November 1, Thursday
Master Class: Marlon Barrios Solano: Interactive Technology and Improvisation
3:00 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Dance Theatre
Venezuelan dance/new-media artist Marlon Barrios Solano is in residency with the Dance Company of Middlebury. Working internationally, Solano designs improvisational performances within digital real-time environments. Free
November 1, Thursday
Alpha Yaya Diallo and the Bafing Riders
7:30 P.M., McCullough Student Center
The music of highly acclaimed guitarist and singer Alpha Yaya Diallo, from Guinea in West Africa, rings out with an irrepressible enthusiasm that makes audiences want to move in response. Diallo has earned a matchless international reputation for the excellence of his musicianship and the excitement of his live shows—whether performing solo or with his band Bafing. “Whether in lead or finger-picking style, for his musical creativity as well as his expressive voice, Diallo ranks easily as among the most exciting and appealing African artists to ever hit the United States.”—Chris Rubin, Rhythm Magazine. Diallo’s residency is funded in part by the Expeditions program of the New England Foundation for the Arts, made possible with funding from the national Endowment for the Arts Regional Touring Program, the six New England state arts agencies, and the Argosy Foundation Contemporary Music Fund. Middlebury College sponsors include the Department of Music, Performing Arts Series, Center for the Arts, and the Middlebury College Museum of Art. Tickets: $15/12/5
For more information, click here.
November 2, Friday
Dancy Company of Middlebury and Marlon Barrios Solano: Informal Showing
4:30 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Dance Theatre
An informal showing of the work that Venezuelan dance/new media artist Marlon Barrios Solano has developed with the Dance Company of Middlebury. Free
November 2, Friday
Emerson String Quartet
Eugene Drucker, violin
Philip Setzer, violin
Lawrence Dutton, viola
David Finckel, cello
8:00 P.M., Mead Memorial Chapel
Ever since Emory Fanning discerningly invited the young Emerson Quartet to play at Middlebury, over a quarter of a century ago, they have become frequent visitors and favorites on the Middlebury College arts scene. In fact, they helped inaugurate the Center for the Arts Concert Hall at the gala opening in 1992. But they made their first mark on Middlebury in Mead Chapel, so it is fitting that they play this special concert, a gift from generous donor and friend Bill Sunderman, in this original venue. Their glorious program includes Haydn, Shostakovich, and Beethoven (the first Razumovsky quartet). This free Performing Arts Series concert is made possible with generous support from the Institute for Clinical Science and Art, established by the late Dr. F. William Sunderman of Philadelphia. Free
For more information, click here.
November 2, Friday
Layaali Arabic Music Ensemble Concert
8:00 P.M., McCullough Social Space
Layaali is a Massachusetts-based group of talented musicians whose love and dedication to Arabic music have earned them wide acclaim from both ethnomusicologists and audiences at sold-out performances throughout the U.S. and internationally. The ensemble is committed to performing the traditional music of the Arab world and to preserving the rich legacy of Arabic culture through soulful vocals, hypnotic instrumental improvisations, electrifying percussion, and faithful renditions and recordings of master works. The musicians and vocalist, who come from four Arabic countries--Palestine, Lebanon, Syria and Morocco--are Jamal Sinno (qanun and vocals), Muhammed Mejaour (nay and percussion), Kareem Roustom (oud), Michel Moushabeck (tabla, riqq, daff), and Geena Ghandour (vocals). Sponsored by the Rohatyn Center for International Affairs, International Studies, Academic Enrichment Fund, Foreign Language Enrichment Fund, Office for Institutional Diversity, the Departments of Arabic and Music, and Cook Commons. Free
November 2, Friday (through November 12)
Animals (a requiem)
Photographs by May Mantell
9:00 A.M.-5:00 P.M., weekend by apointment; Christian A. Johnson Memorial Building, Johnson Gallery
Opening Reception, 5:30 P.M.
