Houston Metropolitan Dance Company | |
---|---|
General information | |
Name | Houston Metropolitan Dance Company |
Year founded | 1995 |
Founders | Michelle Smith |
Website | www |
Senior staff | |
Director | Michelle Smith |
Artistic staff | |
Artistic Director | Marlana Doyle |
Resident Choreographers | Kiki Lucas |
Other | |
Associated schools | Houston Metropolitan Dance Center |
The Houston Metropolitan Dance Company (HMDC) is a Houston-based dance troupe that has showcased the work of emerging and established contemporary and jazz choreographers from all over the world since 1995. [1] Helmed by founder and Executive Director Michelle Smith and Artistic Director Marlana Doyle, the company is the sister organization to the Houston Metropolitan Dance Center, which opened the doors to a newly renovated facility in July 2013. Houston's second-largest dance training space, the center offers a large number of dance classes in multiple disciplines to students of all experience levels, ages 3 and up, and is home to HMDC and the Houston Met Too youth training company. [2] [3]
Since its inception, HDMC has presented the choreography of over 30 artists in Houston and throughout the United States. As of 2013, the company’s repertory consists of 55 pieces, including works by Resident Choreographer Kiki Lucas, Robert Battle (Artistic Director, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater), Doug Bentz, Nina Buisson, Christine Carlson, Joe Celej, Peter Chu (Artistic Director, chuthis), Salim Gauwloos, Charlotte Griffin, Larry Keigwin (Artistic Director, KEIGWIN + COMPANY), Kiesha Lalama-White, Caleb Mitchell, Robbie Moore, Pattie Obey, Jason Parsons, Erin Reck (Recked Productions), Kate Skarpetowska, Suzi Taylor, Jane Weiner (Artistic Director, Hope Stone Dance Company) and Kevin Wynn. [4] [5] [6] [7]
In addition to frequent appearances throughout Houston and the surrounding area, HDMC has performed at the Brazos Contemporary Dance Festival (College Station, TX), YES! Dance Invitation (Richmond, VA), the Great Friends Dance Festival (Newport, RI), Dance St. Louis, the Baruch Performing Arts Center during the REVERBdance Festival (New York, NY), the Skirball Center for the Performing Arts during Dance Gotham (New York, NY), the Barefoot Brigade Dance Festival (Fort Worth, TX), the Boston Contemporary Dance Festival, the Inside/Out Series at Jacob's Pillow, the Grier School Gala (Tyrone, PA), the Midwestern Arts Conference (Columbus, OH), Dance Chicago and the Dallas Morning News Festival. [8] [9]
The Houston Metropolitan Dance Center is a comprehensive training ground offering classes in ballet, jazz, tap, modern and hip-hop to students of varying needs and levels, ages 3 through adult. The faculty consists of HMDC members, other local teaching artists and guest master teachers from around the country.
The center is the home base for HMDC’s educational outreach program “Swing, Jive, and Pop into Dance,” which explores the history of the art of dance through performance and narration, reaching thousands of children each year via in-school performances, demonstrations and field trips. [10] The building also houses the Houston Met Too, a non-competitive youth training company that aims to develop the skills and styles required to execute the main company’s diverse and versatile repertory. Each season, members have the opportunity to perform throughout Houston and to participate in master classes led by HMDC’s visiting choreographers. On average, the junior company consists of 14 members ranging in age from 13 to 18.
Executive Director Michelle Smith’s early dance background includes extensive training from the New York City Ballet and San Francisco Ballet. After receiving her BA from Texas Christian University, she joined the Delia Stewart Dance Company, working first as principal dancer, then as company manager and director of the school. As director, she established a children’s program and diversified the adults’ program, which together formed the foundation for the Houston Metropolitan Dance Center.
Artistic Director Marlana Doyle is a graduate of Point Park University and has been dancing with HMDC since 2002. She has served on many grant and organizational panels for the Houston Arts Alliance and was awarded the Dance/USA Leadership Mentee Fellowship for the Institute of Training in 2013. [11]
Kiki Lucas is the resident choreographer and a senior dancer for HMDC, and also directs the Houston Met Too youth company. Lucas has presented her choreography and taught throughout the country and abroad. [12]
HMDC maintains a roster of 9 to 13 dancers, including apprentices.
|
|
|
The National Ballet of Canada is a Canadian ballet company that was founded in 1951 in Toronto, Ontario, with Celia Franca as the first artistic director. A company of 70 dancers with its own orchestra, the National Ballet has been led since 2005 by artistic director Karen Kain, one of the greatest ballerinas of her generation. Renowned for its diverse repertoire, the company performs traditional full-length classics, embraces contemporary work and encourages the creation of new ballets as well as the development of Canadian choreographers.
