Wednesday, November 04, 2009

NJ Ballet to Premier work by Nai-Ni Chen

New Jersey Ballet

Presents the Premiere of
The Three Riddles of Turandot
Saturday, November 7, 2009 - 8:00 pm



Community Theatre
Mayo Center for the Performing Arts
100 South Street, Morristown, NJ


Acclaimed choreographer Nai-Ni Chen will bring her unique brand of Asian elegance to New Jersey Ballet's season opener An Evening of Dance From Around the World on November 7. The evening will be a tribute to the late Eric Munoz, assemblyman, trauma surgeon at UMDNJ and longtime member of New Jersey Ballet's Board.

The evening will feature the premiere of The Three Riddles of Turandot. Ms. Chen, whom Dance Magazine described as a "spiritual choreographer," will explore Puccini's tale of a beautiful but cruel princess, her would-be suitor and the riddles that hold the key to Turandot's heart.

Also on the program are:
The return of Guajira by Cuban-born choreographer Pedro Ruiz Contemporary ballet with Afro-Cuban and Latin music. The Star-Ledger cheered "Viva ballet Latino!" James Kinney's March, a colorful, upbeat all-American work about busy New Yorkers whose chance encounters transform a walk in the park into an adventure. Rounding out the world tour will be a return of Para Dois, a duet is based on traditional Brazilian street dances and and Le Corsaire pas de deux. It will be a wonderful evening of dramatic, energetic dance to remember. Don't miss it!

Tickets are $42, $32, $22
Discounts available
For Tickets Call the Box Office at 973-539-8008 or
New Jersey Ballet at 973-597-9600


BUY TICKETS ONLINE!


Thursday, October 08, 2009

Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company to Perform in Hopkinsville, KY

Pennyroyal Arts Council

Live at the Alhambra Series
October 15, 2009 - 7:30 pm


Alhambra Theatre
507 South Main Street, Hopkinsville, KY

Tickets:
Adults: $20 + $3 (taxes and handling)
Students
Elementary & Middle School: $5 + $1 (taxes and handling)
High School & College: $10 + $1 (taxes and handling)
Group discounts available for 15 or more. Call the Pennyroyal Arts Council for details.

Printable Ticket Order Form
For Tickets:
270-887-4295 or 270-887-4079

Wednesday, September 23, 2009

Company headed to Troy, NY

Hudson Valley Community College


presents



Friday, September 25, 2009 - 7:00 PM

Maureen Stapleton Theater
Siek Campus Center
80 Vandenburgh Ave, Troy, NY


Tickets: $10 general admission;
please call (518) 629-8071
(Hudson Valley students, faculty and staff receive one free ticket.)

For more information, click here

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company at Ball State University


Ball State University

September 18, 2009 - 7:30 pm


Emens Auditorium

Corner of Riverside Ave. & McKinley Ave., Muncie, IN 47306



General Admission: Adults $20 in advance/$25 at the door; Youth (18 & under) & BSU students $5; Artist Series Subscribers & Pick 4 $15 in advance/$25 at the door.



For Tickets: 765-285-1539
or
BUY Tickets Online!

Tuesday, September 01, 2009

8.31.09
Asian-American Dance Company Returns to Sweet Briar Sept. 14
Tickets available Sept. 7

At 7:30 p.m. on Monday, Sept. 14, Sweet Briar College will welcome the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company to Murchison Lane Auditorium for the first event of the 2009-2010 Babcock Season. Hailed by The Village Voice as "visual poetry," the Asian-American troupe combines modern and traditional Chinese dance in its new show, "Song of the Phoenix."

Named for its Taiwanese founder and art director, Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company last visited Sweet Briar in 2004. Mark Magruder, a dance professor at the College, described that performance as "fantastic" and "visually stunning," but what seems to have stuck with him most were the "water sleeves."

"Nai-Ni did an amazing solo with water sleeves," Magruder said, describing the garment as a tunic with 6- or 8-foot-long sleeves. "It's really cool because you get this gorgeous, flowing effect that with the lighting makes a rippling pattern."

During the upcoming concert, the dance "Passage to Silk River" - an homage to Chen's ancestors - will feature water sleeves.

Other pieces on the program include "Bamboo Prayer," which uses rattan to "symbolize the strength and resilience of women"; "Incense," in which Chen looked to her religious roots for inspiration; "The Way of Five" referring to the five elements; "Raindrops," which draws on the choreographer's childhood memories; "Crosscurrent," a dialogue of passion and strength; and "Mirage," which was "inspired by the unique rhythms and dance movement of the Uyghur people of Xinjiang."

"I think people will be in for a very beautiful visual experience and some very exciting choreography," Magruder said.

Tickets and are $10 for adults, $7 for seniors and free for children younger than 12. For tickets, contact the SBC box office at (434) 381-6120 or boxoffice@sbc.edu , beginning Monday, Sept. 7. Credit card orders can be placed after Sept. 7 via www.lynchburgtickets.com.

