Click for 2016 Season Brochure
Transcription
Click for 2016 Season Brochure
3 SUNDAY TUESDAY MONDAY June July WEDNESDAY THURSDAY 16 SATURDAY 17 18 PILOBOLUS 7pm 2016 SEASON CALENDAR 19 FRIDAY 7pm Durham Performing Arts Center 8pm SEASON DEDICATION Family Matinee 1pm to Judith Sagan prior to performance 20 AN EVENING WITH SAVION GLOVER & JACK DEJOHNETTE 21 22 ppd 23 24 STEPHEN PETRONIO COMPANY 8pm Co-presented by ADF and Duke Performances Page Auditorium | 8pm 25 7pm Durham Performing Arts Center ppd SARA JULI Children’s Matinee 1pm Motorco Music Hall 7pm & 9pm KATE WEARE COMPANY★ ppd Reynolds Industries Theater | 8pm 26 27 28 5 BY 5 29 30 Mark Dendy, Brian Brooks, Dafi Altabeb,❖ Rosie Herrera,★ Gabrielle Revlock❖ Reynolds Industries Theater 8pm 8pm 1 BILL T. JONES/ ARNIE ZANE DANCE COMPANY★ 4 ppd 6 5 Baldwin Auditorium 7pm 10 Reynolds Industries Theater 2pm & 7pm TRIBUTE to Luise Elcaness Scripps and 2016 TEACHING TRIBUTE Anne Green Gilbert Page Auditorium | 4:30pm 11 ppd 12 LAR LUBOVITCH DANCE 7pm Durham Peforming Arts Center 18 ppd HUBBARD STREET DANCE CHICAGO Durham Performing Arts Center MM 8pm ppd KOMA 19 RIOULT DANCE NY★ Reynolds Industries Theater 8pm 25 26 20 15 3 7pm Reynolds Industries Theater 8pm 22 8pm ✴ US Premiere ❖ ADF Debut 23 COMPANY WANG RAMIREZ✴ 7pm Durham Peforming Arts Center TRAJAL HARRELL❖ Children’s Matinee 1pm ppd 27 28 8pm 29 PAUL TAYLOR DANCE COMPANY Durham Peforming Arts Center 30 7pm ppd 7pm ppd All programs subject to change. 16 PROVINCIAL DANCES THEATRE 21 FOOTPRINTS Beth Gill,★❖ Dafi Altabeb,★❖ Lee Sher and Saar Harari★ Reynolds Industries Theater 8pm ★ ADF Commissioned World Premiere ppd MM 14 Co-presented by ADF and Nasher Museum of Art Sheafer Theater at Duke | 7:30pm 24 7pm Co-presented by ADF and 21c Museum Hotel 21c Museum Hotel | 8:30pm to Lar Lubovitch prior to performance 17 MM ppd SCRIPPS/ADF AWARD 9 Children’s Matinee 1pm 13 8pm 8 8pm Reynolds Industries Theater 8pm MM FACULTY CONCERT 7 JOHN JASPERSE PROJECTS★ MUSICIANS CONCERT 7pm Durham Performing Arts Center ppd 3 2 ppd Post Performance Discussion FOOTPRINTS Vanessa Voskuil★ Sarah P. Duke Gardens | 7pm MM Movies By Movers locations TBD 4pm & 6pm TS N Jodee Nimerichter ADF Director TE My best, N ADF is in an expansive state of mind! We’re exploring out-of-the-box venues, performing in new neighborhoods, and even moving beyond the state of North Carolina. Through this, we hope to fuel our audience’s imaginations and perhaps challenge their notion of “modern dance.” This year we are thrilled to open preseason, in April, with two performances by LMnO3 at ADF’s Samuel H. Scripps Studios. Pilobolus will open the regular season with their internationally acclaimed magical production (only the second in the US) of Shadowland. We welcome back audience favorites such as Bill T. Jones /Arnie Zane Dance Company with the ADF commissioned second work of Analogy: A Trilogy and Hubbard Street Dance Chicago with an all William Forsythe program highlighting the intelligence and diversity of the legendary choreographer’s work. We also look forward to sharing five ADF debuts and 5 by 5, an evening of five distinctive performances by five of today’s hottest choreographers. If that wasn't enough, we get to share the talents of our beautiful students on the Footprints program as well as our faculty and musicians in their own programs. With 67 performances, 9 ADF commissioned world premieres, 14 different venues, over 52 days, take a deep breath, take your vitamins, and buckle up. It’s going to be a wild ride. O C DEAR FRIENDS, Performances................................................. 3-23 Opening Night Children’s Saturday Matinees Awards & Dedications............................. 24 Festival Extras ................................ 25-26 Ways To Give............................... 26-27 Ways To Save................................ 28 How To Order........................... 29 DPAC Order Form............. 30-31 Duke Order Form.......... 32-33 Motorco Order Form..... 34 ini yN ob ot Ph he os M 3 LM Photos by Justin Skarowski, Whitney Browne N B ADF’S SAMUEL H. SCRIPPS STUDIOS FRI, APRIL 15 | 7:00PM & 9:00PM Deborah Lohse, Donnell Oakley, and Cori Marquis’ B.A.N.G.S.: made in america is a kaleidoscopic pageant of status, attention, categorization, and femininity. In their first evening-length work, LMnO3 shape-shift in style and identity, donning everything from velvet evening wear, to ripstop jumpsuits, to snack-filled purses, to sensible bathing suits, as the dancers explore what they are—and aren’t—qualified to do. Serious play and creative instincts rule as the trio obsesses over the ideas behind B.A.N.G.S., a mnemonic device frequently used by French language learners to remember which adjectives go in front of a noun: Beauty, Age, Number, Goodness, and Size. Utilizing hard rap, body percussion, headlamps, a game show, and the power of female relationships, this comedic trio sets aside its own fear and doubt, beginning to repurpose how we can unapologetically wear our own B.A.N.G.S. This performance contains nudity and adult language. 3 O .N 3 .G .A m ad ei “It’s not just the dancing, or the acting, or the lip-synching; the flux speed of their performance leaves the audience thoughtdrenched, processing what they just saw while their eyes hold on to what is happening now.” –OffOffOff.com n .S am er . ica K O –The New York Times A BODY IN A FARMER’S MARKET Durham Farmer’s Market SAT, MAY 14 | 8:00AM and 11:00AM A BODY IN A MARKET PLACE Weaver Street Market, Carrboro SUN, MAY 15 | 11:00AM A BODY IN A LIBRARY Cameron Village Regional Library, Raleigh SUN, MAY 15 | 2:30PM-followed by a talk/video presentation at 3:30PM FREE PERFORMANCES! Eiko has expanded into the realm of solo artist in her latest work. She is returning this season with her series A Body in Places in three new venues. Central to the work is Eiko’s drive to explore non-traditional venues and respond to the innate characteristics of the specific place. These mini performances will offer a strange and intense experience that invites, almost forces, the viewer’s gaze to engage the performer’s gaze. Performing as a soloist, Eiko willfully partners with the particularities of places and viewers. This work also includes a photo exhibition exploring the theme of A Body in Places with photographs by William Johnston of Eiko’s latest body of work in Valparaiso, Chile. Valparaiso is known for having one of the homes of poet Pablo Neruda and for the way it has encouraged graffiti artists to create fantastic visions in an already colorful city; it invited Eiko and Johnston to continue their collaboration and create images that express an innate creativity in a community where art is not limited to the elite. The exhibit at the Cameron Village Regional Library will take place in May while the exhibit in the lobby of Reynolds Industries Theater will take place June 16-July 30. Additional Activities: Delicious Movement Workshop with Eiko Otake MON, MAY 9 | 6:00–8:00pm ADF’s Samuel H. Scripps Studios From Trinity to Trinity Book Discussion with Eiko Otake TUE, MAY 10 | 7:00–8:30pm Durham County Main Library ADF’s presentation of A Body in Places by Eiko is made possible with support from the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project, with lead funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, with