additional support provided by Alphawood Foundation Chicago. The Auditorium 2025-26 Season is made possible in part by support from the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation and the Illinois Arts Council Agency. The Auditorium’s official hotel partner is the Palmer House, a Hilton Hotel.

The Auditorium thanks Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater Student Matinee Sponsors Denise Littlefield Sobel, Mike Aden and James D. Miller, Deborah and Bruce Crown, and The Robert Thomas Bobins Foundation, and Opening Night Sponsor Helen Hall Melchior.   

For more information on The Auditorium, please visit AuditoriumTheatre.org.

Published in Upcoming Dance

It’s no secret every new dance season is filled with its own undercurrent of anticipation. Regardless of the company, audiences who follow them silently wonder what will be the prevailing theme that will dominate a troupe’s next major performance. What attributes will signal growth and maturity.  What kind of insights are going to be shared through a gifted choreographer’s storytelling skills.  What unexpected feat of technical or physical prowess is going to once again prove dance’s unmatched ability to translate the full scope our humanity.

Some companies can always be relied on to provide brilliant responses to those kinds of musings.  Giordano Dance Chicago (GDC) is one of them and their Ignite the Soul program at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance Friday night demonstrated that even with more than 60 years’ experience dancing at the top, the growing process never ceases.  The will and desire to keep striving, learning and absorbing does much more than simply avert atrophy.  It fuels the kind of energy that invigorates everyone on the stage and in the seats.  And it enables some of the galvanizing moments found in Ignite the Soul.

A broad ranging show that spanned genres of dance and artistic temperaments, half of the program’s six dance roster consisted of works that have never previously been performed publicly.  Two of the three world premieres were made possible by donors who, not so uncommonly, prefer to remain anonymous.

The show opened with resident choreographer Al Blackstone’s Latin inspired, Sana.  Receiving its own world premier last year, the dance lives as comfortably in the realm of contemporary dance as it does jazz.  Meant to evoke notions of healing, Sana highlights the beneficence of community and the power of the collective.  Thrillingly dynamic and often probing, Stahv Danker’s original score makes for a potent force that enhances Sana’s appeal.

Over the years, GDC has fine-tuned the way it incorporates film shorts to provide supporting information about the company, its history, its dancers, the choreographers it partners with and the wealth of community initiatives it conducts.  Each season these interludes become more polished and prove more indispensable.  One preceded each of the evening’s new dance segments; providing priceless insights into what fuels a talented choreographer’s creative process.  By the time tap dancer, choreographer and arts executive Mike Minery finished his explanation on how My Kind of Girl came about, you couldn’t wait to see the world premier he collaborated with GDC’s Artistic Director, Nan Giordano, to produce for the company. 

Adam Houston and Sasha Lazarus - photo by Zach Kemper.

Through his lead in, we learn how crucial tap is to much of modern dance and how instructive it can be to a dancer’s technical foundation.  Then we were reintroduced to how therapeutic and beautiful the dance form can be when Minery himself took to the stage with GDC’s splendid Erina Ueda to enrapture the hall with a gorgeous tap duet.  In this hyper-digitized, infamously disconnected world, My Kind of Girl is as analog as a warm hug and twice as pleasing.  Loaded with dance prowess of the highest level and bathed in Frank Sinatra’s silky voice backed by Count Basie’s band, the audience couldn’t help but cheer heartily after My Kind of Girl came to its swoon worthy close. 

Following that welcome touch of sweetness, the company brought out the flame throwers with Sabroso, a 2011 torcher crafted by Del Dominguez and Laura Flores.  Quintessential Giordano in its presentation, dancers shimmied and strutted their way through a sassy half dozen Latin dance styles that came packed with plenty of sensual heat.  Flaunting knock-out sequined costumes designed Nina G., the women in the company made sultry soar while their male counterparts wrapped machismo in a thick layer of sophistication.  Adam Houston and Analysse Vance picture perfect Bolero highlighted the exceptional individual artistry dancers bring to a performance.  The kind that always guarantees delight.

Something of the transformational arrived with Jon Rua’s namuH, a dance signifying the power and importance of love at its most basic and pure.  Rua’s video explanation of his personal background and the trajectory of his career from street dancer to choreographer ideally framed the dance that followed.  The word “Human” spelled backward, namuH feels as if it has one foot in the present day and one in the future.  Bjork and Stateless’s music draw an intense landscape.  Rugged and difficult.  Coupled with neutral, utilitarian costumes worn by the dancers and you sense a sterile almost bleak world.  The energy and magnetism come from the dance and the dancers who, despite any obstacle or hardship, invariably end up leaning on each other to keep on keeping on. 

