Posts Tagged ‘master class’

Malashock Blog Series: Behind The Curtain (Malashock Summer Intensive)

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011 by Scott M.

Behind The Curtain is a unique opportunity to get exclusive insight into the inner workings of Malashock Dance performances, programs, and events through first-person accounts from those that make them happen. From performers and choreographers to directors, producers, and beyond, our varied cast of contributors will provide an entertaining insiders look at what happens "behind the scenes" at Malashock Dance.

Series # 6 - MALASHOCK ASSOCIATE ARTISTIC DIRECTOR MICHAEL MIZERANY TALKS SUMMER DANCE SAN DIEGO


MALASHOCK SUMMER INTENSIVE PERSONAL BLOG DAY 1

The Malashock Dance Summer Intensive started today. Wow! What an incredible experience. I cannot believe I am lucky enough to spend three weeks with these amazing students. They are smart, savvy and just a little bit sassy (probably the three best adjectives ever uttered and fun alliteration as well).

Here is recap of my day:

Of course, coffee and toast, that is a must. Then, hopped in my jalopy and was overjoyed when I made it to Dance Place in one piece. I wanted to arrive at the Malashock Dance Studio a little early to plan class and make sure our Education Director, Molly Puryear, had the help she needed. Not surprisingly, Molly had everything under control due to the fact that she is incredible and is an organizational dynamo.

When I walked in the studio at 10am, it was HOT! Then, add twenty-seven intensive participants, thrashed thoroughly by a Michael Mizerany technique class, and you get a roomful of sweaty, albeit incredible, dance students. I am also very fortunate to have Malashock Dance company member Nicholas Strasburg assisting me in both technique as well as repertory classes. Thanks, Nick!

In repertory, I am teaching the first section of John Malashock’s THE FLOATING WORLD and the last section of my work, BAD COMPANY, which premiere at Malashock/RAW last year. These pieces have some very difficult dance moves and the students were stellar.

Acting for Dancers is happening now, so I am going to go and take a peek. I’ll be teaching technique on Wednesday and Thursday and so come and get thrashed with the rest of the summer intensive students.

Michael Mizerany

Associate Artistic Director, MALASHOCK DANCE

Malashock Blog Series: Behind The Curtain - Series #4 (vol.3)

Thursday, February 24th, 2011 by Scott M.

Behind The Curtain is a unique opportunity to get exclusive insight into the inner workings of Malashock Dance performances, programs, and events through first-person accounts from those that make them happen. From performers and choreographers to directors, producers, and beyond, our varied cast of contributors will provide an entertaining insiders look at what happens "behind the scenes" at Malashock Dance.

Series #4 - MALASHOCK MASTER CLASS SERIES: 4 SUNDAYS IN FEBRUARY
In this exciting series of Master Classes, Malashock Dance presents four Master Teachers/Choreographers from New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Long Beach. Students will experience innovative techniques and powerful repertory in a supportive and positive environment. And in this new BLOG SERIES, you’ll be able to hear from the instructors in their own words.

Vol. 3 - Regina Klenjoski (Regina Klenjoski Dance Company)

[Regina Klenjowski's class will be Feb. 27th, 2011 from 11am - 1pm]

After spending 20+ years as a dancer, choreographer and teacher, I sometimes wonder what continues to draw me back to the dance studio, as if I can put my finger on a single tangible reason. I have yet to give an articulate answer to that question. To give the cliché “its in my blood” or “a part of my soul” just doesn’t come close to describing the indescribable feeling I have when I walk into an empty studio and feel the limitless possibilities of the day waiting for me to make them come to life. Perhaps we all share a similar motivation.

I love watching a dancer move, especially one that moves with confidence and passion. Skill is optional. That can be learned. But confidence and passion are an elusive quality that when employed, elevates a performer to the next level. You know who those dancers are right away. They are the ones that draw your eye on stage or in class. They dance with a personal abandon and risk that has nothing to do with how high they jump or how hard they fall. They are present in their bodies and minds and have a quiet focus that makes the dance the star and not themselves. I think all dancers are capable of achieving this. But since so much of the work lies within the mind and the soul, it doesn’t usually get as much playtime as the body in a technique class. Is there room for internal work in class when so much technical, physical work needs to happen in the precious few hours we have to train in the day? I believe there is.

