Monday, December 21, 2009

Chinese New Year Celbrations


Dear Friends,


Tiger5

Enjoy a cultural extravaganza for the whole family and kick off a roaring
Year of the Tiger!

Join the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company for a vibrant celebration of the Chinese New Year at the New Jersey Performing Arts Center's Victoria Theater in Newark on Saturday, February 13, and Sunday, February 14, at 2 pm.

Our program will feature the traditional favorite Lion Dance along with other exciting and colorful works performed by the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company. We will also present new Chinese dances by guest choreographers Wei Chen and Min Zhou, and feature the Chinese Music Ensemble of New York, the oldest, largest, and only full-scale Chinese orchestra in the United States and the Americas. To top it all off, renowned paper-cut master Ho-Tien Cheng will be on hand to provide you with his unique take-home art for the Chinese New Year.

After the performance, join us for a special Chinese New Year Banquet at the newly renovated Chinatown Restaurant, just two minutes away in nearby Harrison, NJ. Five-star, award-winning Chef Ni will create just for us spectacular Chinese New Year dishes not available on his regular menu. The feast will be an occasion not to be missed.

So don't wait. Call us at (800) 650-0246 to reserve your tickets today (details below). We'll see you soon! And don't forget to tell your friends.

TICKETS
Price includes one admission to the performance and post-performance Banquet
Adults $75
Children (age 12 and under) $25
Special discounts are available for groups of 10 or more.


Dance and Music Performance
2 pm
NJPAC's Victoria Theater
One Center Street
Newark, NJ
Click here to purchase performance tickets only

New Year's Banquet
4 pm
Chinatown Restaurant
218 Harrison Avenue
Harrison, NJ
Click here for gala banquet reservation form

Sponsorships
To learn about the benefits available to corporate sponsors or how your company can become a Corporate Sponsor of this event, please call 1-800-650-0246, email us or click here.

Happy Holidays,

AndySigYellow2

Andy Chiang
Executive Director
Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company
andy@nainichen.org

Wednesday, December 16, 2009

Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company at APAP


2010 APAP Showcases
Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company
DATE: January 9 & 10, 2010
TIME: 6:00-7:00 PM
LOCATION: NY City Center Studio #4
Entrance to Studios is at 130 West 56th Street. Between 6th and 7th Avenues
MORE: No reservations required
Visit us at Booth #820 in Americas Hall II
MANAGEMENT: Joanne Rile Artists Management
Booth #710 in Americas Hall II

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Gliding across the stage with color, lyricism and a subtle whisper of Chinese tradition, "Song of the Phoenix" features the original choreography of Nai-Ni Chen. Experience the majestic thunder of the Martial Arts and the mysterious whisper of poetry through the global language of dance. Nai-Ni Chen's innovative dances bring together the dynamic freedom of American modern dance and the splendor of Asian culture.
Click here for sample video

Friday, December 11, 2009

Another Review of Nai-Ni's "Three Riddles of Turandot" performed by NJ Ballet

NJ Ballet Goes International in Mayo Center Appearance
By SHEILA ABRAMS
Dance Critic
Published: Dec 9th, 9:53 PM

Looking very sharp and up-to-date, New Jersey Ballet took a mini-world tour during a Nov. 7 appearance at the Community Theatre of the Mayo Center for the Performing Arts in Morristown. This was the first of an annual three performance series the company offers at the theater, and it had something for everyone.

The centerpiece of the program, which was billed as “A World Tour of Dance,” was the world premiere of “The Three Riddles of Turandot,” a ballet created for the company by choreographer Nai-Ni Chen, who directs her own New Jersey-based modern dance troupe. Chen, who is from China, took both her inspiration and her musical accompaniment from Puccini’s opera, so you might say that, in that selection, New Jersey Ballet was hitting both China and Italy on its world tour.

Perhaps in the spirit of European grand opera, Chen chose to put the women on pointe. The movement language was largely neoclassical, but reflected the choreographer’s background in traditional Chinese dance and in modern movement as well.

In works for her own company, Chen has always used props like ribbons, flags and even bamboo rods to extend the lines and motions of her dancers. She did that to great effect in “Turandot,” with swaths of white gauze stretched across the stage by white-clad dancers, red silk flags manipulated by dancers in red silk, and banners with Chinese characters descended from the ceiling. These last apparently represented the three challenges the Princess Turandot presents to her would-be suitors.

Kerry Mara Cox projected a cold and powerful presence as the vengeful princess, and Andre Luis Teixeira, as the man who meets her challenge, handled Chen’s choreography adeptly, as did the others in the large cast. A nod should go to Karen Young for her beautiful costumes.

Click here for rest of article