additional support from the National Endowment for the Arts. Photos by William Johnston, CPAK Studio EI “It’s impossible to recount every detail, yet tempting: Each resonated so intensely…” 4 Photos by Ian Douglas THUR, JUNE 16 | 7:00PM DURHAM FRI, JUNE 17 | 8:00PM PERFORMING SAT, JUNE 18 | 7:00PM ARTS CENTER FAMILY SATURDAY MATINEE | 1:00PM Fan favorite Pilobolus will kick off the 2016 season with Shadowland. Created after several years of experimentation with short-form shadow play, Shadowland is part shadow act, part dance, part circus, and part concert. It’s a groundbreaking, first-of-its-kind performance conceived in collaboration with Steven Banks, lead writer for the playfully surreal animated series SpongeBob SquarePants, and propelled by a rhythmic original score by the popular American musician, producer, and film composer David Poe. The performance combines Pilobolus’s legendary approach to modern dance with high-energy, fast-paced multimedia innovation, including multiple moving screens of different sizes and shapes, and a groundbreaking merging of projected images and front-of-screen choreography that leverages darkness and light. The evening performances contain nudity. The Family Matinee will include the same full-length program presented during evening performances. There will be no nudity at this performance. 5 sh ad ow “It’s a colourful, big, entertaining and completely wacky evening.” –Time Out London lan d “Glover not only exhibits his mastery of different styles of music and tap, he also reveals his wit and his joy in performing.” A A N D F & D U K E PE R FO R M A et te hn ejo N C ES C O -P R ES EN T SA EV EN V & IO IN JA N G W g C lov IT K d er H –Chicago Tribune “Jack DeJohnette’s drums rarely settle on a pulse, painting a sound-world in intricate floating patterns full of empty spaces, like a points of light in a night sky.” –Telegraph UK PAGE AUDITORIUM MON, JUNE 20 | 8:00PM TUE, JUNE 21 | 8:00PM A tour de force of expert jazz and tap dancing, this once in a lifetime session, co-presented with Duke Performances, brings together living legends, Savion Glover and Jack DeJohnette. Glover, the world’s reigning king of tap, collaborates with legendary drummer and NEA Jazz Master DeJohnette, backed by a trio featuring George Colligan on piano and Jerome Harris on bass. Glover will be joined onstage by fellow hoofer, and longtime collaborator, Marshall Davis, Jr. This will be an evening of rhythmic genius, with DeJohnette’s drumming providing expert interplay for Glover’s cadenced dance. Glover photo courtesy of Duke Performances, DeJohnette photo by Carlos Pericás 6 Photos by Keira Heu-Jwyn Chang, Paula Lobo ADF COMMISSION REYNOLDS INDUSTRIES THEATER TUE, JUNE 21 | 8:00PM WED, JUNE 22 | 8:00PM THUR, JUNE 23 | 8:00PM The ADF commissioned Marksman, the latest work by Kate Weare, explores the nuance and precision we use to intuit one another on a magnetic level, etching formal patterns that serve us both biologically and aesthetically. Using ancient senses remote from modern consciousness yet imperative to survival, Marksman delves into peripheral awareness, reflex, synchrony, repulsion, and the sheer forcefulness of formation. As always, Weare mines the magnetism and electrical connection between bodies that is emotionally resonant, imbuing Marksman with power, attraction, hierarchy, vulnerability, and aloneness. Marksman is commissioned by ADF with support from the SHS Foundation and the Charles L. and Stephanie Reinhart Fund. ADF’s presentation of Marksman is made possible by the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project, with lead funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, with additional support from the National Endowment for the Arts. 7 W KA EA T E co R m E pa “Kate Weare creates terrifically satisfying dance phrases. And her fine company brings these steps to full, luscious life.” –The New York Times ny –Portland Press Herald R A T $18 Tickets! Sara Juli returns to ADF to perform Tense Vagina: an actual diagnosis, a work about motherhood—its beauty, challenges, isolation, comedy, and influence on the human experience. This hour-long, evening-length solo uses humor, movement, sounds, songs, text, and audience participation to reveal “all that is awesome and all that sucks” when it comes to being a mother. Tense Vagina focuses on the seldom-discussed and taboo aspects of motherhood, such as loss of bladder control, tears, monotony, loneliness, and dildos. EN J U SE L an V I ac A tu G al di This performance contains adult language and subject matter. Photos by Arthur Fink, Alban Maino SA WED, JUNE 22 | 7:00PM & 9:00PM THUR, JUNE 23 | 7:00PM & 9:00PM FRI, JUNE 24 | 7:00PM & 9:00PM MOTORCO MUSIC HALL “She had the audience laughing out loud as she lay bare her personal secrets.” IN A n ag os is 8 –The Huffington Post 9 Photos by Yi-Chun Wu, Sarah Silver company PETRONIO STEPHEN “…Petronio has a tendency for turning things on their heads, and Bloodlines is no different…” DURHAM PERFORMING ARTS CENTER FRI, JUNE 24 | 8:00PM SAT, JUNE 25 | 7:00PM CHILDREN’S SATURDAY MATINEE | 1:00PM Stephen Petronio Company will present three works as a part of Bloodlines, a five-year project that incorporates dances by trailblazers of American postmodern dance into the company’s repertory and presents them alongside new works by Stephen Petronio. Merce Cunningham’s RainForest (1968), a spare and bracing foray into animal abstract motion and sound, set loose amidst a world of floating silver pillows, features an electronic score composed by David Tudor performed live each evening, with visual design by Andy Warhol. Trisha Brown’s Glacial Decoy (1979), her first work for the proscenium stage, plays with theatrical convention. Glacial Decoy features iconic projections depicting classic Americana and billowing white costumes by Robert Rauschenberg and is the first of many Brown/Rauschenberg collaborations. Petronio’s Locomotor (2014) addresses the elemental act of bodies traveling—extreme locomotive states that cast the dancers in a careening mix of action forward and backward through time and space. Locomotor features an original score by electronic pioneer Clams Casino, lighting design by Petronio’s longtime collaborator Ken Tabachnick, and costumes by Narciso Rodriguez, one of America’s foremost designers. REYNOLDS INDUSTRIES THEATER ADF COMMISSION TUE, JUNE 28 | 8:00PM WED, JUNE 29 | 8:00PM THUR, JUNE 30 | 8:00PM ● ● New Work by Rosie Herrera is commissioned by ADF with support from the Doris Duke/SHS Foundations Award for New Dance. Additional support provided by Hilton Durham near Duke University. ● Solos, duets, quartets, and more choreographed by five of the dance world’s most electrifying artists! Mark Dendy will perform an excerpt from Dystopian Distractions! (2014). In an army uniform and a gas mask, Dendy sits on a stool gesturing to the sound of Donald Rumsfeld being interviewed. His animations transform the interview into a significant piece of performance art. Dafi Altabeb deals with life choices. What do we really choose in our lives, and what are mere products of a familiar routine? How many times have you asked yourself whether the person you live with is somebody you have chosen or somebody you have grown accustomed to? Questions of this nature are closely examined in her Never