Category: <span>News</span>

"Empowering Actors Through Viewpoints" at ATHE Conference – 2019/08/10 (Orlando, FL)

I’m thrilled to be speaking at the Association for Theatre Movement Educator’s (ATME) Debut Artist-Scholar Panel, sharing my presentation “Empowering Actors Through Viewpoints” on the cross-genre potential of Anne Bogart & Tina Landau’s “Viewpoints of Space & Time.”

"Exploring & Expressing Our Roots Through Butoh Dance" Lecture / Workshop at Humboldt State University (Arcata, CA) – 2019/03/02

I’m thrilled to be giving a FREE 3-hour lecture / workshop on Butoh Dance at Humboldt University’s 25th Annual Social Justice Summit.
Date: Saturday, March 2, 2019
Time: 9:00am – 12:00pm

Get us to the UNAM Theatre Finals!

My MFA Cohort at Dell’Arte International has just been invited to perform our original tragedy Citizens of Nowhere at the UNAM Teatro International Theatre festival in Mexico City, this coming February 2019.
We are very excited about this opportunity and are looking for help raising funds to get us there! Please take a look at our Go Fund Me page, share, and contribute if you can.

Coming Soon: Summer Workshop Tour 2018 (USA)

I’m excited to announce that this summer I will embark upon my first multi-city workshop tour of the USA, visiting major cities on both coasts to teach butoh, yoga, acrobatics, and physical theatre for performing artists and the general public.
The tentative tour schedule is below, but still under development. Therefore if you or someone you know is interested in helping to co-produce or promote a workshop, or in adding a new stop, or in otherwise supporting this endeavor feel free to e-mail me!

Vangeline interviewed on Tricycle.org

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Vangeline interviewed on Tricycle.org

This month, one of my main Butoh teachers, Vangeline of Vangeline Theater / NY Butoh Institute was featured in an incredible article by Jeff Goldberg on tricycle.org about the relationship between Butoh, compassion, and buddhism. Check out the excerpt below or read the full article here.


How Butoh, the Japanese Dance of Darkness, Helps Us Experience Compassion in a Suffering World

Butoh is now being taught to Zen students, prisoners, and others as a way to acknowledge difficult emotions.

By Jeff Goldberg


Butoh [bu-tō], often translated as “Dance of Darkness,” rose out of the ashes of post-World War II Japan as an extreme avant-garde dance form that shocked audiences with its grotesque movements and graphic sexual allusions when it was introduced in the 1950s.

Though not directly connected to Buddhism, Butoh shares the tenets of selflessness, transformation through changes of consciousness, and above all, compassion. “Its grotesque elements do not constitute the core of Butoh,” wrote the dance historian Juliette Crump in the 2006 essay “‘One Who Hears Their Cries’: The Buddhist Ethic of Compassion in Japanese Butoh.” “Rather, it is the basic Buddhist value of compassion that inspires Butoh’s content and powerful expression.”
 
No one has done more to bring Butoh to America than Vangeline, the founder and director of the Vangeline Theater and New York Butoh Institute. Born in 1970, Vangeline moved from her native France to New York when she was 23, where she worked as a jazz and cabaret dancer until 1999, when she saw a performance of the Sankai Juku Butoh company at the Brooklyn Academy of Music.
 
“It was like having an out-of-body experience,” Vangeline recalls. “I stopped everything I was doing and began to study Butoh.” She studied for five years with the Mexican Butoh master Diego Piñon, who had been inspired by the pioneering Japanese dancers to introduce Butoh to his country. She started the Vangeline Theater and New York Butoh Institute in 2002 and has been performing and teaching Butoh ever since.

Click here to continue reading the full article on tricycle.org.
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Tickets on sale now for the Humboldt Butoh Festival 2018!