I like to challenge my company and my students with movement combinations that not only push the comfort levels of endurance and technique but also leave room for imaginative play and discovery. I love the concept of threading movement and use that connective idea in my Limon and Laban influenced movement vocabulary. I love the floor and inverting and we often find ourselves thinking of our pelvis as our head in class. I love the words of a San Diego dancer recently performing my dance Hey Lover, Why the Gun , “This looked so easy but damn, this is hard to do!” And therein lies a great example of my favorite part of movement coaching: Having a dancer take a challenging phrase and perform it with graceful effortlessness.

I look forward to sharing some of these ideas with all you fantastic San Diego folks this weekend!

- Regina

Malashock Blog Series: Behind The Curtain - Series #4 (vol.2)

Tuesday, February 15th, 2011 by Scott M.

Behind The Curtain is a unique opportunity to get exclusive insight into the inner workings of Malashock Dance performances, programs, and events through first-person accounts from those that make them happen. From performers and choreographers to directors, producers, and beyond, our varied cast of contributors will provide an entertaining insiders look at what happens "behind the scenes" at Malashock Dance.

Series #4 - MALASHOCK MASTER CLASS SERIES: 4 SUNDAYS IN FEBRUARY
In this exciting series of Master Classes, Malashock Dance presents four Master Teachers/Choreographers from New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Long Beach. Students will experience innovative techniques and powerful repertory in a supportive and positive environment. And in this new BLOG SERIES, you’ll be able to hear from the instructors in their own words.

Vol. 2 - James Healey (Shen Wei Dance Arts)

[James Healey's class will be Feb. 20th, 2011 from 11am - 1pm]

My brief return to San Diego takes me in an adventure-filled full circle, of which has been quite a ride.  After dancing with Malashock Dance and Company for a few years in the late 90s, I moved to New York City to help a young choreographer from China, Shen Wei, establish his new company.  Shen Wei Dance Arts was officially launched in 2001.  Although we had somewhat of a slow start in the beginning, the company of 12 dancers took advantage of this time by developing and learning Shen Wei’s ideas regarding movement, as well as his unique viewpoints regarding art, philosophy, and the vision for what he wanted his company to become.  At that time, a majority of the dancers that Shen Wei invited to join his company had never danced professionally, so Shen Wei was working from the ground up in many ways.  After Shen Wei created his version of Rite of Spring in 2003, the company really took off and became quite successful.  Shen Wei Dance Arts has had consistent engagements throughout Europe, Asia, North America, and Australia.

Shen Wei’s initial movement background has its roots in Chinese Opera, which he focused on as a child.  Later, he not only began to explore western visual art, but he also developed an interest in western movement styles and western modern dance.  This balance between his eastern and western movement influences are what makes his work unique.  Shen Wei is a painter as well, so his work often has strong visual elements within the costuming and set design, that balance beautifully with the physicality of the choreography.  To see his work, it is sometimes difficult to describe it as eastern or western, and impossible to imagine the movement without the delicate balance of the visual components.

Although Shen Wei has gone through some phases of movement interests, his Natural Body Technique has remained an important training tool for his company.  During the development of Rite of Spring, many of the key movement ideas that would become his Natural Body Development Technique were introduced.  These movement concepts would later be refined into the technique that all Shen Wei Dance Arts dancers use today to prepare their bodies for the work.   It explores and manipulates breath, internal energy, center-shifting, momentum, spirals, rotations and flow.  With these movement ideas, there is also always the element of how the body relates to the positive and negative space within the dance environment, which is essential in Shen Wei’s work.

I look forward to bringing some of these ideas to the San Diego community of dancers, and will introduce some of these concepts, as well as a few of my own, as they have developed in my body.

- James

Malashock Blog Series: Behind The Curtain - Series #4 (vol.1)

Monday, January 31st, 2011 by Scott M.

Behind The Curtain is a unique opportunity to get exclusive insight into the inner workings of Malashock Dance performances, programs, and events through first-person accounts from those that make them happen. From performers and choreographers to directors, producers, and beyond, our varied cast of contributors will provide an entertaining insiders look at what happens "behind the scenes" at Malashock Dance.