Animals (a requiem) is an exhibition of large-scale black and white photographic prints by May Mantell. Dark and poetic many of the images are death portraits of animals in our midst and suggests a skewed relationship between them and us. Many of the images were shot in Addison County. May Mantell was born in Cloverdale, CA in 1969. Currently she lives and works in Orwell, Vermont. May received her BFA in Photography from the San Francisco Art Institute and her MFA from Stanford University. She has taught at Middlebury College, the University of Vermont, Stanford University, and the San Francisco Art Institute. Artist Gallery Talk on November 7 at 4:30 P.M. For further information, please call the Middlebury College Studio Art Program at 802-443-5397. Free. Read a 2006 interview with The Morning News about Animals at: http://www.themorningnews.org/archives/galleries/animals/
November 3, Saturday
The Last King of Scotland
3:00 and 8:00 P.M., Dana Auditorium
A young doctor from Scotland arrives in Uganda and strikes up an unlikely friendship with the new president Idi Amin (Forest Whitaker in an Oscar winning performance), who has radical ideas for his African nation. After a time the doctor fears for his life, as Amin’s erratic behavior and manic suspicion take over his regime. “Shocking in its truth, jolting is its lack of sentimentality, Shakespearean in its vision of the doctor’s catastrophic flaw.”—Kyle Smith, New York Post. Screened in conjunction with the exhibition, Resonance from the Past: African Sculpture from the New Orleans Museum of Art. Sponsored by the Hirschfield International Film Series. (UK, 2006, 123 minutes) Free
November 3, Saturday
Performers Teach; Teachers Perform:
Affiliated Artists in Concert
8:00 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Concert Hall
From bluegrass to classical, from show tunes to new music, members of the Department of Music’s outstanding group of private music teachers form ensembles to perform a wide range of music. Featuring Carol Christensen, soprano; Rachael Elliott, bassoon; Dick Forman, jazz piano; Mia Fritze, horn; Dan Frostman, oboe; Dayve Huckett, guitar; Anne Janson, flute; Natasha Koval Paden, piano; Mark Lavoie, harmonica; Betsy Leblanc, clarinet; Pete Sutherland, fiddle; Beth Thompson, soprano; Greg Vitercik, piano playing classical, folk, and jazz. Free
November 3, Saturday
Yaya
9:00 P.M., McCullough Social Space
Yaya is an all-female, Afro-Caribbean percussion group, presented in conjunction with Wonnacott Commons’ annual Global Rhythms show. Founded in 2002, Yaya is dedicated to preserving and promoting the rich, cultural legacies and African-based musical traditions of Puerto Rico and the Dominican Republic. The group reflects the vibrant musical heritage represented in Puerto Rican bomba and Dominican salve traditions through live performances, workshops, and female-led creative ciphers. Recognizing the contributions of women in preserving and transmitting these traditions, Yaya honors the mothers, known as yayas (Creole/Kongo origin), who have helped shape the histories, traditions, and legacies of resistance. Sponsored by the Office of Institutional Diversity, Women’s and Gender Studies, and Wonnacott Commons. Free
November 4, Sunday
A Number
7:30 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Room 232
Who are you when you discover one day there are 20 or more of you -- 'a number' with the same DNA? This staged reading of Caryl Churchill's play A Number is the story of a parent and his child(ren), directed by Cheryl Faraone (with Alexander Draper '88 and Alec Strum '08). Free
November 7, Wednesday (through November 14)*
Landscape Paintings
Johnson Memorial Building, Pit Space
Plein air paintings done in the manner of the impressionists in Jim Butler’s painting course, ART 0309, represent students’ observations of the Middlebury College campus during the height of fall foliage season. Sponsored by the Program in Studio Art. Free
*new dates
November 7, Wednesday
Master Class: Intermediate/Advanced Dance Technique and Partnering
Nugent+Matteson Dance
2:45 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Dance Theatre
Nugent+Matteson Dance, founded in 2005, supports the collaborative as well as individual choreography, performing, and teaching of Jennifer Nugent and Paul Matteson ’00. The work focuses on human relationships interacting in the moment on stage through dancing and sometimes speaking that is physical and phrased. Their residency continues through November 10. Free
For more information, click here.
