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A member of Gauthier Dance, which is performing at The Joyce Theater this month. Photo by Jeanette Bak.
Catch the annual Flamenco Festival, the 60th anniversary of Twyla Tharp Dance, a celebration of 90 years of dance at 92NY and more
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This month, the legendary Twyla Tharp celebrates her 60th year as a choreographer at New York City Center. Admirers of Israeli choreographer Ohad Naharin can see his work at BAM and at The Joyce Theater. 92NY looks back on 90 years of modern dance history, while Juilliard's talented students offer a glimpse of the future. And the Flamenco Festival heats up NYC's dance scene.
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BAM Howard Gilman Opera House, 30 Lafayette Avenue between Ashland Place and St. Felix Street in Fort Greene, Brooklyn
Runs March 6-8.
Israel's leading contemporary troupe, the Batsheva Dance Company, presents the latest work by its daring and influential resident choreographer, Ohad Naharin, whose movement is raw, thrilling and layered. MOMO features ballet barres and the occasional tutu as the dancers conjure a creature with two contrasting souls to music from the celebrated 2018 album Landfall by Laurie Anderson and Kronos Quartet.
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New York City Center, 131 West 55th Street between Sixth and Seventh Avenues in Midtown West
Runs March 6-9.
For more than two decades, the Flamenco Festival has presented premier practitioners of the rhythmic dance style at venues across the city. But the centerpiece is always the extravaganza at New York City Center. This year's edition opens with the US premiere of Alfonso Losa and Patricia Guerrero's Ater Ego featuring the acclaimed dancers exploring personal connection. In the New York premiere of Muerta de Amor (Dead in Love), the seven dancers and five musicians of Compañía Manuel Liñán delve into the rewards and challenges of intimacy. For the final two days, the acclaimed Compañía Eva Yerbabuena presents Yerbagüena (Oscuro Brillante), which explores the differences between new and classic flamenco styles. All three programs are performed to live music.
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92NY, 1395 Lexington Avenue at 92nd Street on the Upper East Side
Runs March 6-10.
The adventurous programming at 92NY's Harkness Dance Center has played a seminal role in the development of contemporary artists for the past nine decades. Many iconic works premiered at the venue, which has helped transform budding talents into leaders in the field. Honoring all that history in just a few days is a challenge, but 92NY has assembled an impressive array of programming throughout its various performance spaces. Two Art Bath events feature works by that cutting-edge collective. On Saturday, March 8, two leading companies, Ronald K. Brown/EVIDENCE and PHILADANCO!, perform works that capture the legacy of the org. Tying it all together is an illuminating evening at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts at Lincoln Center featuring the directors of the Martha Graham Dance Company and Limón Dance Company as well as several generations of choreographers who have worked at 92NY.
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The Joyce Theater, 175 Eighth Avenue at 19th Street in Chelsea
Runs March 11-16.
Stuttgart is well known for its eponymous ballet company, but choreographer Eric Gauthier also turned it into a destination for contemporary dance. Since 2007, his company has performed his own choreography as well as works by other current dance-makers. The 16-member troupe returns to The Joyce with a program of his dances complemented by pieces created by Ohad Naharin, Hofesh Shechter and Sharon Eyal.
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New York City Center, 131 West 55th Street between Sixth and Seventh Avenues in Midtown West
Runs March 12-16
In honor of Twyla Tharp Dance's 60th anniversary, the groundbreaking choreographer celebrates her legacy with a pair of epic New York premieres performed to live music. In Diabelli, Tharp uses Beethoven's monumental Diabelli Variations to create an outpouring of witty and daring moves for ten dancers. In SLACKTIDE, she returns to the music of Philip Glass, exploring the vibe of his intriguing, percussion-heavy Aguas da Amazones in a new arrangement by Third Coast Percussion.
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University Settlement, 184 Eldridge Street between Rivington and Delancey Streets on the Lower East Side
Runs March 13-15.
Ellen Cornfield, a former Merce Cunningham Dance Company member, is known for creating delicate and pristine pieces. Her latest, The Endless Ladder, continues her collaboration with composer Jerome Begin. This evening-length work for eight dancers explores life's constant climb as we strive to get ahead while finding spiritual fulfillment.
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Danspace Project, St. Mark's Church, 131 East 10th Street between Second and Third Avenues in the East Village
Runs March 13-15.