The Less (2012). Gabrielle Revlock’s Halo (2012) is an intimate and sensual solo that makes manifest the fields of energy around the dancing body through the use of a simple hula-hoop. At times the dancer seems to disappear and only the hoop is visible. At other points, the audience may forget about the hoop and only see a fragile gyrating body. Brian Brooks’ Torrent (2014) fluctuates between orderly patterns and unrestrained turbulence. Torrent sends the company of eight dancers soaring to Max Richter’s revelatory score. Rosie Herrera completes this program with an ADF commissioned new work. mark dendy brian brooks dafi altabeb rosie herrera gabrielle revlock ADF DEBUTS ● Photos by Christopher Duggan, Bonnie Friel, Nini Moshe, Sara D. Davis, David Bazemore 5 BY 5 3 10 –NJArts.net 11 3 Photos by Sam Rosenblatt, Eric Politzer / ES E y N Npan A JO Zcom T. IEce N an LL R d BI A “Empathy is how art works and, as the central question in our relations with others, it has threaded its way through Jones’ career.” ADF COMMISSION DURHAM PERFORMING ARTS CENTER FRI, JULY 1 | 8:00PM SAT, JULY 2 | 7:00PM Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company presents the second part of Analogy: A Trilogy developed by Bill T. Jones with Associate Artistic Director Janet Wong. In this ADF commissioned world premiere work, Analogy/Lance: Pretty aka the Escape Artist, we meet Lance, whose battles with his own personal demons of drugs and excess expose us to another type of war. It was the battlefield of the nightlife and underworld of the late 80s and early 90s club culture and sex trade. This “pretty boy-gangster thug,” a name he acquired in prison, holds steadfast to his often tragic and sometimes outrageously humorous narrative, while facing an uncertain future. Inspired by W.G. Sebald’s The Emigrants, Jones continues his exploration of how text, storytelling, and movement pull and push against each other and how another experience can be had through the combination and recombination of these elements. All three stories in the trilogy, while wildly different, ruminate on the nature of service, duty, and the question of what is a life well lived. This performance contains adult language and subject matter. Analogy/Lance: Pretty aka the Escape Artist is commissioned by ADF with support from the Doris Duke/SHS Foundations Award for New Dance. Additional support provided by The Mary Duke Biddle Foundation. –The Dance Enthusiast Photos by Yi-Chun Wu pr E oj R ec S ts E H N JA SP JO “...Jasperse has taken the audience on quite a full journey. An enormous amount of space has been traversed, yet it feels as though no time has passed—the trip was so satisfying.” ADF COMMISSION REYNOLDS INDUSTRIES THEATER TUES, JULY 5 | 8:00PM WED, JULY 6 | 8:00PM THUR, JULY 7 | 8:00PM John Jasperse Projects returns to ADF with the world premiere of an ADF co-commissioned work, Remains (working title). The piece is made in collaboration with performers Maggie Cloud, Marc Crousillat, Burr Johnson, Heather Lang, Stuart Singer, and Claire Westby, composer John King, lighting designer Lenore Doxsee, who collaborated with Jasperse on Within between (ADF 2014), and video designer Jeff Larson. The work addresses the illusion of ego, the notion of a fluid boundary between the self and one’s environment, and the notion of legacy as the sum total of the energy that we put out into the world—what we build energetically in our environment through our actions and what we leave behind in our wake. The presentation of Remains (working title) is made possible by the New England Foundation for the Arts’ National Dance Project, with lead funding from the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation and The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation. 12 3 DURHAM PERFORMING ARTS CENTER FRI, JULY 8 | 8:00PM SAT, JULY 9 | 7:00PM CHILDREN’S SATURDAY MATINEE | 1:00PM “The list of choreographers who have worked with this immaculately technical group reads like an international who’s who of contemporary dance.” –The New York Times 13 3 HUBBARD dance chicago Photos by Todd Rosenberg, Cheryl Mann Hubbard Street Dance Chicago returns with a not-to-be-missed all William Forsythe program. N.N.N.N. appears as a mind in four parts, four dancers in a state of constant, tacit connection, underscored by the sudden murmured flashes of Thom Willems’ music. Quintett’s seamless progression of solos, duets, and trios for five dancers runs in concert with—and counter to—themes of loss, hope, fear, and joy heard in Gavin Bryars’ 1971 orchestral composition, “Jesus’ Blood Never Failed Me Yet.” One Flat Thing, reproduced begins with a roar: twenty tables, like jagged rafts of ice, fly forward and become the surface, the underground, and the sky inhabited by a ferocious flight of dancers. This pack of bodies rages with alacrity, whipping razor-like in perilous waves. Its score, by composer and longtime Forsythe collaborator Willems, begins quietly before becoming a gale, gathering sonic force as the dancers’ bodies produce a voracious and detailed storm of movement. Photos by Phyllis A. McCabe, Todd Rosenberg an y H p m In T ce C co da BO V R U A Photo courtesy of Joffrey Ballet “With a clever nod to the geniuses of the past and a great affinity for storytelling, Lubovitch is one of the most brilliant, innovative, and original choreographers working today…” –Broadway World DURHAM PERFORMING ARTS CENTER MON, JULY 11 | 7:00PM TUES, JULY 12 | 8:00PM Men’s Stories (2000) is Lar Lubovitch’s powerful exploration of masculinity, biography, and character. Lubovitch has described the work as “a dance that opens up, like a book, to reveal the story of the men inside the dance.” This 45-minute work for 9 men is acclaimed for both its choreography and its virtuosic male dancing. The dance tells its stories though a “collage” format, rather than a linear narrative structure. The unusual commissioned score—also a collage—combines original music with samplings of classical music and other audio effects, creating “a concerto in ruin.” Concerto Six Twenty-Two, one of Lubovitch’s most-acclaimed works, premiered at Carnegie Hall in 1986. Although “men dancing” has existed in modern dance almost from the beginning, Concerto brought a new freedom of expression to this concept. While Concerto does not tell a literal story, it does indelibly portray men (for the first time) within a caring, supportive, and loving relationship. In the mid-80s, this aspect of Concerto gave the work special resonance in the face of the AIDS crisis, but the theme is timeless. The company will perform the male duet from Concerto at ADF. North Star (1st movement), Scriabin Dances, and Othello Pas de Deux (Act III) will round out the program. 