Series #4 - MALASHOCK MASTER CLASS SERIES: 4 SUNDAYS IN FEBRUARY
In this exciting series of Master Classes, Malashock Dance presents four Master Teachers/Choreographers from New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Long Beach. Students will experience innovative techniques and powerful repertory in a supportive and positive environment. And in this new BLOG SERIES, you’ll be able to hear from the instructors in their own words.

Vol. 1 - Keith Johnson (Keith Johnson/Dancers)

[Keith Johnson's class will be Feb. 6th, 2011 from 11am - 1pm]

I have had a long, interesting career as a dancer/choreographer. I began training my body as a gymnast in my youth and began formal training in dance in my senior year of college. Because I had trained so intensely in gymnastics, my first few years of dance were all about letting go and shifting. I had understood physicality in only one way and I had to broaden my viewpoint of what physicality encompassed. Many times I was frustrated with my inability to ‘shift gears’ quickly to a new standard required by various teachers. What I found exciting and new was that each of these teachers had a strong point of view and a reason for making these choices involving their artistry. I was curious as to why each individual traveled down various pathways and enamored by their personal histories that help shape their art. In sports we were encouraged to leave our ‘personal stuff’ at the door and in dance I found it to be the opposite. I was encouraged to bring my life experiences to the studio. It was an new way to think about things and because of that I became more interested in the world.

I have had many great teachers in my career who have influenced me immensely. The teachers I respect most are the ones who taught me to push myself physically, emotionally, internally, and externally. They have given me life experiences that helped me become an artist. It was/is not always easy and many times I felt the sting of failure. I have learned to understand the ups and downs of this art form. I have celebrated life with people of varying backgrounds and ideologies. I have learned how to form opinions and allow others to have differing ones. I have learned that the body is resilient and tough but also has limitations. But I have found grace in those limitations.

Keith Johnson

On Tour - Behind the Scenes: Rehearsals & Master Classes

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010 by malashockdance

The company is back from their tour to Southern Illinois University Edwardsville and the St. Louis area, and they had a blast!

The superstition seems to be true: A bad dress rehearsal means a good—or, in this case, great —performance! All the dancers came back with stories about the lifts they messed up or choreography they forgot during rehearsal. But when the performance arrived, the dancers nailed it!

The students in the area enjoyed taking master classes with Malashock Dance, as well. Artistic Director John Malashock and Associate Artistic Director Michael Mizerany both taught at Southern Illinois University Edwardsville. Michael also taught master classes at Premier Performance Dance Studio and Lindenwood University.

All around, the company enjoyed sharing Malashock’s artistry and vision with dancers and dance lovers in the St. Louis area. Don’t miss these clips from rehearsals and classes on the tour:

Watch this video on YouTube

From the Master: John Malashock of Malashock Dance

Wednesday, February 24th, 2010 by malashockdance

Today’s blog is written by John Malashock of Malashock Dance, the fourth teacher in our 4 Sundays in February Master Class Series. Join him for class this Sunday, February 28, 11 am - 1 pm at the Malashock Dance School.

Look at the top of this web page. It says, “Malashock Dance puts emotion in motion.” This was a slogan we came up with a long time ago and, while it is not untrue, I have found myself thinking about it a lot lately. I love the physical sensation of dance, but I have always preferred using it for a purpose. For telling a story. For portraying characters. For saying things that can’t be said in words. For freeing a part of myself.

What I have been thinking about is the approach of actively putting emotion into movement, versus trusting that it will show up on its own if I (and the dancers I am working with) am personal and honest about my approach. There is a wide range of ways dancers and choreographers go about this. We have all seen ‘overwrought’ young dancers indulging in a sappy pop song that happens to match their current state of being. And we have all seen ‘super cool’ dancers who seem to have Vulcan blood flowing through their veins. Neither is particularly satisfying to watch.

Interpretation of choreography is a dancer’s job. That means developing the ability to put something of themselves into movement that has been created by someone else. As a choreographer, I have to leave enough room for my dancers to ‘insert’ themselves and influence the work. As dancers, they have to bring something to my movement that I don’t see already. That is when things get interesting.

This doesn’t just apply to rehearsals and performance. It belongs in class as well. That is when dancers can take the biggest risks with movement. If dancers treat class like an opportunity to interpret; like an interactive process rather than a one-way street; like a creative chance for self-expression, then it is a much richer experience than just trying to pick up some new movement – working hard enough to be good and sore the next day.