The music, the way the dance unfolds, the unorthodox movements whose origins clearly derive from the grit of urban streets, all draw you in and leave you captivated.  As rewarding as the choreography itself is, the company’s dancers give it life by fully internalizing its precepts and projecting its message so beautifully.   

This is about as far away from jazz dance as you can get, but namuH’s central theme of cohesion and co-dependence; as well as the way it helps us see the latent generosity in all of us, make it an ideal match for this venerable dance company that can shape shift so elegantly.

Excerpts of Ronen Koresh’s 2015 Crossing/Lines preceded the night’s finale and final world premiere, Dumb Luck!, choreographed by Mr. Blackstone.   A salute to the country’s upcoming 250 anniversary and an intentional lighthearted salve to our erratic times, Dumb Luck!, with its nautical pastiche and post-war verve, is a happy escape to nostalgia.  Nina G.’s period sailor outfits take you right back to the grand old days of splashy Hollywood musicals.  Coasting on jazz gold via the sounds of The Nate King Cole trio, the Manhattan Transfer, and Big Bad Voodoo Daddy, dancers cavort while maintaining tight but jaunty dance formations.

A very fine effort, strengthening the dance’s core character would make it more even more distinctive.  

Whetting the appetite for more is what Dumb Luck! and the rest of the dances making up Ignite the Soul’s program do all too well.  Placing those expectation reveries about their next stage outing on high boil once again.

Ignite the Soul

Giordano Dance Chicago

April 10-11, 2026

Venue: The Harris Theater for Music and Dance

205 E. Randolph Street

Chicago, IL  60601

For more information about Giordano Dance Chicago:  https://www.giordanodance.org

This review is proudly shared with our friends at www.TheatreInChicago.com

 

Published in Dance in Review

South Chicago Dance Theatre (SCDT) presents its ninth annual home season performance, An Evening with South Chicago Dance Theatre, featuring three electric world premieres by award-winning choreographers Natasha AdorleeDavid Dorfman, and SCDT Founder and Director of Vision and Strategy and Resident Choreographer Kia S. Smith. The four-part mixed repertory program opens with a powerful work by renowned choreographer Donald ByrdAn Evening with South Chicago Dance Theatre takes place for one night only at the Harris Theater for Music and Dance, 205 East Randolph, on Friday, May 1, 2026.

An Evening with South Chicago Dance Theatre is paired with SCDT's Inaugural Legacy Builders Benefit. Legacy Builder ticket holders are invited to attend an exclusive intermission reception and an after-party and silent disco with the artists following the performance. Tickets for the performance and benefit are available at southchicagodancetheatre.com.

"Donald, Natasha, and David are choreographers that I have admired for years. Presenting their works on the Harris stage will foster a sense of hope, connectivity, joy, light, and faith for the future as we dream together of a more equitable tomorrow. This celebratory evening advances SCDT's role as a platform for emerging and established choreographers in Chicago and beyond," says Smith.

The evening begins with It Begins, a creative fusion between the renowned choreographer behind the Broadway production of The Color Purple, Donald Byrd, and sound designer Rob Whitmer. First commissioned for South Chicago Dance Theatre in 2024, It Begins returns triumphantly to Chicago as an audience favorite.

The program continues with Smith's Suite On The Saharaa new work conceived during SCDT's January 2026 residency at LAKE Studios in Berlin, Germany. Scaffolded by the genius of artists from the Silk Road Ensemble, the piece weaves sounds from Argentina, Morocco, Spain, and Italy, immersing audiences in a landscape flowing with light, color, passion, and a range of movement vocabularies. For this work, Smith steps away from the cerebral work of narrative building to allow her first love, music, to be at the helm of the choreographic process.

Next is the world premiere of Adorlee's Slip Force, a work that questions what structures we continue to uphold, and what becomes possible when a body no longer consents to be read, controlled, or contained. Throughout the work, Adorlee builds structures out of movement—a skeletal house, a circling train, a fragile house of cards—nodding to monuments of power and imposed systems of control. The structures are built, maintained, and repeated, despite their instability and cost. At the center, a woman appears framed within a window, suspended between artifact and entrapment. As pressure accumulates, her stillness gives way to release and acceleration, while another figure becomes newly confined. Slip Force moves between precision and unraveling, humor and severity, ultimately revealing the power of women reclaiming their voice and agency.

The evening concludes with Dorfman's Subject(s)?    Verb   Object!, a snapshot of group fervor, independence, solidarity, and joy. Addressing a moment in which we need each other more than ever, the performers embody hope and pain to fend off stasis and deceit. Kinetic and textual poetics connect the audience to an experience of feeling as alive as humanly possible, set to music ranging from spiritual and moving to a driven club frenzy. Subject(s)?    Verb   Object! is an electric celebration for people of all walks of life.