14 3 Photos by Dan Johnston “...theatrically concise and emotionally expansive, dancing that takes place in the arena of life just as much as in the theater.” –Los Angeles Times 21C MUSEUM HOTEL TUE, JULY 12 | 8:30PM WED, JULY 13 | 8:30PM THUR, JULY 14 | 8:30PM $18 TICKETS Co-presented by 21c Museum Hotel, The Ghost Festival is the first multi-disciplinary solo project by artist Koma Otake, one half of the performance artists Eiko & Koma. Using a mobile trailer, Koma presents a gallery of works meant to be both an interactive visual art installation as well as a performance space. Koma envisions a meditative and communal space to honor the connection between past and present and provide a home for lost spirits. The Ghost Festival is a solo project in the most absolute way. The set design, paintings, choreography, and lighting have all been created or set up by Koma himself. Koma states that he is not a visual artist by trade and that movement is his “true language.” Only through performance and the presence of his body in relation to the set does the installation and The Ghost Festival truly come to form. KOMA THE GHOST FESTIVAL ADF & 21C MUSEUM HOTEL CO-PRESENT 15 3 –The New York Times REYNOLDS INDUSTRIES THEATER TUE, JULY 14 | 8:00PM FRI, JULY 15 | 8:00PM SAT, JULY 16 | 7:00PM Tatiana Baganova’s Sepia (2010), originally commissioned by ADF and danced by students and now reimagined for her company, is a work capturing the atmosphere of Kōbō Abe’s book Woman in the Dunes. The sand in the piece becomes a symbol of time, the habitat of heroes, and is a symbolic element in the changing of consciousness. The endlessness of the rolling sand is highlighted by the long slow sounds of Avet Terteryan’s symphony. Maple Garden (1999) presents strong, compelling, and mysterious visions. A barebranched tree, bird sounds, and a man with a large butterfly net are just some of the images that make this work appear part fairytale and part grim dream. Beautiful, if grotesque, and bewitching. Provincial Dances Theatre is presented by ADF with support by the Trust for Mutual Understanding. Photos by Elena Rezvova L IA tre C ea IN th V S O E R C P AN D “Miss Baganova…is the real thing.” US PREMIERE 16 3 ADF COMMISSION REYNOLDS MON, JULY 18 | 8:00PM INDUSTRIES TUE, JULY 19 | 8:00PM WED, JULY 20 | 8:00PM THEATER RIOULT Dance NY, known for its sensual, articulate, and exquisitely musical work, will present WOMEN ON THE EDGE…Unsung Heroines of the Trojan War, a trilogy of dances inspired by Euripides’ tragic heroines Iphigenia, Helen of Troy, and Cassandra. Artistic director and choreographer Pascal Rioult’s interpretations of these timeless myths highlight not only the grace, strength, and resilience of women in society but also the futility and immorality of war. The program includes Rioult’s Iphigenia, On Distant Shores, and the ADF commissioned Cassandra’s Curse, each set to commissioned music by contemporary American composers Michael Torke, Aaron Kernis, and Richard Danielpour, respectively. Cassandra’s Curse is commissioned by ADF with support from the Doris Duke/SHS Foundations Award for New Dance. Uny IOE RNC T L “…like an artisan…he’s the maker of a rich and complex cloth; he weaves moments in time from threads of imagination and makes them into dances…” –The Huffington Post 17 3 Photos by Sofia Negron A D $18 TICKETS! “What would have happened if one of the early postmoderns from Judson Church had gone uptown to perform in the voguing ballroom scene in Harlem?” This is the question Trajal Harrell asks in his performance piece Judson Church is Ringing in Harlem (M2M), part of Twenty Looks or Paris is Burning at The Judson Church. In Judson Church is Ringing in Harlem, Harrell makes a work for three dancers which engages the formalism and minimalism of postmodernism with the flamboyancy of voguing. Combining these contrasting styles, Harrell also looks at the influence of jazz and improvisation in early postmodern dance. This performance is co-presented by the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke. Additional Activities: Talk with Trajal Harrell THUR, JULY 21 | 5:00pm The Nasher Museum of Art HARRELL TUE, JULY 19 | 7:30PM WED, JULY 20 | 7:30PM THUR, JULY 21 | 7:30PM ADF & NASHER MUSEUM OF ART CO-PRESENT SHEAFER THEATER AT DUKE TRAJAL Photos by Ian Douglas, Miana Jun ADF DEBUT “He’s not about to reject thought; he’s a man of ideas, a lover of concepts and theories, and these are built into the substructure of all the pieces in his Twenty Looks series. But, thank heaven, he also lives to move.” –DanceBeat 18 3 Y i A P ram MG ON 19 3 CA “It’s as if the hip-hop techniques, acrobatics and reckless moves all caught a kind of swing akin to Sebastien Ramirez’ Southern French accent.” –Le Monde Photos by Frank Szafinski Nrez US PREMIERE DURHAM PERFORMING ARTS CENTER FRI, JULY 22 | 8:00PM SAT, JULY 23 | 7:00PM CHILDREN’S SATURDAY MATINEE | 1:00PM After last season’s electrifying, sellout performances, Company Wang Ramirez is back with another genre-defying work. The company, known for their emotional and powerful blend of contemporary and hip hop dance, presents Borderline (2013), exploring themes of constraint, manipulation, and the meaning of democracy. Attached to cables, the five dancers bring to light and transpose the desire of freedom inherent in all forms of dance, especially hip hop, with costumes that reflect both Greek and Korean traditions. The dance expands the dialogue between technique and the art of rigging while reflecting on human relationships. Social boundaries are evoked by the interplay of physical forces on the stage as well as through the broadcast testimonies collected from the dancers’ friends, relatives, and the media. New Work by Beth Gill is commissioned by ADF with support from the SHS Foundation and the Charles L. and Stephanie Reinhart Fund. New Work by Dafi Altabeb is commissioned by ADF with support from the SHS Foundation and Israel’s Office of Cultural Affairs in North America. Additional support provided by The Israel Center of the Jewish Federation of Durham-Chapel Hill. Photo by Alex Escalante ● New Work by Lee Sher and Saar Harari is commissioned by ADF with support from the Doris Duke/SHS Foundations Award for New Dance and additional support by The Consulate General of Israel to the Southeast Region and The Israel Center of the Jewish Federation of Durham-Chapel Hill. –The News & Observer Photo by John Koch Beth Gill’s minimalist works explore the tension between formalist structures and psychological themes, where layers of meaning unfold over a prolonged sense of time. For Footprints, Gill will continue to research the often highly controlled systems designed to simultaneously distill and free gestures within her work. Gill’s process will engage the darker and more instinctual content of psychology, human nature, and expression. Dafi Altabeb’s work is tender, delicate, yet powerful. Her pieces project youth, courage, imagination, contradictions, and above all, honesty. Her creations come from the heart. Lee Sher and Saar Harari established LeeSaar The Company in 2000. They use the different disciplines and training of theater and dance to create original dance performances. Their works display an astonishing array of movements, from minimal to jumping, twisting, and falling to the floor, all with beautiful ease. FOOTPRINTS Footprints delivers an outstanding presentation of four ADF commissioned world premieres by groundbreaking artists, performed with impeccable technique and infectious energy by ADF students. “The program’s energy and creativity never fail to impress.” ● MON, JULY 25 | 8:00PM TUE, JULY 26 | 8:00PM WED, JULY 27 | 8:00PM ● REYNOLDS INDUSTRIES THEATER ADF COMMISSIONS beth gill dafi altabeb lee sher and saar harari vanessa voskuil ADF DEBUTS DUKE GARDENS ADF COMMISSION THUR, JULY 28 | 7:00PM FRI, JULY 29 | 7:00PM SAT, JULY 30 | 4:00PM & 6:00PM FREE! Characterizing human behavior in movement is an aesthetic Vanessa Voskuil has developed over the duration of her work. For Voskuil, moving is considered a specific way of being. Ranging from large community-inclusive performance works to ensemble and solo works for site-specific locations and theater settings, her work has been described as “visually arresting,” “boldly and uncompromisingly moving within its own time and its own logic,” and “interlaced with surrealist sensibility and bracing intelligence.” New Work by Vanessa Voskuil is commissioned by ADF with support from the McKnight Artist Fellowship Program at Northrop at the University of Minnesota and the SHS Foundation. 