Dance Production, one of 瓜子TV鈥檚 oldest and most popular student-run clubs, returns to the Thorne Hall stage for its 68th annual show March 18-19.
Showcasing the dancing talent of more than 350 瓜子TV students, Dance Production (affectionately known as Dance Pro) will put on three shows: Friday, March 18 at 7:30 p.m. and Saturday, March 19 at 2 and 7:30 p.m. Tickets will be on sale in the Academic Quad March 14-18 from 11:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. Evening show tickets are $5 for students, $8 for staff and faculty, and $10 for community members. Matinee tickets are $5 for everyone.
This year鈥檚 performance features 24 choreographers working in styles ranging from flamenco and ballet to hula kahiko and hip-hop. The 2016 choreographers include a good number of Dance Pro veterans, including Leah Nomkin 鈥16, a Spanish and English double major from Phoenix, Arizona, and Melody Dahlgren 鈥16, a politics major from Santa Cruz, both of whom are serving as choreographers for the fourth straight year.
During their first year at 瓜子TV, Nomkin and Dahlgren both found Dance Production separately. Each auditioned to be choreographers and choreographed separate pieces that first year. After being partners in a swing dance, the two decided to team up as choreographers and go back for their second year.
"After that first year starting not just as a dancer but as a choreographer as well, I was already so deep into Dance Pro, and I just wanted to get more involved," Dahlgren said. "[Dance Production] is the main part of my life here outside of academics."
In addition to being choreographers for all four years of their 瓜子TV careers, Nomkin and Dahlgren have also been on the Dance Production executive board for three years, the maximum amount of time one can serve on the E-Board.
"They can鈥檛 get rid of us," Nomkin said with a laugh.
Since its start in 1948, Dance Production has given the opportunity to dance to anyone who is willing to learn. Many have little or no dancing experience. Over the course of five months, student choreographers hold weekly, 90-minute rehearsals, sometimes teaching up to 80 students at a time.
"I think Dance Pro鈥檚 inclusiveness really draws me in -- the fact that anyone can participate who wants to participate in it, and I鈥檓 all about that, "Nomkin said. "I think that鈥檚 what should be dance. Dance shouldn鈥檛 be an exclusive thing; it shouldn鈥檛 be limited to people that only have a certain skill level."
Third-time choreographers Clare Shuey 鈥16, an economics major from Palo Alto, and theater major Declan Meagher 鈥16 from Baltimore showcase hip-hop, while economics major Deon Summerville 鈥16 of Saint Louis and art history and visual arts (AHVA) major from Mill Valley Jessie Fontana-Maisel 鈥16, also third-time choreographers, pair up to present Broadway. Cognitive science major Onyekachi Nwabueze 鈥17 of San Francisco comes back with a new hip-hop piece, and sociology major from Randolph, Mass. Dalin Celamy 鈥16 also presents hip-hop. Physics major Scott Lew 鈥16 of Chino and biochemistry major Pavel Gladkevich 鈥16 of Albany come back with urban styles, and history major from Montpelier, Vt. Flynn Aldrich 鈥18 will add his second commercial hip-hop piece to the production as well.
Many first-time choreographers are making their appearance this year, bringing fresh talent to the stage. Long-time Dance Pro participants Hilary Fitzsimmons 鈥16, a psychology major from New Canaan, Conn., and Patrick Walsh 鈥16, an AHVA major from Northborough, Mass., are first-time choreographers presenting a smooth hip-hop and a percussive hip-hop piece, respectively.
Third-time choreographer Tess Arrighi 鈥17 will bring a new jazz/ballet piece. First-year trio Elizabeth Hansel, Mariana Martinez of San Antonio, Texas, and Emma Wilson of Palo Alto bring contemporary ballet to the stage. Carlsbad native Michelle Levitt 鈥19 comes in with a new contemporary piece. Ian McPherson 鈥19 of Bothell, Wash. is choreographing a hip-hop piece, while Zuleika De La Cruz 鈥19 of Los Angeles introduces flamenco to Dance Pro. Ben Lomond native London Murray 鈥18 introduces a unique form of jazz. Diplomacy and world affairs and Spanish double major Kiera Cox 鈥18 of Everett, Wash. brings an original lyric piece, and sociology major from Hilo, Hawai鈥檌 Kelly Fitzgerald 鈥18 presents a hula kahiko (traditional hula).
With the exception of faculty supervisor Chad Myers, Dance Production is completely student-run. Choreographers鈥 responsibilities are extensive, ranging from creating and teaching their original dances to formulating stage formations and lighting cues. E-Board members are responsible for everything else, including organizing dancer bonding events, scheduling rehearsals, managing club finances, advertising, fundraising, coordinating with Theater Department Associate Production Manager Marie Scott Mawji, and updating social media.
This year鈥檚 E-Board members are co-presidents Summerville and Fitzsimmons, co-secretaries Nomkin and Fitzgerald, co-treasurers Julianne Butt 鈥17, a group language major from Singapore, and Reed Foster 鈥18 from Salem, Ore., co-publicists Dahlgren and Aldrich, and co-social chairs Ilana Share 鈥17 of Oakland and Rachel Wein 鈥17 of Sunbury, Mass. (both psychology majors), and Washington, D.C. native Sydney Hemmendinger 鈥18.
"Just have fun!" Nomkin said with a smile. "That鈥檚 what Dance Pro鈥檚 about: fun and community."