Danspace Project's 50th season continues with Donna Uchizono returning to the venue that launched her in 1988. For this special performance, she revives her Bessie Award-winning State of Heads (1999), set to a score by James Lo and featuring an intergenerational cast that includes some of its original performers. In addition, Uchizono and two downtown luminaries, David Thomson and Jodi Melnick, will offer dance Dedications that investigate the concept of listening.
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The Invisible Dog Art Center, 51 Bergen Street between Smith Street and Boerum Place in Boerum Hill, Brooklyn
Runs March 13-15.
Raja Feather Kelly has been making quite a name for himself on NYC's theatre scene as a choreographer (Broadway's A Strange Loop), director (We're Gonna Die at Second Stage Theater) and playwright (Soho Rep's The Fires). He wrote, directed and choreographed this latest work, Bunny Bunny, a dance-theatre production-installation that examines desire and surveillance through the tale of six rabbits confined to a house during a dystopian era.
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New York Live Arts, 219 West 19th Street between Seventh and Eighth Avenues in Chelsea
Runs March 19-22. If you're a TDF member, log in to your account to purchase discount tickets.
Clymene Aldinger, who danced with Elisa Monte's company, founded the spirited CLYMOVE Dance five years ago. For this anniversary, the troupe offers a program featuring six pieces, including a world premiere by Aldinger and Inner Tides choreographed by founding dancer JoVonna Parks.
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Alice Tully Hall, 1941 Broadway at 65th Street in Lincoln Square
Runs March 21-22.
This is not your grandparents' Carnival of the Animals! Spoken word artist Marc Bamuthi Joseph has reimagined Camille Saint-Saëns' classical composition as a reaction to the events of January 6, 2021, through music, poetry and movement. Broadway vet and Ailey II artistic director Francesca Harper helms and choreographs the production, which features former New York City Ballet luminary Wendy Whelan and Joseph performing to a new arrangement of the score by interdisciplinary artist Sugar Vendil. Tickets are choose-what-you-pay starting at $5.
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92NY, 1395 Lexington Avenue at 92nd Street on the Upper East Side
Runs March 21-22.
Tap-dance genius Dormeshia celebrates the achievements of women in her genre with a curated program of nine up-and-comers selected from video submissions. This dynamic array of women from across the nation pays homage to the rich legacy of tap while pointing the way forward.
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SLAM (STREB Lab for Action Mechanics), 51 North 1st Street, between Kent and Wythe Avenues in Williamsburg, Brooklyn
Runs March 21-April 13.
The daredevils of STREB, Elizabeth Streb's high-energy company that fuses dance with acrobatics and circus machines, show off their death-defying moves in a new edition of Do Not Try This at Home. Streb dubs her works Action Events rather than dances, and the physical challenges she devises demand strength, courage and confidence. The feats in this program include jaw-dropping leaps and navigating a 100-foot wave simulation.
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The Joyce Theater, 175 Eighth Avenue at 19th Street in Chelsea
Runs March 25-30.
This 47-year-old troupe continues to evolve and look forward. Its new Joyce run features Black Milk, a subtle gem by Ohad Naharin, along with three New York premieres: A Duo by resident choreographer Aszure Barton, Johan Inger's IMPASSE and Into Being by Alice Klock and Florian Lochner, aka FLOCK.
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Peter Jay Sharp Theater, 155 West 65th Street between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue in Lincoln Square
Runs March 26-29.
This annual showcase is a rite of spring for Juilliard's talented, ready-for-anything Dance Division students as they perform works by an eclectic mix of established choreographers. The freshmen will perform José Limón's expansive A Choreographic Offering, set to a Bach score. Students in other grades will appear either in a reimagining of William Forsythe's Duo or a new piece by Aszure Barton with music by Ambrose Akinmusire.
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Ailey Citigroup Theater, 405 West 55th Street at Ninth Avenue in Midtown West
Runs March 26-April 6.
After touring for much of the year, the youthful and engaging dancers of Alvin Ailey's junior company return to their hometown to show off their new repertory. The two smartly curated programs include vintage choreography by the company's namesake, including his rarely seen Streams, alongside fresh works by Houston Thomas, Baye & Asa and Ailey II artistic director Francesca Harper.
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Lincoln Center's Rose Theater, Broadway and West 60th Street in Lincoln Square
Runs March 27-29.
Lincoln Center presents the US debut of this lauded British hip-hop dance-theatre troupe in Cycles, which explores the possibilities of the form through choreography by Kenrick Sandy and music by Michael Asante. Tickets are choose-what-you-pay starting at $5.
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