ABOUT THE CHOREOGRAPHERS

Natasha Adorlee is an Emmy Award–winning choreographer, filmmaker, composer, and educator based in San Francisco. A first-generation Asian American artist, she was the final Artistic Fellow with Amy Seiwert's Imagery and began choreographing in 2016 while cultivating an acclaimed performance career with Robert Moses' Kin, ODC/Dance, Kate Weare & Co., and the San Francisco Symphony. After her short film Take Your Time earned more than ten international awards in 2018, Adorlee became a sought-after voice in dance filmmaking, choreography, and composition. A graduate of UC Berkeley following studies at SUNY Purchase, she went on to join ODC/Dance, performing an extensive repertoire and contributing original choreography, sound design, and art direction to more than 20 works. Adorlee has since created over 20 original dance-based works across stage, film, and immersive media. She was recently commissioned by the National Choreographers Initiative (NCI) for 2025, with additional commissions from Joffrey Ballet's Winning Works, BalletX, Nevada Ballet Theatre, Kansas City Ballet, Houston Contemporary, Ceprodac (Mexico), Kawaguchi Ballet (Japan), Ballare Carmel, Ballet22, and Imagery. Her creative collaborations also include original work for Pixar Animation Studios, Oculus, National Geographic, and The New Yorker. Adorlee founded Concept o4 to produce multimedia dance experiences that expand access to the arts. Her recent honors include the Grand Prize at the 2024 Palm Desert Choreography Festival, an NEA Grant, a Dresher Fellowship, and a Jacob's Pillow Choreographic Fellowship. In 2025, she received a National Theater Project (NTP) Touring Grant in support of her new work with Crescent Moon Theater. Adorlee is currently in a prolific creative period, sharing her expertise through Dance on Camera workshops and serving as Artistic Advisor for Ballet22.

Donald Byrd is the Artistic Director of the Seattle based Spectrum Dance Theater, a TONY-nominated (The Color Purple) and Bessie Award-winning (The Minstrel Show) choreographer. He has created works for Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, Pacific Northwest Ballet, Dance Theater of Harlem, and The Joffrey  Ballet, among others; and has worked extensively in theater and opera including The New York Public Theater, The 5th Avenue Theater, CenterStage (Baltimore), Seattle Opera, Dutch National Opera, The Atlanta Opera, The Israeli Opera, Houston Grand Opera, and San Francisco Opera. Awards, prizes, and fellowships include Doris Duke Artist Award, James W. Ray Distinguished Artist Award, Honorary Doctorate of Fine Arts (Cornish College of  the Arts), Masters of Choreography Award (The Kennedy Center), Fellow at The American Academy of Jerusalem, James Baldwin Fellow of United States Artists, Resident Fellow of The  Rockefeller Center Bellagio, Fellow at the Institute on the Arts and Civic Dialogue (based at Harvard), Rainier Club Laureate, the  Gordon Davidson Award (Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation) and the Mayor's Arts Award for his sustained contributions to the City of Seattle.

David Dorfman has been making movement-based dance theater since graduating with an MFA in Dance from Connecticut College in 1981. In 1987, he founded David Dorfman Dance (DDD) in New York City with the intention of creating politically and socially relevant work. A lifelong educator and activist, Dorfman has been a professor at Connecticut College since 2004, where DDD is Company-in-Residence. Dorfman choreographed Broadway's "Indecent," for which he was given a Lortel Award for its Off-Broadway run; other accolades include a 2019 USA Fellowship in Dance, a Guggenheim Award, four NEA fellowships, and a Bessie Award. Dorfman's early performing years were happily spent with Kei Takei's Moving Earth and Susan Marshall & Co. Dorfman co-created and toured internationally a body of tragi-comic physical theater with Dan Froot, entitled "Live Sax Acts", and he continues to dance profusely with wife Lisa Race and son Samson Race Dorfman.