Friday, August 21, 2009

Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company is in Korea

The Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company has been invited to perform as part of the 15th Annual ChangMu International Arts Festival in Seoul, Korea.

ChangMu Logo


ChangMu International Arts Festival

Uijeongbu Arts Center Small Theater
Seoul, Korea

Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
8:00 PM

The ChangMu International Arts Festival, focused on "pursuing the globalization of traditional dances through modern forms," is one of the international cultural exchange programs organized by the ChangMu Arts Center. The festival, which has been held annually since 1993, aims to connect distinctive art forms of the Asia-Pacific region, introducing current dance trends across the world to international and Korean audiences, and contributing to the globalization of the Korean culture. The Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company would like to thank the Spingold Foundation of New York for making this presentation possible in this economically challenging time.

Tuesday, August 11, 2009

New Dancers


The Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company would like to welcome new dancers:

Chien-Hao Chang, from Taiwan, is a graduate of the Taipei National University of the Arts with a major in Modern Dance and is also professionally trained in Chinese Martial Arts and dance.

Jung Hm Jo, from Dae Gun, Korea, earned a BA in dance from SeJong University and has an extensive background in modern, ballet, and Korean traditional dance.

Kerry Lee, from Atlanta, Georgia, is trained in ballet, modern and Chinese Dance.

Nijawwon Matthews, of Newark, NJ, began his professional dance career at age 16 with Absolute Dance Company and recently worked with Philadanco in Philadelphia, PA.

We look forward to their active participation in re-creating our repertory and the making of new works.

Thursday, August 06, 2009

Collaborations with the
Harlem Schoool of the Arts

For the past several months, Nai-Ni has been working with students in the Children's Dance Ensemble at the Harlem School of the Arts (HSA). She choreographed the dance In this Sky, where the Angels Fly for them to showcase in their year-end performance. They also had the opportunity to perform it again at the Harlem Arts Alliance event, Artz Rootz & Rhythm at The Adam Clayton Powell Jr. State Office Building's outdoor plaza in May and again in June at the Morris Jumel Mansion (Manhattan's oldest house and headquarters to General Washington in September and October of 1776).

The company also performed The Art of Chinese Dance for the students participating in the HSA's ARTScape Summer Camp, followed by a traditional Chinese dance workshop taught by Chu-Ying Ku. Both were very well received by the students.


The Harlem School of the Arts collaborated with The Joan Mitchell Foundation and Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company to do a workshop, where visual art students draw professional dancers. The Foundation brought over about 15 high school students and they did drawing for about 1-1/2 hours. It was a great success and we hope it leads to future collaborations of this type.


Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company to Perform in Great Neck, NY

The Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company will be performing at the Steppingstone Waterside Theatre in Great Neck, NY, on Sunday, July 18, 2009 at 8:00 PM.

Program:
Festival
Peacock Dance
Fan Dance
Sword Dance
Way of Five - Fire
-Intermission-
Ribbon Dance
Passage to the Silk River
Mirage

The performance is Free and open to Great Neck Park Department resisdents only with a valid parks card.

Friday, June 26, 2009

Executive Director, Andy Chiang, interviewed about the economy for article in Back Stage

Dancing On
How two boutique dance troupes are weathering the downturn.


By Lisa Jo Sagolla
June 25, 2009


(excerpts from article)

"Because we're a touring company, we noticed signs of the weakening economy early on, in the Midwest, and immediately started cutting back on senior-level administrative staff and marketing," says Andy Chiang, executive director of the New York–based Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company, founded in 1988. Its bookings in the Midwest dropped about 50 percent from 2007 to 2008. "Even though our bookings in the Northeast hadn't yet dropped off, we started making changes in early 2008, so when things really got bad, around last September, we weren't hit by surprise."

Nai-Ni Chen presents contemporary choreography infused with Chinese dance sensibilities, as well as actual Chinese dances. "Fortunately, our company has a very good education assembly program," says Chiang, "and that really helps keep us going. Wherever we go to perform, we offer in-school programs. The funding for educational programs has not been cut back as severely as other funding sources, so we're currently focusing on doing more in that arena. We also plan to have our dancers teach more workshops here in New York, which is something we were never able to do as much of as we wanted when we were touring constantly. Nai-Ni Chen has created a unique movement style, and there's a great interest in it among dancers here. So we're viewing this as a chance to increase our local presence."

Click here for entire article

Friday, June 05, 2009

Project Poetry Live! Final Performance Tonight

PROJECT POETRY LIVE!
Final Performance

Friday, June 5, 2009
Naugatuck Valley Community College
Waterbury, CT


The Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company was excited to be invited back to work with 1,100 middle and high school students in five Connecticut school districts. Students write poetry, attend writer's workshops, see their words become music, design sets and work with community artists translating their words into other art forms, including dance. The final results of the project will be performed on Friday with original music performed by the student jazz band. In addition, the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company will be featured, performing Bamboo Prayer, Crosscurrent and Mirage. For tickets or more information, click here.