For Sunday’s master class, I give you full permission to throw yourselves at the movement. You don’t find out what you are capable of by being careful and always trying to be ‘right.’ Just like the skiers and skaters we are seeing this week don’t win when they are careful or tight. Technique in dance is the easy part. What you do with it is where the art is.

See you Sunday.

- John Malashock, Malashock Dance
www.Malashock Dance.org

Join John in class on Sunday, February 28, 11 am - 1 pm
Malashock Dance School
2650 Truxtun Road, Studio 200, SD 92106
Class Fee: $20
Sign up now!

Recap: Master Class with Jennifer Backhaus

Monday, February 22nd, 2010 by malashockdance

Jennifer Backhaus - 4 Sundays in February

Yesterday the studio was full of dancers sweating it out for the third class in our 4 Sundays in February Master Class Series!  Jennifer Backhaus of Backhausdance gave a two-hour master class, teaching her technique and repertory.  Watch this video of excerpts from the class:


Click here to watch this video on Youtube.

The dancers seemed to agree that Jennifer’s class felt a bit more like familiar territory after last week’s master class with Bradley Michaud.  But that doesn’t mean the class was easy!  Jennifer challenged all of the students to dance with full awareness and expression.

Don’t miss the last in the 4 Sundays in February Master Class Series next week, February 28, 11 am - 1 pm, with our own Artistic Director John Malashock!

From the Master: Jennifer Backhaus of Backhausdance

Wednesday, February 17th, 2010 by malashockdance

Today’s blog is written by Jennifer Backhaus of Backhausdance, the third teacher in our 4 Sundays in February Master Class Series. Join her for class this Sunday, February 21, 11 am - 1 pm at the Malashock Dance School.

When thinking about what to write for this blog I wondered why I have stayed with this art form for as long as I have. What about being a dancer and choreographer makes sense to my life and why am I so passionate about encouraging other people to explore it either as an active participant or as an audience member?  I realized that I have many reasons that keep me walking into the studio everyday… so here is a short list …

I love to move through space

  • With abandon
  • With grace
  • With aggression
  • With purpose

I love to shift

  • Directions
  • Energy
  • Style
  • Perspective

I love to challenge

  • Physicality
  • Technique
  • Comfort
  • Minds

I love to engage

  • Space around me
  • Energy of other dancers
  • Audiences
  • Students

I love to design

  • Movement
  • Energy
  • Bodies
  • Relationships

Somehow all of this finds its way into my class.  It can be through a tendu combination, an improv exercise, or rolling around on the floor. The process of walking into a dance studio and opening yourself up to new ways of moving and understanding is exciting. It is transformative, it is brave, and it is fun. Going on that journey with students or dancers in my company keeps me motivated and pushes me to grow in directions that I would never discover alone. It makes me feel alive and present. It’s my hope that I am able to share that with the people around me. Dance is hard and the dance business is even more difficult to navigate at times. Reminding myself of why I do what I do is important and helps keep me walking into that empty studio day after day.

- Jennifer Backhaus, Backhausdance
www.backhausdance.org

Join Jennifer in class on Sunday, February 21, 11 am - 1 pm
Malashock Dance School
2650 Truxtun Road, Studio 200, SD 92106
Class Fee: $20
Sign up now!

Recap: Master Class with Bradley Michaud

Monday, February 15th, 2010 by malashockdance

Bradley Michaud - 4 Sundays in February

Yesterday the studio was full of dancers sweating it out for the second class in our 4 Sundays in February Master Class Series!  Bradley Michaud of Method Contemporary Dance in Los Angeles gave a two-hour master class, teaching his technique and repertory.  Watch this video of excerpts from the class:

Bradley really pushed everyone to just dive in and go for it, and the result was a great effort yesterday and a lot of sore muscles today! Although Bradley’s style is very unique, students may enjoy continuing to work on the strength and control required for his style in our weekly Pilates Flow class with Marianne Olsson at the Malashock Dance School, Thursdays 7-8:15 p.m. Marianne is ACE certified and offers a dance-oriented pilates class that really pushes dancers and non-dancers alike.