20 3 DURHAM PERFORMING ARTS CENTER L UR A P LO y FRI, JULY 29 | 8:00PM SAT, JULY 30 | 7:00PM Closing out ADF’s Durham season is one of modern dance’s most beloved companies. Paul Taylor Dance Company will perform Promethean Fire (2002). Set to three keyboard works by Bach as richly orchestrated by Stokowski, Promethean Fire examines a kaleidoscope of emotional colors in the human condition. All 16 Taylor dancers, costumed in black, weave in and out of intricate patterns that mirror the way varied emotions weave themselves through life. A central duet depicts conflict and resolution following a cataclysmic event. But if destruction has been at the root of this dance, renewal of the spirit is its overriding message. Additional classic Taylor repertory will round out the program. Audio description available upon request. Please call 919-684-6402 to request by July 15. Y m o A c Tance n a p Photos by Paul B. Goode, Grant Halverson d 21 3 “One of the most singular and searching imaginations of our time.” –The New York Times SUN, JULY 3 | 7:00PM Each summer the virtuosic musicians of the ADF school take center stage for an evening featuring an immense range of musical styles that will get you moving. Come experience the extraordinary talent that inspires the ADF faculty and students throughout the summer. MUSICIANS CONCERT FACUTLY CONCERT BALDWIN AUDITORIUM AT DUKE REYNOLDS INDUSTRIES THEATER SUN, JULY 10 | 2:00PM & 8:00PM Each year, ADF’s internationally renowned faculty share their explosive talent, skill, and creativity with over 400 students. The faculty will present a concert of their own choreography, performed by ADF students and faculty themselves. Same program at both performances. 22 3 Photos by Adam Reign “Miss Baganova…is the real thing.” –The New York Times MON, AUG 1 | 7:30 TUE, AUG 2 | 7:30 WED, AUG 3 | 7:30 sie ro ra re r he da e nc tre ea th 23 –The Miami Herald ● ADF’s New York performances are supported by the SHS Foundation. “One of the strongest and most original talents to emerge from Miami.” tre ea th es New Work by Rosie Herrera s commissioned by ADF with support from the Doris Duke/SHS Foundations Award for New Dance. Additional support provided by Hilton Durham near Duke University. nc da Rosie Herrera brings her Miami-based company to present Various Stages of Drowning: A Cabaret (2009). At once campy and poignant, Drowning recreates dream states using dance, theater, cabaret, and film. World Dance Reviews calls Herrera “a magician that twists our emotions” and The Classical Voice of North Carolina says “this work is strange and adventurous, bright and cheeky… as much dance as it is theater and is as highly theatrical as it is booty shaking kinetic.” Herrera will also perform her latest ADF commissioned work, sure to charm the pants off of any audience. al THUR, AUG 4 | 8:00 FRI, AUG 5 | 8:00 SAT, AUG 6 | 8:00 ci THE JOYCE THEATER in Provincial Dances Theatre is presented by ADF with support by the Trust for Mutual Understanding. ov pr Tatiana Baganova’s Sepia (2010) is a work capturing the atmosphere of Kōbō Abe’s book Woman in the Dunes. The sand in the piece becomes a symbol of time, the habitat of heroes, and is a symbolic element in the changing of consciousness. The endlessness of the rolling sand is highlighted by the long slow sounds of Avet Terteryan’s symphony. Maple Garden (1999) presents strong, compelling, and mysterious visions. A bare-branched tree, bird sounds, and a man with a large butterfly net are just some of the images that make this work appear part fairytale and part grim dream. Beautiful, if grotesque, and bewitching. C F Y D N A IN THE JOYCE THEATER OPENING NIGHT FÊTE CELEBRATE ADF’S 83RD SEASON AT PARIZÄDE • • • • • June 16th immediately following the Pilobolus performance, 9pm-midnight $75 per ticket Enjoy delicious appetizers, wine, and beer Dance the night away with music provided by DJ Shahzad Special appearance by members of Pilobolus CHILDREN’S SATURDAY MATINEES The Children’s Saturday Matinee series presents performances by three of the acclaimed professional dance companies from the season. These one-hour shows begin at 1:00pm at the Durham Performing Arts Center and are specially curated to ignite and inspire the imaginations of children. Additionally, each one is followed by a FREE Kids’ Party in the DPAC lobby, complete with live music, face-painting, snacks, and additional activities. American Sign Language (ASL) Interpreter available upon request. Please call 919-684-6402 to request at least two weeks ahead. Stephen Petronio Company: June 25 Hubbard Street Dance Chicago: July 9 Company Wang Ramirez: July 23 Buy tickets to all 3 performances for $32.25! AWARDS AND DEDICATIONS Photos by Jano Cohen Durham Performance Arts Center | 1:00pm Tickets: $16 2016 SEASON DEDICATION Thursday, June 16 at 8:00pm Durham Performing Arts Center The 2016 ADF Season will be dedicated to ADF Board member Judith Sagan prior to Pilobolus’s performance at DPAC on Thursday, June 16 at 7:00pm. BALASARASWATI/JOY ANNE DEWEY BEINECKE ENDOWED CHAIR FOR DISTINGUISHED TEACHING Sunday, July 10 | 4:30pm Page Auditorium The 2016 Balasaraswati/Joy Anne Dewey Beinecke Endowed Chair for Distinguished Teaching will be awarded to celebrated dance educator Anne Green Gilbert. A ceremony will take place on Sunday, July 10, 2016 at 4:30pm in Page Auditorium on the campus of Duke University. Preceding the ceremony, ADF will pay tribute to the late Luise Elcaness Scripps, who, with the help of Walter Beinecke, established the teaching chair at ADF in 1991 to honor her master teacher Tanjore Balasaraswati. Scripps studied bharatanatyam with the famed South Indian classical dancer and teacher from 1962 to 1984. To honor the visionary Ms. Scripps, Aniruddha Knight, the sole remaining heir to the legacy of the practice of bharatanatyam codified at the Court of Thanjavur, will perform a solo to live music. SAMUEL H. SCRIPPS/AMERICAN DANCE FESTIVAL AWARD Monday, July 11 at 7:00pm Durham Performing Arts Center ADF will present the 2016 Samuel H. Scripps/American Dance Festival Award for lifetime achievement to Artistic Director and Choreographer, Lar Lubovitch. Established in 1981 by Samuel H. Scripps, the annual award honors choreographers who have dedicated their lives and talent to the creation of modern dance. Mr. Lubovitch’s work, acclaimed throughout the world, is renowned for its musicality, emotional style, highly technical choreography, and deeply humanistic voice. The $50,000 award will be presented to Mr. Lubovitch in a brief ceremony prior to Lar Lubovitch Dance Company’s performance at the Durham Performing Arts Center. 