Kia S. Smith is a Chicago-born choreographer and artistic leader and the Founder and Director of Vision and Strategy, as well as Resident Choreographer, for South Chicago Dance Theatre. Under her leadership, the company has developed several signature initiatives, including the Associate and Emerging Artist Programs, South Chicago Dance Festival, the Choreographic Diplomacy™ Program, Education and Community Programs, Dancing Across Generations, and a Workforce Development program. As a sought-after freelance choreographer, Smith has created work for companies including the Lyric Opera of Chicago, Madison Ballet, Chicago Repertory Ballet, Houston Contemporary Dance Company, Chicago Opera Theater, Giordano Dance Chicago, Opera Laguna, New Dance Partners, Resilience Dance Company, Columbia College Chicago, and the Scottish Ballet School. Smith's first evening-length work, Memoirs of Jazz in the Alley, premiered at Chicago's Auditorium Theatre in 2023. She is an active member of the International Association of Blacks in Dance and received its Joan Myers Brown Artist Development Fund Scholarship in 2018. Her honors include a 3Arts Make A Wave Award (2021), the Ann & Weston Hicks Choreographic Fellowship at Jacob's Pillow (2021), and recognition as a Chicago Dancemakers Forum Lab Artist (2022). Smith was named a Rising Star by Chicago Magazine (2023), a "Player of the Moment" by Newcity (2023), and one of Dance Magazine's "25 to Watch" for 2024. WBEZ identified her as a breakout artist for 2024, and Chicago News Weekly has called her "one of the fastest rising stars of the dance world today."

About South Chicago Dance Theatre
South Chicago Dance Theatre (SCDT) creates artistic experiences for all people through its world class repertory dance company and innovative educational programming. Led by founder Kia S. Smith, the Berkshire Eagle lauds SCDT as "a company to watch in 2025 and beyond," and Smith was named one of Dance Magazine's "25 to Watch" in 2024. SCDT is known for Smith's signature dance theater works as well as a robust commissioning platform for global emerging and established choreographers. SCDT's touring history includes venues throughout the United States and international engagements in South Korea, Vietnam, the Netherlands, Colombia, and Germany.

Published in Upcoming Dance

Cerqua Rivera Dance Theatre (CRDT) is pleased to announce its Spring 2026 Concert Series, URGENT MOTION/SHARED GROUND, presented by the Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago, 1306 S. Michigan Ave. Thursday, April 30, at 7:30 p.m., Friday, May 1 at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday, May 2 at 12 p.m. Tickets are $10 - $30, (free for Columbia College students) and available now at CerquaRivera.org. The approximate runtime is 75 minutes.

CRDT's URGENT MOTION/SHARED GROUND features performances of original dance and music by the company's professional dance ensemble and jazz orchestra. The program will feature two new world premieres: Immense World by Shannon Alvis and Joe Cerqua and We Intersect by Monique Haley and Joe Cerqua. Also featured, and back by popular demand, A Place Between Earth & Sky by Shannon Alvis and Clarice Assad.  In this program, the company meets a world in turmoil with movement and music that listens, reflects. This performance is an exploration of who we are, where we've been and where we're headed, together.

The Spring 2026 Concert Program Includes:

Immense World: A World Premiere 

by Shannon Alvis (Hubbard Street Dance Chicago) and Composition by Co-Founder Joe Cerqua, Additional Composition: Richard M. Jones with arrangement by Joe Cerqua

Lyrical and sensitive, a new work of dance theatre exploring the relationship between humans and nature

Victims of Comfort

Music by Keb' Mo'

Featuring Joe Cerqua (vocalist) & Stu Greenspan (guitar & CRDT music director)

We Intersect: A World Premiere

by Monique Haley (River North Chicago Dance) and Composition by Kendrick Scott (Founder, World Culture Music), arrangement by Joe Cerqua

Rooted in jazz and blues, this is a consideration of loops of prejudice and the promise of community

Bridge Over Troubled Water

Music by Paul Simon, Arrangement by Joe Cerqua

Featuring Joe Cerqua and Margaret Murphy-Webb (vocalists)

A Place Between Earth & Sky (2019): Revival

By Shannon Alvis (Hubbard Street Dance Chicago) and Composition by Clarice Assad (2009 Latin Grammy and 2022 Grammy nominee)

A propulsive and ethereal work that uses the framework of a day to consider the arc of a life

ABOUT CERQUA RIVERA DANCE THEATRE

Cerqua Rivera Dance Theatre gathers people to contemplate our unique distinctions and common humanity. We offer recognition and respect to the full breadth of our community and nurture empathy and understanding to improve the quality of life everywhere we go. We are proudly and visibly multicultural, exploring the intersection of heritage, culture, and identity through high quality, original dance and music rooted in diverse and authentic personal narratives.

Cerqua Rivera Dance Theatre presents URGENT MOTION/SHARED GROUND, presented by the Dance Center of Columbia College Chicago, 1306 S. Michigan Ave. Thursday, April 30, at 7:30 p.m., Friday, May 1 at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday, May 2 at 12 p.m. Tickets are $10 - $30, (free for Columbia College students) and available now at CerquaRivera.org. The approximate runtime is 75 minutes.

Published in Upcoming Theatre

 

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