November 7, Wednesday
Artist Gallery Talk: May Mantell
4:30 P.M., Christian A. Johnson Memorial Building, Johnson Gallery
May Mantell was born in Cloverdale, CA in 1969. Currently she lives and works in Orwell, Vermont. May received her BFA in Photography from the San Francisco Art Institute and her MFA from Stanford University. She has taught at Middlebury College, the University of Vermont, Stanford University, and the San Francisco Art Institute. Animals (a requiem) is an exhibition of large-scale black and white photographic prints by May Mantell. Dark and poetic many of the images are death portraits of animals in our midst and suggests a skewed relationship between them and us. Many of the images were shot in Addison County. For further information, please call the Middlebury College Studio Art Program at 802-443-5397. Free
November 7, Wednesday
Screening: Trial by Media
7:30 P.M., McCardell Bicentennial Hall, Room 219
In this film version of Wasserstein’s play “An American Daughter," protagonist Dr. Lyssa Dent Hughes (Christine Lahti)seems to have it all: a loving husband, smart kids, a lovely home, a politically prominent father, a highly successful career, and now a nomination to become U.S. Surgeon General. However, when the media gets a hold of a small indiscretion in her past, Lyssa suddenly becomes the center of a national controversy. Wasserstein explores friendship, betrayal, a woman’s struggle to balance career and family, and making choices. Part of the Wasserstein "Fortnight," a series of events illuminating the life and work of playwright Wendy Wasserstein, culminating in the College's production of The Heidi Chronicles. Free
November 8, Thursday
Master Class: Advanced Beginning Dance Technique
Nugent+Matteson Dance
9:30 A.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Dance Theatre
Part of week-long dance residency activities with Nugent+Matteson. Free
For more information, click here.
November 8, Thursday
Master Class: Beginning Technique and Partnering
Nugent+Matteson Dance
3:00 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Dance Theatre
Part of week-long dance residency activities with Nugent+Matteson. Free
For more information, click here.
November 8, Thursday
Representing Africa: Exhibitions, Photography, and Modern Art
4:30 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Room 221
This slide lecture by Wendy Grossman, visiting professor of History of Art and Architecture, reveals how African artifacts have acquired new meanings through twentieth-century photographic practice and exhibition design. Free
November 8, Thursday
Lecture: Marlon Blackwell, Cameron Visiting Architect
7:00 P.M., Dana Auditorium
The Architecture & … Series is pleased to present a lecture by internationally recognized and award-winning architect Marlon Blackwell. Professor of Architecture at the University of Arkansas and cofounder of the Summer Urban Studio in Mexico City, Blackwell has taught throughout North America and is serving this fall as Middlebury’s inaugural Cameron Visiting Architect (a program that brings major architects to campus to work with studios in Architectural Studies). His lecture is part of a series exploring issues in contemporary design organized as a collaborative venture between Middlebury College and Bread Loaf Corporation, who are joined in the sponsorship of this event by the Program in Environmental Studies, Atwater Commons, and the Vermont Chapter of the American Institute of Architects. Free
November 8, Thursday
A Blues Concert: Bill Simms Jr. and Mark Lavoie
8:00 P.M., Mead Memorial Chapel
Presented by Wonnacott Commons, The Office for Institutional Diversity and the Middlebury College Department of Music. Free
November 9, Friday
Uncommon Women and The Heidi Chronicles in Historical Context
12:30 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Room 232
Public talk by Wasserstein scholar Jan Balakian, Professor of English, Kean University, followed by student response “Why Wendy, Why Now?” presented by Feminist Action at Middlebury, featuring FAM members Aaron Gensler ’08 and Morgane Richardson ’08, and cast members from the College’s production of The Heidi Chronicles. Part of the Wasserstein "Fortnight," a series of events illuminating the life and work of playwright Wendy Wasserstein, culminating in the College's production of The Heidi Chronicles. Lunch provided. Free
November 9, Friday
Middlebury College Orchestra
Troy Peters, director
8:00 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Concert Hall
Anne Janson, an applied-music faculty member, joins the Middlebury Orchestra, conducted by Troy Peters, in a performance of Mozart’s Flute Concerto No. 2. Janson has taught flute at Middlebury College since 1984 and is also on the music faculty at the University of Vermont. She is a member of the Vermont Symphony Orchestra, the Vermont Mozart Festival Orchestra, and Quintette a Vent, a woodwind ensemble which has performed throughout Vermont and in New York State. The concert also includes Borodin’s heroic Symphony No. 2 and American composer John Corigliano’s haunting Elegy. Free
November 9-10, Friday-Saturday
Nugent+Matteson Dance
8:00 P.M. each evening, Mahaney Center for the Arts, Dance Theatre
Acclaimed dancers Jennifer Nugent and Paul Matteson ’00 present four precarious dances. Fare Well takes place within Edmund Mooney’s richly atmospheric sound score to create “…that rare work that lives up to its advance billing... a delight.”—Jennifer Dunning, The New York Times. Block Idol, a solo by Matteson with music by Michael Krassner, layers bittersweet, coming-of-age narratives with impossible physical challenges. Semi-Formal, a solo by Nugent with live music by violinist Heather Somerland, is a hip-circling ceremony of ballroom dance fantasies. Finally, Saints Smother Swans is an intricately technical new duet for Nugent and Matteson choreographed by Terry Creach, with lighting by Middlebury’s own Jennifer Ponder. Visit www.middlebury.edu/arts for details on residency activities and master classes. Sponsored by the Middlebury College Performing Arts Series and the Dance Program. Tickets: $15/12/5
For more information, click here.