24 3 FESTIVAL EXTRAS MOVIES BY MOVERS Directed by Cara Hagan June 6-9, Times and Location TBA Free and open to the public! ADF PROJECT DANCE ADF Project Dance exposes local youth to dance and performance through free workshops, residencies, and classes for various ages. Led by Gaspard Louis, Director of Project Dance, this program brings the joy of dance to Durham communities that may not otherwise get to experience dance. Stay tuned to the ADF website for ADF Project Dance opportunities. Moving images, moving bodies. Movement and film just go together. From the early experiments of artists like Loie Fuller and physical comedians like Charlie Chaplin, to the lush spectacle of the movie musicals of the 1930s and 40s starring dancer/ ADF Project Dance is made possible with major support from the SHS Foundation. Additional support provided by Central Park School for Children and individual donors. choreographers like Bill Bojangles Robinson and Fred Astaire, to the avant garde movement with the likes of Maya Daren and Merce Cunningham, to Michael Jackson’s Thriller – moving bodies and the camera have shared an ongoing, dynamic conversation. SAMUEL H. SCRIPPS STUDIOS Please visit the ADF website for additional information and the full screening schedule. The year-round programs at ADF’s Samuel H. Scripps Studios are dedicated to providing a sound scientific and aesthetic base for all levels of dance training from beginning to professional. Our studios serve as a center for creative activity in Durham, NC, in which COMMUNITY YOGA EVENT A summer celebration of ADF and yoga students learn in a welcoming and non-competitive environment from faculty who are Times and Location TBA experts in their fields. Our programs offer a variety of classes, for the dancer and nonFree and open to the public! dancer alike, designed to strengthen the body, increase flexibility of movement, and foster an appreciation of dance. Throughout the summer the studios will provide classes ADF and lululemon have paired up for a fourth summer to invite you to a special yoga for adults and children and two one-week dance camps for youth, June 13–17 and June event to celebrate our vibrant community of movers! First-time and seasoned yogis 20–24. Please visit the ADF website for more details on these classes and camps. alike are encouraged to come out for a free restorative movement class. Please visit the ADF website for further details. FESTIVAL TOURS June 27-July 22 on Mondays, Tuesdays, Thursdays, and Fridays, mornings and afternoons Free and open to the public! Take a FREE tour and experience the ADF school! Throughout the summer, tours offer individuals, families, and community groups an insider’s perspective where you can experience the world-renowned ADF faculty, students, and musicians hard at work. Tours of the school increase your understanding of modern dance and ADF. The tours highlight the history of the festival up to the present day. Tours are led by Director of ADF School Tours, Joseph Fedrowitz, ADF staff, and other long-time ADF supporters giving visitors the chance to observe art in action as well as obtain details about the 2016 season. Tours usually last 1-2 hours. Please call 919-684-6402 to make your reservation. POST PERFORMANCE DISCUSSIONS Moderated by Chris Vitiello Free for ticket holders! Post Performance Discussions (PPDs) provide a unique opportunity for patrons to meet the festival artists, ask questions, and gain insight into the creators’ work and vision. PPDs take place after select evening performances throughout the summer. Please check the calendar on page 1 for the PPD schedule. 25 3 Photo by Grant Halverson ✄ ➦ ADF GO Donate today and help ADF support new work, scholarships, performances, and international programs! Any size gift is appreciated and can be paid in full or by ADF’s monthly giving program! Photo by Grant Halverson The ADF Go program is designed to make modern dance more accessible and affordable for young arts lovers in our community. Audience members 18-30 have the opportunity to purchase a $10 ticket to any 2016 ADF performance except Savion Glover & Jack DeJohnnette at Page Auditorium. Tickets may be purchased online or at the box office. Patrons must present a valid ID when picking up tickets. Rally your friends and make this the summer of ADF. You have no excuse not to see everything! So, Go! Ways To Give SPECIAL DONOR BENEFITS BEGIN AT $250 AND INCLUDE: • Access to DPAC’s president’s lounge for ADF’s 2016 performances • Invitations to exclusive donor events (open rehearsals, director’s tour of ADF school, and more) Please join us opening weekend for an ADF Go Season Launch Party! Head to The Rickhouse after Friday night’s performance for an evening of music, drinks, fairy hair, and dancing with Pilobolus. A $10 ticket will get you entry to the venue and a drink cup. Ages 18-30 only, please. GIFTS STARTING AT $1,000 ALSO INCLUDE: • 2 tickets total to ADF’s opening night Fête ($150 value) • ADF ticket concierge service (order your season tickets directly through ADF) • 2 tickets to a private reception during the 2016 season ($50 value) Date: Friday, June 18, 2016 Time: 9pm-12am Place: The Rickhouse, 609 Foster St, Durham, NC 27701 To Purchase Tickets: visit americandancefestival.org For a full list of the NEW 2016 ADF donor levels and benefits or to make a contribution visit ADF’s website. MAKE A CONTRIBUTION: PNC is a proud supporter of the 2016 ADF Go program. The ADF Go Season Launch Party is presented in partnership with Runaway and ArtsNow NC. • Online at: americandancefestival.org/support/contribute • Include your donation with your DUKE ticket order form (pages 32-33) • Send directly to ADF at Box 90772, Durham, NC 27708 (form on reverse side) • Contact Jay Nygren, Director of Individual and Corporate Relations at jay@ americandancefestival.org or 919-684-6402 EXPERIENCE DANCE In an effort to make the performing arts accessible to as many groups as possible, ADF can distribute complimentary performance tickets to nonprofit organizations that work with individuals, families, youth, and seniors in need who otherwise could not attend performances. We will review applications from local nonprofit organizations and determine how Experience Dance tickets will be distributed. Contributions are tax-deductible within the law. A copy of the ADF’s latest annual report may be obtained, upon request, from American Dance Festival, 715 Broad Street, Durham, North Carolina 27705 or from the Charities Bureau, 120 Broadway, 3rd Floor, New York, New York 10271. Financial information about this organization and a copy of its license are available from the NC State Solicitation Licensing Branch at (888) 830-4989. This license is not an endorsement by the state. ✄ Interested nonprofit organizations, as well as businesses and individuals who would like to help fund the Experience Dance program, are encouraged to contact Mollie O’Reilly, at (919) 684-6402 for more information. 