CHICAGO—Deeply Rooted Dance Theater (DRDT)
celebrates its past and seeds its future with its Summer Dance
Intensive and Emerging Choreographers Showcase in July and the 20th
anniversary season finale performances in December, featuring a premiere
by South African choreographer Fana Tshabalala.
Deeply Rooted conducts its annual Summer Dance Intensive (SDI) for 70 national and international students June 26–July 22 at its resident studio in downtown Chicago. This year, DRDT launches a satellite program in partnership with The Chicago Park District, offering technical training and artistic development in the culturally underserved West Pullman Park community. Participants will experience a rigorous curriculum fostering learning and personal growth, along with opportunities to experience the company’s repertoire through workshops and performances. The Emerging Choreographer Showcase (ECS), an advanced division of the Summer Intensive, provides an environment for emerging choreographers and dancers to cultivate creativity, deepen technical skill and gain performance experience. Also serving as a platform for established choreographers, ECS provides an opportunity for further exploration of choreographic approach. The program concludes with performances July 21 and 22 at the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts in Hyde Park.
South African choreographer Fana Tshabalala completes a three-week residency with DRDT in July to create an American/Chicago-focused adaptation of his work INDUMBA. Originally created to illuminate the spiritual impact of unresolved apartheid politics in his native South Africa, Tshabalala is adapting the work for an American audience. “Indumba” means African healing hut, promising a work of stirring resilience and reconciliation. Deeply Rooted premieres the new incarnation of INDUMBA at its 20th anniversary season finale performances, “Deeply Free,” December 8–10 at the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts in Hyde Park. The program also will feature company classics such as Church of Nations, Desire, Surrender and more. For those interested in a behinds-the-scenes look at the choreographic process, DRDT presents a preview of the new version of INDUMBA July 27–29 at West Pullman Park.
Deeply Rooted conducts its annual Summer Dance Intensive (SDI) for 70 national and international students June 26–July 22 at its resident studio in downtown Chicago. This year, DRDT launches a satellite program in partnership with The Chicago Park District, offering technical training and artistic development in the culturally underserved West Pullman Park community. Participants will experience a rigorous curriculum fostering learning and personal growth, along with opportunities to experience the company’s repertoire through workshops and performances. The Emerging Choreographer Showcase (ECS), an advanced division of the Summer Intensive, provides an environment for emerging choreographers and dancers to cultivate creativity, deepen technical skill and gain performance experience. Also serving as a platform for established choreographers, ECS provides an opportunity for further exploration of choreographic approach. The program concludes with performances July 21 and 22 at the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts in Hyde Park.
South African choreographer Fana Tshabalala completes a three-week residency with DRDT in July to create an American/Chicago-focused adaptation of his work INDUMBA. Originally created to illuminate the spiritual impact of unresolved apartheid politics in his native South Africa, Tshabalala is adapting the work for an American audience. “Indumba” means African healing hut, promising a work of stirring resilience and reconciliation. Deeply Rooted premieres the new incarnation of INDUMBA at its 20th anniversary season finale performances, “Deeply Free,” December 8–10 at the Reva and David Logan Center for the Arts in Hyde Park. The program also will feature company classics such as Church of Nations, Desire, Surrender and more. For those interested in a behinds-the-scenes look at the choreographic process, DRDT presents a preview of the new version of INDUMBA July 27–29 at West Pullman Park.
DRDT
embarks upon its next 20 years when it presents “Looking to the Future”
February 24, 2018 at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts in
Skokie. The program features the premiere of Alice by DRDT company member Nicole Clarke-Springer and other works from the repertoire.
Founded in 1995, Deeply Rooted Dance Theater is
rooted in traditions of African-American dance, storytelling and
universal themes that spark a visceral experience and ignite an
emotional response in diverse audiences worldwide. Collaborating with
nationally renowned choreographers across the spectrum of modern, ballet
and African dance, DRDT presents work that reflects eclectic voices in contemporary life.
Deeply Rooted’s
programs are partially supported by the Chicago Community Trust, the
Illinois Arts Council, the Irving Harris Fund, MacArthur Foundation
funds through the Richard H. Driehaus Foundation, the MacArthur
Foundation’s International Connections Fund and the Deeply Rooted Family of Friends.
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Top left: Joshua Henry.
Top right: Tracey Franklin.
Bottom: Paige Frazier and Joshua Henry.
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