November 10, Saturday
Army of Shadows
3:00 and 8:00 P.M., Dana Auditorium
Occupied France, 1942: Philippe Gerbier (Lino Ventura) is a civil engineer with the French Resistance until his identity is revealed by a traitor. After escaping from an internment camp, Gerbier arrives in Marseilles, where he seeks revenge on the rat. An edge-of-your-seat story about French life under the Nazis and their collaborators in World War II, this masterpiece by Jean-Pierre Melville (Bob Le Flambeur, Le Doulos, Le Samouraï) takes us deep into the lives of underappreciated heroes. Best Foreign Film, New York Film Critics Circle. In French with English subtitles. Sponsored by the Hirschfield International Film Series. (France, 1969, 145 minutes) Free
November 10, Saturday
Traditional Chinese Music
8:00 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Concert Hall
Two award-winning Chinese instrument virtuosos, Zhiming Han and Cynthia Hsiang, perform Chinese music classics and favorites on authentic Chinese instruments yangqin (butterfly harp), zheng (long zither), and dizi (bamboo flute). During a performance that brings to life the subtle intricacies and distinctive tones of Traditional Chinese Music, the artists explore a range of musical pieces representing China's diverse culture. Han and Hsiang have been featured in numerous concerts around the world including performances with Hollywood Bowl Orchestra, the San Francisco Symphony, and in the soundtracks of Jackie Chan’s movies, Disney’s Mulan II, and the video game for X-box, “Jade Empire.” This event is sponsored by the Department of Music, the Department of Chinese, the Rohatyn Center, the Center for the Arts, the Performing Arts Series, and Wonnacott Commons. Free
November 11, Sunday
Music Department Advanced Vocal Recital
3:00 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Concert Hall
Free
November 11, Sunday
Faculty discussion on WendyWasserstein, Playwright and Chronicler of Women
3:30 P.M., Ross Fireplace Lounge
Panelists include Katherine Smith Abbott and Dana Yeaton '79. Part of the Wasserstein "Fortnight," a series of events illuminating the life and work of playwright Wendy Wasserstein, culminating in the College's production of The Heidi Chronicles. Free
November 12, Monday
Not Yet Modernist, Already Postmodern: Hong Sang-soo and Modernism in Korean Cinema
12:15 P.M., Robert A. Jones ’59 House
Lecture by Seung-hoon Jeong, film studies and comparative literature, Yale University. Sponsored by the Hirschfield International Film Series with the Rohatyn Center for International Affairs, the Women’s and Gender Studies Program, Middlebury Asian Students’ Organization, International Studies, and the Film and Media Culture Program. Free
November 12, Monday
Geoff Kaufman in Concert
8:00 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Concert Hall
Tenor and folk musician Geoff Kaufman '69 performs a concert of sea songs and chanties. Free
November 13, Tuesday
Behind-the-Scenes Lunch and Discussion:
The Heidi Chronicles
12:30 P.M., Wright Memorial Theatre
Director Cheryl Faraone introduces the play and leads a discussion about the upcoming production. Part of the Wasserstein "Fortnight," a series of events illuminating the life and work of playwright Wendy Wasserstein, culminating in the College's production of The Heidi Chronicles. Lunch is provided. Free
November 13, Tuesday
Play Reading: Uncommon Women and Others
4:30 P.M., Mahaney CFA, Room 232
Wendy Wasserstein’s first play details the coming of age of students of Mount Holyoke as the 60s rolled over into the 70s, and all the rules for women began to change. Performed by the students of THEA/WAGS0206 (Contemporary Women Playwrights) and other theatre students. Directed by Cheryl Faraone. Part of the Wasserstein "Fortnight," a series of events illuminating the life and work of playwright Wendy Wasserstein, culminating in the College's production of The Heidi Chronicles. Free
November 14, Wednesday
Music Department Student Instrumental Recital