26 3 I would like to support: ✄ ➦ MAIL-IN FORM ❑ ADF Fund* $ (Supports performances, choreographic commissions, student scholarships, community outreach programs, and ADF’s archives.) ❑ Endowment $ Installments: ❑ Monthly $ ❑ Yearly $ *Funds received between October 1-September 30 support the ADF season that takes place during this time. Please consult the website under Support for donor benefits. If you opt to waive benefits and receive the full deduction, check here ❑ I’d like to discuss a planned gift for ADF. Please contact me. My company will match this gift. This gift is in ❑ Honor of ❑ Memory of Name(s) (as you would like it to appear in the ADF playbill) ❑ Anonymous Address CityState Phone Zip E-mail ❑ Check payable to ADF ❑ Visa ❑ Mastercard ❑ AMEX ❑ Discover Name (as appears on card) 27 3 ✄ Credit Card # Billing Zip Code Exp Date MAJOR SUPPORT FOR ADF’S 2016 PERFORMANCE SEASON PROVIDED BY: WAYS TO SAVE PICK 4+ Series Subscriptions: Save 25% When you purchase one ticket to four or more different performances at one venue, at one time, you will receive 25% off those tickets. You may purchase as many series subscriptions as you like. Additional single tickets are full price. By becoming a 4+ Series Subscriber you will be able to enjoy many benefits including the best seats in the house, easy ticket exchange, ticket insurance, and a tax deduction receipt for any unused tickets. Becoming a subscriber also gives you the opportunity to be among the first to purchase tickets before the general public the following year! OUT-OF-THE-BOX Series Subscriptions: Receive one ticket to all five offsite performances for the price of four. One ticket to all five shows will cost only $60.50, regularly priced at $80. Note: Due to the exceptional ticket values of the following performances, discounts will not be available for the Saturday Children’s Matinees, Sara Juli at Motorco, Koma at 21c Museum Hotel, Trajal Harrell at Sheafer Theater, and the Faculty and Musicians Concerts. 4+ Series Subscriptions to ADF@Duke are available through the order form on page 32, online, in person, or by phone. 4+ Series Subscriptions to ADF@DPAC are available through the order form on page 30, online, in person, or by phone. Photo by Yi-Chun Wu Please note that there is no processing fee at DPAC or Duke for orders made in person. All orders are processed in the order in which they are received. Subscribers may exchange their tickets up to 48 hours in advance for the same performing company and same price level. Subject to availability. KIDS NIGHT OUT (KNO) Kids deserve a night out, too! All youth, ages 6-17, are invited to attend many 2016 ADF performances for FREE with the purchase of a single ticket or subscription. Share the thrill of modern dance and excitement of ADF with the next generation of dancegoers. A limited number of KNO tickets will be available for most performing companies. As some programs may contain adult themes or nudity, the selection of KNO tickets is left to the discretion of parents and guardians. ADF will post any adult content information on the website immediately after it is received. Please note that programs are subject to change. SENIOR DISCOUNT ADF patrons who are 65 years of age or older may reduce their regular-priced single ticket by $3. STUDENT DISCOUNT All full-time students can receive half-priced tickets! Just present a valid student ID at the box office window one hour prior to the start of each ADF performance. Subject to availability. One ticket per valid ID. GROUPS SAVE 25%! There’s no better way to see the best in modern dance at an incredibly affordable rate than to bring a group of ten or more. Group tickets are ideal for clubs of any kind, networking groups, neighborhood associations, and much more! Groups of 10 or more save 25% off of regular-priced tickets. UNIVERSITY EMPLOYEE DISCOUNT University employees receive 20% off regular ticket prices. Contact your university/ college human resources department for the ADF University Employee discount code or visit our website to view participating universities. 28 3 TICKETS ON SALE MAY 3 ☛ RETURNING SUBSCRIBERS: Return your order form by April 29 to get the best seats IN THE HOUSE! For details on series subscriptions and other discounts, check out Ways To Save on page 28. For general questions about the season, please call 919-684-6402. How to Order ADF@DPAC Tickets IN PERSON or BY MAIL Single Ticket Prices: $62.25 | $58 | $46 Pick 4+ Series SAVE 25%: $47.50 | $44.25 | $35.25 (order form on page 30) The DPAC box office will open three hours prior to event time for all DPAC performances. Pick 4+ Series SAVE 25%: $39.50 | $37.75 | $29 Durham Performing Arts Center The American Tobacco District 123 Vivian Street, Durham, NC 27701 PARKING Single Ticket Prices: $33.25 | $27.75 | $25.75 BY PHONE 919-680-ARTS (2787) Single Ticket Prices: $51.50 | $49.25 | $37.50 Pick 4+ Series SAVE 25%: $25.75 | $21.75 | $20 ONLINE americandancefestival.org Single Ticket Prices: $22.50 Pick 4+ Series SAVE 25%: $17.75 How to Order ADF@Duke Savion Glover & Jack DeJohnette IN PERSON or BY MAIL (order form on page 32) Page Auditorium *Single Ticket Price: $55 | $45 | $35 Pick 4+ Series SAVE 25%: $41.25 | $33.75 | $26.25 Kate Weare Company 5 by 5 John Jasperse Projects Provincial Dances Theatre RIOULT Dance NY Duke University Box Office Bryan Center, Duke University’s West Campus Box 90940, Durham, NC 27708 BY PHONE 919-684-4444 ONLINE americandancefestival.org PARKING Reynolds Industries Theater *Single Ticket Price: $27 Pick 4+ Series SAVE 25%: $20.25 PARKING is available in the Bryan Center parking garage, located on Science Drive on Duke’s West Campus. Duke Parking charges an event parking fee of $5. Footprints Reynolds Industries Theater *Single Ticket Price: $34.50 Pick 4+ Series SAVE 25%: $26 *Does not include OUT-OF-THE-BOX performances. See page 32 for additional performance prices. Ticket purchases for ADF@Duke performances must be made payable to University Box Office. All tickets are non-refundable. How to Order ADF@Motorco Please see page 34 for details. 29 DPAC BOX OFFICE HOURS Mon-Sat, 10am–2pm PARKING at DPAC is easy in three decks within a few minutes walking distance of the theater. American Tobacco East Deck ($5), American Tobacco North Deck ($5), American Tobacco South Deck ($5). Ticket purchases for ADF@DPAC performances must be made payable to Durham Performing Arts Center. All tickets are non-refundable. DUKE BOX OFFICE HOURS Mon-Fri, 11am–6pm The Duke University Box Office will open one hour prior to event time for all Duke performances. DPAC Order Form 1 Pick 4+ Series Subscriptions: SAVE 25% SELECT YOUR PERFORMANCES When you purchase one ticket to four or more different performances at ADF@ DPAC, at one time, you will receive 25% off those tickets. You may purchase as many series subscriptions as you like. Additional single tickets are full price. ☛ ALL SATURDAY NIGHT PERFORMANCES AT 7:00! Ticket prices include NC State House Bill 998 sales tax and City of Durham Facility Fee. KNO tickets are Kids Night Out tickets. For details, see page 28. ADF @DPAC Dates (please circle) Th 6/16 7pm Fri 6/17 8pm Sat 6/18 7pm Stephen Petronio Company Fri 6/24 8pm Sat 6/25 7pm Bill T. Jones/ Arnie Zane Dance Company Fri 7/1 8pm Sat 7/2 7pm Hubbard Street Dance Chicago Fri 7/8 8pm Sat 7/9 7pm Pilobolus Lar Lubovitch Dance Mon 7/11 7pm Tues 7/12 8pm Company Wang Ramirez Fri 7/22 8pm Sat 7/23 7pm Paul Taylor Dance Company Fri 7/29 8pm Sat 7/30 7pm Seat Ticket Price (circle) Pick 4+ Series Tickets (Save 25%) (circle) Orch $62.25 | $51.50 | $33.25 | $22.50 $47.50 | $39.50 | $25.75 | $17.75 Grand Tier $62.25 | $51.50 $47.50 | $39.50 Orch $46 | $37.50 | $25.75 | $22.50 $35.25 | $29 | $20 | $17.75 Grand