From the Master: Bradley Michaud of Method Contemporary Dance

Wednesday, February 10th, 2010 by malashockdance

Today’s blog is written by Bradley Michaud of Method Contemporary Dance, the second teacher in our 4 Sundays in February Master Class Series. Join him for class this Sunday, February 14, 11 am - 1 pm at the Malashock Dance School.

When asked to describe my technique or my choreography I used to get irritated. My chosen communicative tool is dance, and it speaks for itself, so why would I talk about it? I’d spent nine months teasing movement out of my brain and into the bodies of my dancers in order to make a work of art. Why would I reduce all that effort and energy and heartache to a few tepid sentences? I have struggled to find the proper, eloquent words to communicate something I always felt could only honestly be spoken about through movement. However, the necessities of being an artistic director forced me to open my mouth, and this is what came out. I still am not sure if it is proper or eloquent but it’s honest and that’s all I can offer.

I love when people fall down. I love seeing someone drop something, or spill food or drink on themselves. I love when my pencil breaks as I’m writing, or I accidentally give myself a paper cut while trying to create stacks of paper in the name of cleaning. These little interruptions that force me to change direction, or slow down, or reformulate a plan make my inner child smile. Walking into a plate glass window is the surest way to make me your new best friend. There is no greater joy in life than watching someone trip over a crack in the sidewalk, stumble a few feet, throw their paperwork and coffee into the air, lose a shoe, and finally succumb to gravity. Do not mistake me for a sadist; I take no pleasure in other’s misfortune.

What fascinates me is the immediate moment after a trip, but before the fall; when the fear has registered in the brain but before the self-awareness has taken back over. That moment when the autonomic nervous system kicks in, pushes the ego aside, the façade finally drops, and the unvarnished you peeks through. Gone is the self-assured, well put together, able bodied walker, a real self has poked out from behind the mask–limbs flailing, spit flying–as the body tries desperately to right itself. The moment of completely unselfconscious letting go is the moment I crave. When emotional baggage, plans for tomorrow, the echo of last night’s triumph or failure, the inner monologue all cease and you are totally in the here and now trying to prevent disaster. These moments often occur only in moments of great surprise, often coupled with pain or embarrassment. But they are more organic to me than the manufactured realism of play acting or emoting.

As such, for the overwhelming majority of my dance career I felt like an outsider in my own body. I didn’t want pretty and perfect, I wanted chaos and freedom. No matter which style of dance I tried (ballet, tap, jazz, Irish dance, breakdance), none seemed to replicate these images that swirled in my head. The impossible moves and liquid, crazed athleticism I conjured in my mind’s eye seemed to be forever trapped inside my skull. It was not until college when I met Stephanie Gilliland my first mentor, that I found what my body had been looking for: the permission to be itself. I spent three years investigating my body, listening to it, retraining it, and falling down a lot. I became unconcerned with the mirror and perfection and instead with the ride my pelvis could take, how far I could expand my kinesphere, and how intimately I could dance with my constant duet partner, the floor.

I take no ownership of this technique, of course, as I see it as a unique Los Angeles hybrid to which multiple dancers and choreographers have contributed. My own contribution has been to strip the artifice out of my dancing and let the choreography itself be the communicative tool. Rather than narrative, I strive for a visceral emotional energy exchange with audience members and fellow performers. I have found that this only occurs when I push my students, my company members, and myself out of our comfort zone and into territory that scares them, then delights them. The technique I teach uses a few structural and muscular foundations as a base upon which I add layers of high-speed, off center propulsion.

Therefore the best master classes I have taught are those in which the dancer’s completely let go of their beauty and fear of making mistakes and just enjoy the ride. I try my best to make the class as fun and engaging as possible, but this is also hard work. Hard work requires sweat, a few tears, and the occasional bloody, floor-burned foot. Those students who are preoccupied with looking in the mirror, making sure they hit all the right angles, and play follower to another’s leader seem to struggle. A dancer who pushes so far that they fall flat on their face earns a gold star from me, and possible future employment.

- Bradley Michaud, Method Contemporary Dance
www.methoddance.com

Join Bradley in class on Sunday, February 14, 11 am - 1 pm
Malashock Dance School
2650 Truxtun Road, Studio 200, SD 92106
Class Fee: $20, Full Master Class Series: $60 (Get one class free!)
Sign up now!


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