Archive for January, 2008

The Sundance Channel features Misnomer

The Sundance Channel is featuring Misnomer with a “Spotlight” page on their website with an exclusive interview and article created by Sundance about the works and creative process of Misnomer Dance Theater. During our residency at the Baryshnikov Arts Center, a production team came out to our rehearsals and shot the footage. For a sampling of what you can see on the site, you can watch the clip below. Or visit Sundance’s site for the full feature.

As you may know, we’ve doing a lot of film and video work, recently collaborating in choreographing a video for Bjork, as well as working with Tronic Studios to create the motion-capture trailer for ResFest, a prominent film festival. We firmly believe that there are lots of interesting ways in which choreographers and film directors can create together, and we hope this Sundance Feature becomes part of this ongoing dialogue.

If you have thoughts or interests in an interdisciplinary project, please let us know.

A Mighty Thanks…

…to all the folks who participated and supported Misnomer’s proposal on IdeaBlob.

The Misnomer Family Poses for the Press

We have exciting news for you. We did it! Your incredibly inspiring support helped Misnomer win $10k for the Arts. With this amazing gift, we are planning on building tools to bring artists and audiences (that’s you) closer via the web.

You can read the press release from Advanta, the sponsors of IdeaBlob.

Each month, there is a different winner. This month, Misnomer took the prize. IdeaBlob held a reception in New York City to recognize past winners. During the reception, Ami (IdeaBlob’s Chief Innovation Officer) handed Chris a large check – just like I used to see on TV.

We all took the opportunity to take a picture with the check. Check out the full photoset on our flickr page.

UPDATED: You can now read Deborah Jowitt’s article on Ideablob and Misnomer in the Village Voice

Closing out APAP

To start off 2008, we want to invite you to a short FREE performance of our newest work before the premiere later this year! The show will be followed by a free cocktail reception for our audience at Bello Italian Restaurant around the corner from the theater directly after the performance, hosted by a special sponsor!

Mon, Jan 14th (9 – 9:30 pm)
Ailey Citygroup Theater
405 W. 55th St., btwn 9th and 10th Ave

We have enjoyed performing for you this past year and appreciate all that you’ve shared with us, including your messages, your contributions, your support for our ideaBlob campaign, and your care about our work. This performance and reception is one of our ways of saying thank you! Onwards in 2008!


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Thoughts from Rehearsals

So we are getting ready for APAP this week, and trying to puzzle out how to condense our new work, ‘Zipper’ (which has not premiered yet, and is also not quite finished) into a 9 min. piece. It is an interesting conundrum to be in, but it is a nice challenge, and I think the program will be all the stronger for it. We had a visitor, Rachel, from Towson University, in for about a half hour on Friday–travelled all the way on her lunch break from a dance festival!

She confidently stated that even though it wasn’t very practical, she wanted to come over because she considered it the highlight of her trip. She also had a curious and mysterious answer for Chris when he asked what she thought of her brief glimpse into rehearsal. She seemed to understand the dynamic in the room, almost as if she knew us personally. You can imagine how delightful and touching her visit could be, in the middle of an ordinary day, when all perspective can get lost and we’re just trying to stay focused and slog through rehearsal as best we can.

After she left, we were all a bit inquisitive, so Chris gave us some background. He had set ‘Land Flat’, our women’s quartet from the 2006 season, on some of the
students. When they came in for their first rehearsal, he informed them that for this process they would now be referred to as their character names (the names of the women in the piece) — “Coco” “Brynne” “Jen” and “Dorian”.

I imagined this would help him distill the essence and connectivity of the work, since so much of who we are, as individuals, informs the breadth and body of the piece. This gave me a fresh perspective on how to reinterpret the role if and when it needs to be brought back for touring purposes; that the character, the role of “Jen” with-in the quartet as a whole, is just as important as relearning the movement content. Being ‘myself’, or ‘Jen’ as I am now would not be the same as relearning the “Jen” who has a character and specific dimension with-in the context of the piece.

It dawned on me that it functioned much more like a play than like a traditional dance– and Chris as much of a playwright as a choreographer– writing and shaping human characters. Our building process allows the work to move far beyond just a series of interesting movements strung together, and it creates this emotional,
yet abstracted; and personal, yet universal work.

Chris talks a lot about giving the audience “handles” in the work– a map to read it by if you will. This capacity to ‘humanize’ the process makes the process of learning a work of Misnomer’s much more difficult, but also that much more rewarding. Dancing and learning this work not only hones and displays copious movement skills, it really does make one a better thinker as well.

People ask me, as a founding member, why I have chosen to dance with this company so long, why I haven’t chosen to move on to another company or to other projects. Well, this is why. Nothing beats the thinking around here…. and the movement ain’t so shabby either.