8:00 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Concert Hall
A recital of works by Bach, Beethoven, Chopin, Debussy, Mendelssohn, and Schubert. Student performers include Elizabeth Bowman '09, piano, Hannah Brotherton '11, flute, Jenna Conklin '10, piano, Ellen Flanagan '09, violin, Megan Guiliano '08, violin, Scotty Hardwig '10, guitar, Peter Huston '11, piano, Noah Silverstein '11, piano, Nicholas Tkach '11, piano, Ema Zubovic '10, piano. Sponsored by the Department of Music. Free
November 15, Thursday (through November 29)*
Pinhole Camera Photography
Johnson Memorial Building, Pit Space
John Huddleston’s black-and-white photography class, ART 0327, presents an exhibition of pinhole photography. The students’ images are contact prints made from large-format negatives exposed in cameras of their own design and construction. Sponsored by the Program in Studio Art. Free
*new dates
November 15–17, Thursday–Saturday
The Heidi Chronicles
8:00 P.M. each evening and 2:00 P.M. on Saturday, Wright Memorial Theatre
In this smart and rueful Wendy Wasserstein comedy, Heidi Holland, feminist art historian and observer of the passing cultural scene, remembers significant milestones in her life from the 60s through the 90s, from activism to consumerism to choice. The Heidi Chronicles brings the late award-winning playwright’s grace, humor, and gently lacerating wit to the dilemmas of modern womanhood. Directed by Cheryl Faraone; sponsored by the Department of Theatre and Dance. Tickets: $5/4/3, on sale November 1.
This production is the culminating event in a “Wasserstein Fortnight”: two weeks of films, talks, and play readings celebrating her life and career. Visit www.middlebury.edu/arts for more details this fall.
November 16, Friday (through December 3)
Someplace
Photographs by Cory Schubert '08
Johnson Building, Johnson Gallery
Sponsored by the Studio Art program. Free
November 16, Friday*
Claremont Trio
Emily Bruskin, violin
Julia Bruskin, cello
Donna Kwong, piano
8:00 P.M., Kevin P. Mahaney’84 Center for the Arts, Concert Hall
The award-winning Claremont Trio, whose playing has been called “positively spellbinding” (Palm Beach Daily News), offers a unique blend of soulful insight into works of the standard repertoire along with an enthusiastic appetite for performing the greatest 20th and 21st century works and commissioning new ones as well. The Trio spent a busy summer with return engagements at such prestigious festivals as the Bard Music Festival, Mostly Mozart, and the Chappaquiddick Summer Music Festival, adding debut appearances at the Saratoga Chamber Music Festival and the Rockport Chamber Music Festival. This young trio, first recipients of the Kalichstein-Laredo-Robinson International Trio Award, will perform in major venues throughout the country in the 2007-08 season. The group has been invited to present the complete piano trios of Schumann and Brahms in a 3-concert series at Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum; they will tour Hawaii and the Midwest, and will appear at prominent concert halls in Buffalo, St. Paul, Providence, Tulsa, and New York, among others.
Twin sisters Emily Bruskin and Julia Bruskin formed the Trio with Donna Kwong in 1999 at The Juilliard School. After winning the 2001 Young Concert Artists International Auditions, the Claremont Trio launched their touring career with an acclaimed New York debut at the 92nd Street Y. The Claremonts are based in New York City near their namesake: Claremont Avenue.
At Middlebury the Claremont Trio will perform works by Claude Debussy, Frank Martin, and Anton Arensky. Reserved Seating. Tickets: $15/12/5
Pre-performance dinner at Rehearsals Cafe, 6:30 p.m. Tickets: $15
*This concert is presented in lieu of the formerly scheduled performance on the same date/time by Baiba Skride, violin, and Lauma Skride, piano. Tickets sold for the previously announced concert will be honored normally for this updated performance. There is no need to exchange previously-purchased tickets.