American Ballet Theatre (ABT) is a classical ballet company based in New York City. It has an annual eight-week season at the Metropolitan Opera House in the spring and a shorter season at the David H. Koch Theater in the fall; the company tours around the world the rest of the year. ABT was founded in 1939 by Lucia Chase and Richard Pleasant and is recognized as one of the world's leading classical ballet companies. ABT is the parent company of the American Ballet Theatre Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School, and was recognized as "America's National Ballet Company" in 2006 by the United States Congress.
Mark William Morris is an American dancer, choreographer and director whose work is acclaimed for its craftsmanship, ingenuity, humor, and at times eclectic musical accompaniments. Morris is popular among dance aficionados, the music world, as well as mainstream audiences.
Houston Ballet, operated by Houston Ballet Foundation, is the fourth-largest professional ballet company in the United States, based in Houston, Texas. The foundation also maintains a ballet academy, the Houston Ballet Academy, which trains more than half of the company's dancers. As of 2017, the Houston Ballet's endowment at more than $73 million is considered among the largest endowments held for a dance company in the US. The company produces over 85 performances each year and consists of 59 dancers.
Fall for Dance is an annual dance festival presented by New York City Center in New York City. Established in 2004 as a means to introduce new audiences to dance, and loosely based on the Delacorte Dance Festival model of the 1960s and 1970s, Fall For Dance showcases as many as five different dance companies on each of the festival's six nights. In response to the Festival's popularity, in 2006 the number of performances was expanded to ten, with four of the six programs being repeated; in 2009 the number of performances remained ten, with five programs, each repeating.
The Washington Ballet (TWB) is an ensemble of professional ballet dancers based in Washington DC. It was founded in 1976 by Mary Day, and has been under the artistic directorship of Julie Kent since 2016. Septime Webre was artistic director for 17 years starting in 1999 and stepped down as artistic director at the conclusion of the 2015/2016 season.
Tina Ramirez is a Puerto Rican/Mexican-American dancer and choreographer, best known as the Founder and Artistic Director (1970–2009) of Ballet Hispanico, the premier Latino dance organization in the United States.
Ben Stevenson OBE, is a former ballet dancer with Britain's The Royal Ballet and English National Ballet, co-director of National Ballet of Washington, D.C. (1971–1974), artistic director of Chicago Ballet (1974-1975), artistic director of Houston Ballet (1976–2003), and current artistic director of Texas Ballet Theater (2003–present).
The Cincinnati Ballet is a professional ballet company founded in 1958 in Cincinnati, Ohio, United States and had its first performance in 1964. The current artistic director is Victoria Morgan.
Helgi Tomasson is artistic director and principal choreographer for San Francisco Ballet, and a former professional ballet dancer. Since assuming leadership of San Francisco Ballet, he has helped transform the company from a respected regional troupe to one of the world's great classical ballet companies. He is originally from Iceland.
Benjamin Millepied is a dancer and choreographer, who has lived and worked in the United States after joining the New York City Ballet in 1995, where he became a soloist in 1998 and a principal in 2002. He has also created choreography for the company, and choreographed pieces for other major companies. He retired from NYCB in 2011.
Natalie Weir is an Australian choreographer, and Artistic Director for the Expressions Dance Company in Australia.
The Dayton Ballet is a ballet company based in Dayton, Ohio.
The Oklahoma City Ballet is a professional dance company and school located in Oklahoma City. The company began under the artistic direction of Ballet Russe de Monte Carlo dancers Yvonne Chouteau and Miguel Terekhov in the Science and Arts Foundation building on the Oklahoma City Fairgrounds,
The Kansas City Ballet (KCB) is an American professional ballet company based in Kansas City, Missouri. The company was founded in 1957 by Russian expatriate Tatiana Dokoudovska. The KCB presents five major performances each season to include an annual production of The Nutcracker. In the 2016–2017 season, KCB grew to an all-time high with 30 company dancers, 15 second company dancers, 64 full-time and part-time staff, and a network of over 400 local volunteers. The KCB, its school, and its staff are all housed in, operate from, and rehearse at the Todd Bolender Center for Dance and Creativity, a renovated, seven-studio, office, and rehearsal facility in Kansas City, Missouri, that opened in August 2011. The company performs at and is the resident ballet company at the nearby Kauffman Center for the Performing Arts, a performance venue in downtown Kansas City that opened in September 2011.
Larry Keigwin an American choreographer and the artistic director of KEIGWIN + COMPANY.
Kathleen Crofton was an English dancer, dance director and dance teacher. She was founder of the Niagara Frontier Ballet and the Ballet Center of Buffalo.
Enzo Celli is an Italian contemporary dancer, choreographer and dance company artistic director
Adam Crystal is an American composer, violinist, and keyboardist known for his work in film score and contemporary classical music composition for modern dance and ballet.
Mariya "Masha" Dashkina Maddux is a Ukrainian modern dancer and dance teacher. She is a former principal dancer with the Martha Graham Dance Company and is the founder and director of the Wake Forest Dance Festival.