Tier $46 | $37.50 $35.25 | $29 Orch $58 | $49.25 | $27.75 | $22.50 $44.25 | $37.75 | $21.75 | $17.75 Grand Tier $58 | $49.25 $44.25 | $37.75 Orch $62.25 | $51.50 | $33.25 |$22.50 $47.50 | $39.50 | $25.75 | $17.75 Grand Tier $62.25 | $51.50 $47.50| $39.50 Orch $46 | $37.50 | $25.75 | $22.50 $35.25 | $29 | $20 | $17.75 Grand Tier $46 | $37.50 $35.25 | $29 Orch $58 | $49.25 | $27.75 | $22.50 $44.25 | $37.75 | $21.75 | $17.75 Grand Tier $58 | $49.25 $44.25 | $37.75 Orch $58 | $49.25 | $27.75 | $22.50 $44.25 | $37.75 | $21.75 | $17.75 Grand Tier $58 | $49.25 $44.25 | $37.75 # of Pick 4+ Series Tickets # additional single Tix (Full Price) # KNO Tix Subtotal $_________ $_________ $_________ $_________ $________ $_________ $_________ ADF is committed to providing equal access to performances for audience members of all abilities. Large print programs are available at all venues and can be reserved by calling 919-684-6402, or printed from our website at americandancefestival.org. Assistive Listening Devices (ALDs) are available at each theater upon request. For additional information about accessibility at the theater visit dpacnc.com (for DPAC) or tickets.duke.edu (for Duke). ✄ DPAC Grand Total $__________ Continued on reverse side ➣ 30 3 2 ❑ Left 3 DPAC Order Form SEATING PREFERENCE The Box Office will make best efforts to seat you as requested. ❑ Center ❑ Right ❑ Aisle ❑ Best Available CHILDREN’S SATURDAY MATINEES Performance Date & Times Price # of Tickets Subtotal Children’s Saturday Matinee Series 6/25, 7/9, and 7/23 $32.25 $____________ Stephen Petronio Company Sat 6/18 at 1pm $16 $____________ Hubbard Street Dance Chicago Sat 7/9 at 1pm $16 $____________ Company Wang Ramirez Sat 7/23 at 1pm $16 $____________ Sat 6/18 at 1pm $62.25 | $51.50 | $33.25 | $22.50 $____________ Children’s Matinee Series ADD ON: PILOBOLUS Family Matinee Ticket prices include NC State House Bill 998 sales tax and City of Durham Facility Fee. 4 Children’s Saturday Matinee Total $___________ TICKET ORDER TOTALS DPAC Grand Total (Section 1, reverse side)$_____________________ Children’s Matinee Total (Section 3, see above)$_____________________ DPAC Processing Fee (total # of tickets________x $3) $_____________________ No processing fee for in-person orders. PATRON INFORMATION Name 6 Address CityStateZip Day Phone ( ) Evening ( ) Email (requested) Would you like to receive information from the American Dance Festival? ❑ Yes 7 MAIL OR BRING TO: DPAC Ticket Center, 123 Vivian Street, Durham, NC 27701 31 3 TOTAL $_____________________ PAYMENT INFORMATION ❑ Check payable to DURHAM PERFORMING ARTS CENTER ❑ Visa ❑ Mastercard ❑ AMEX ❑ Discover Signature Name (as appears on card) Credit Card # Billing Zip Code Exp Date ✄ 5 DUKE Order Form 1 Pick 4+ Series Subscriptions: SAVE 25% When you purchase one ticket to four or more different performances at ADF@Duke, at one time, you will receive 25% off those tickets. You may purchase as many series subscriptions as you like. Additional single tickets are full price. SELECT YOUR PERFORMANCES (all performances begin at 8pm unless otherwise noted) Ticket prices include NC State House Bill 998 sales tax. For details about Kid’s Night Out tickets, see page 23. ADF @DUKE Savion Glover & Jack DeJohnette Dates (please circle) Mon 6/20 Tue 6/21 Ticket Price (circle) Pick 4+ Series (SAVE 25%) (circle) $55 | $45 | $35 $41.25 | $33.75 | $26.25 $________ # Pick 4+ Series tickets # Additional Single Tickets (Full Price) # Kid’s Night Out Tickets Subtotal Kate Weare Company Tue 6/21 Wed 6/22 Thur 6/23 $27 $20.25 $________ 5 by 5 Tue 6/28 Wed 6/29 Thur 6/30 $27 $20.25 $________ John Jasperse Company Tue 7/5 Wed 7/6 Thur 7/7 $27 $20.25 $________ $27 $20.25 $________ Thur 7/14 Provincial Dances Theatre Fri 7/15 Sat 7/16 7pm Rioult Dance NY Mon 7/18 Tue 7/19 Wed 7/20 $27 $20.25 $________ Footprints Mon 7/25 Tue 7/26 Wed 7/27 $34.50 $26 $________ ADF OUT-OF-THE-BOX (Add the below performances onto your Duke or DPAC Series Subscription!) ADF@DUKE Subtotal $_________ OUT-OF-THE-BOX SERIES SUBSCRIPTIONS: Buy four tickets and get one free--five tickets for $60.50 instead of $80. Processing fees still apply. Sara Juli Koma ✄ Wed 6/22 at Motorco at 21c Museum Hotel ADF is committed to providing equal access to performances for audience members of all abilities. Large print programs are available at all venues and can be reserved by calling 919-6846402, or printed from our website at americandancefestival.org. Assistive Listening Devices (ALDs) are available at each theater upon request. For additional information about accessibility at the theater visit dpacnc.com (for DPAC) or tickets.duke.edu (for Duke). Dates (please circle) OUT-OF-THE-BOX Sat Sun 6/27 6/28 Mon 6/29 Tue 6/30 Wed 7/1 Times (circle) Thu 6/23 Fri 6/24 7pm 9pm Ticket Price (circle) Single tickets must be purchsed through Motorco Music Hall. Out of the Box Series buyers should circle which show they would like to attend. # of Single Tickets # OUT-OF-BOX Series Tickets Subtotal N/A Get all 4 shows below, and get this one free! Pick up tickets at Motorco. N/A 8pm $19.50 $________ Musicians Concert Sun 7/3 7pm $10.75 $________ Faculty Concert Sun 7/10 2pm 8pm $10.75 $________ 7:30pm $19.50 $________ at Baldwin Auditorium at Duke at Reynolds Industries Theater Trajal Harrell at Sheafer Theater at Duke Tue 7/19 Wed 7/20 Discounts not available for Add-On Performances. Out of the Box Series Subscriptions are $60.50 per subscription. All OUT-OF-THE-BOX performances are general admission. Thu 7/21 OUT-OF-THE-BOX Single Ticket Subtotal $___________ OUT-OF-THE-BOX Series Subtotal $___________ Duke Grand Total $___________ Continued on reverse side ➣ 32 3 2 DUKE Order Form SEATING PREFERENCE The Box Office will make best efforts to seat you as requested. ❑ Left 3 ❑ Center ❑ Right ❑ Aisle ❑ Best Available ❑ Accessible Seating TICKET ORDER TOTALS Duke Grand Total (Section 1, reverse side) Tax-Deductible Contribution* (See page 26 for details) TOTAL Duke University Box Office processing fee (Pick 4+ Series=$5 flat fee/Single tickets=$1.50 per ticket) 4 5 PATRON INFORMATION $____________________ $____________________ + $____________________ $____________________ PAYMENT INFORMATION Address ❑ Check payable to DUKE UNIVERSITY BOX OFFICE ❑ Visa ❑ Mastercard ❑ AMEX ❑ Discover CityStateZip Signature Day Phone ( Name (as appears on card) Name ) Evening ( ) Email (requested) Credit Card # Exp Date *If you are making a tax-deductible contribution, print name(s) exactly as it should appear in the ADF playbill: 6 MAIL OR BRING TO: 33 3 ✄ Duke University Box Office, Bryan University Center, Box 90940, Durham, NC 27708 MOTORCO MUSIC HALL Tickets to Sara Juli at Motorco Music Hall will be available for purchase when single tickets go on sale May 3. Tickets may be preordered as part of the ADF OUT-OF-THE-BOX Series Subscription only. See page 32 for details. PERFORMANCE SELECTION ADF@MOTORCO Sara Juli 2 Dates Wed 6/22 Thu 6/23 Time Thu 6/24 7pm 9pm Ticket Price $19.50 TO ORDER TICKETS: VISIT 723 Rigsbee Ave Durham, NC 27701 Mon: 5:00 PM–12:00 AM Tues & Wed 11:30 AM–12:00 AM Thurs & Fri 11:30 AM–2:00 AM Sat 11:30AM–2:00 AM Sun 11:30AM–2:00 AM OR GO ONLINE http://motorcomusic.com Photo by Arthur Fink 1 34 3 Box 90772, Durham, NC 27708 Connect with us! 3 Non-Profit Organization US Postage PAID Durham, NC Permit No. 987