For more information, click here.
***CANCELLED--SEE ABOVE***
November 16, Friday
Baiba Skride, violin
Lauma Skride, piano
8:00 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Concert Hall
The concert appearance by Baiba and Lauma Skride will not take place due to artist health concerns. A new concert event has been scheduled for this date and time-- see above for details.
November 17, Saturday
Half Nelson
3:00 and 8:00 P.M., Dana Auditorium
This film earned director Ryan Fleck the 2006 New York Film Critics Circle Award for Best First Film, the 2006 San Francisco International Film Festival award for Best Film, and other accolades. Dan Dunne (Ryan Gosling in an award winning performance) is a history teacher in an inner-city school who strikes up an unlikely friendship with Drey, a 13-year-old student who catches Dan smoking crack after school one day. An “unflinching clash between squandered ideals and hopeful realities.”—Gianni Truzzi, Seattle Post-Intelligencer. Sponsored by the Hirschfield International Film Series. (USA, 2006, 106 minutes) Free
November 18, Sunday
Middlebury College Community Chorus
Jeff Rehbach, conductor; George Matthew Jr., accompanist
3:00 P.M., Mead Memorial Chapel
A special program of music to celebrate the season of Thanksgiving. The 75-member chorus includes College students, faculty, staff, and members of communities throughout Addison County and across the lake in New York. Free
November 29-December 1, Thursday-Saturday
After Ashley
8:00 P.M. each evening, with a 10:00 P.M. performance on Friday only; Hepburn Zoo Theatre
Play by Gina Gionfriddo, senior work of Himali Soin '08 (directing), MacLeod Andrews '08 (acting) and 500-level work of Amanda Mitchell '08 (costume design). In this shrewd and biting dark comedy, teenager Justin Hammond squirms as all the "grownups" in his life, hungry to advance their careers, exploit the tragedy that has befallen his family. Amidst tawdry reenactments, distorted retellings, and sound-bites sampled into rap songs, Justin is determined to protect the truth. Equipped with a rapier wit, he battles against a system that brought you such classic American Dramas as The 24 hour 9/11 Show, and The JonBenét Ramsey Case, and Paris Hilton, in hopes that he can be left alone to grieve in peace and on his own terms. Tickets: $1; on sale November 12.
November 30, Friday
Sound Investment Jazz Ensemble
Dick Forman, Director
8:00 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Concert Hall
In its Concert Hall debut, The Sound Investment Jazz Ensemble presents an evening of big band music. Their program is a jazz and swing odyssey, with selections ranging from the Glenn Miller and Count Basie bands to the best of contemporary composers and arrangers. The SIJE is a collaboration of the Music Department and the Sound Investment, a student organization. Jazz and swing have been part of the College music scene for 75 years. Today’s band features some of the best of the College’s musicians, who come from Maine to California. It is directed by Dick Forman, a Music Department Affiliate Artist and well-known Vermont jazz figure. The SIJE has kept the community’s toes tapping in a series of concerts and dances over the past couple of years. Come prepared for dancing in the aisles as the SIJE swings into action. Sponsored by the Department of Music. Free
November 30–December 1, Friday–Saturday
And, Go
Martha Ann Underhill ’07 and the Fall Dance Concert
8:00 P.M., Mahaney Center for the Arts, Dance Theatre
Classically-trained dance major Martha Ann Underhill ’07 presents senior work, including a solo choreographed by New York City artist Tamar Rogoff, a contemporary group piece based on her Southern heritage, and a multimedia solo reflecting her dance experience. The annual fall Dance Program concert also showcases up-and-coming choreographers Philippe Bronchtein ’10, Sophie Levine ’10, Adriane Medina ’08, and Yina Ng ’09. The evening includes the annual Newcomers’ Piece, choreographed this year by Artist in Residence Leyya Tawil. Always full of energy, invention, and collaborative spirit, these pieces represent the culmination of intensive creative work and celebrate the art of dance-making. Tickets: $5/4/3, on sale November 13.
Click here to go to December events