Friday, May 29, 2009

SOPAC Residency Update

SOPAC Residency Update
from Chun-Yu Lin


I have been having a great time teaching and sharing my dance experience with the kids at SOPAC. Although we only have one hour each week, they always have so much fun dancing until the last minute and don't want to finish. I start my class with breathing exercises to concentrate and gather their energy. We follow with some feet, torso and hand exercises in the center and cross-floor movement such as running, turning and jumping. The dance technique I have been teaching them is based on Chinese modern dance, and it's a fusion of both western modern dance and eastern Chinese dance. I also give them some movement phrases from Nai-Ni's repertories as examples, such as Raindrops and Unfolding, so that they can experience what Chinese modern dance is. Recently, I gave them a small movement phrase which I made up for them. It's pretty modern and involves some floor work. I have been adding more and more each week, so they can slowly build up their memory and the strength of their bodies.

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

Poetry in Motion at Union County Academy for Performing Arts

I started Poetry in Motion at Scotch Vo Tech at the end of December. From the moment I began working with the students, I found them to be very open and determined. This was surprising to me considering they were in ninth grade (I really had no idea what to expect). The ideas for movement and dance were created from their own poetry that was guided by the poet Arthur Wilson. Actually the most challenging part of the project was choosing which of their poems to create to; to really narrow in on a few ideas from a huge pile of others words. We then divided the students into different groups, one with me and one with Arthur (the poet, who created a great script for the students).

Through out the next couple of months I met with the students about eight times. Each time I would warm them up and then give them different improv exercises. I wanted them to feel that the movement was coming naturally from themselves. In fact a lot of them had never danced before and I felt inspired watching how organic their created movement was. And for some of the trained dancers, I could see that it was a bit more challenging for them not to stylize their movements. Though in time and with constant reminders of what they were supposed to be imagining or feeling, each and everyone of them was dancing and creating from the inside out.

The most rewarding part of teaching dance to me is seeing how much your students grow. I feel very blessed to have seen this every time I worked with them. It was amazing to watch them trust themselves and each other more. After eight long rehearsal of constant searching and creating, through their willingness and determination, they shared a very powerful performance and grew tremendously as artists.
-Teri Miller (company dancer)

Thursday, April 30, 2009

Week-long Residency in Pemaquid, Maine

March 30-April 3
We had the chance to work with the whole school (K-8th grades) creating and choreographing a 40-minute show called "China's diverse legacy." We based the story on Chinese Culture 5000 years ago using many of the traditional Chinese ribbons, fans, lanterns, lion masks, etc. We had six classes everyday followed by Questions and Answers meetings three times that week, where we also taught students a few greeting phrases in the Chinese language. The day was full of activities interacting with everyone in the school. They have been doing this type of residency for over 10 years now and this year they had the biggest number of students participating in their diversity week show. It was very well received. I do say the place was beautiful and mysterious, with an amazing landscape and delicious food. It was the best place to relax and the people were terrific.
-Noibis Licea (company dancer)

Wednesday, April 29, 2009

Auditions for Dancers to be held on June 9 & 10

AUDITIONS

Professional Male AND Female Dancers

Full-Time Position

For 2009-2010 Season

Excellent Pay

June 9th, 2009 and June 10th, 2009 from 12-4 pm
Call Back on June 12th

Call for appointment - (800)650-0246

Location: Harlem School of the Arts
645 Saint Nicholas Ave, NYC

resume and picture required for audition

Practical Training / P-3 Opportunity available

Equal Opportunity

hr@nainichen.org

(800)650-0246

Friday, April 24, 2009

Nai-Ni Chen to Perform in Morristown on Saturday

Nai-Ni Chen melds East and West to suit her creativity

by Robert Johnson/The Star-Ledger
Thursday April 23, 2009, 2:43 PM


Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company presents "Silk and Bamboo" Saturday at Mayo Center for the Performing Arts in Morristown.

Nai-ni Chen Dance Company. Where: Community Theatre, Mayo Center for the Performing Arts, 100 South St., Morristown. When: 8 p.m. Saturday. How much: $20-$40. Call (973) 539-8008 or visit mayoarts.org.


Nai-Ni Chen has grown accustomed to living in two worlds.

The contemporary choreographer, whose Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company presents "Silk and Bamboo" Saturday at Mayo Center for the Performing Arts in Morristown, brought centuries' worth of Chinese culture with her when she came to the United States from her native Taiwan in 1982. She now lives with her family in Fort Lee.

At first, Chen says, she tried to embrace American ways of thinking.

"I was trying to create something very abstract," she says, describing her search for a completely new movement vocabulary. "I put what I had learned in the past into my pocket and didn't go there."

Yet Chen discovered that her rich Chinese heritage was not easy to ignore. Now the two perspectives, Chinese and American, balance each other in her work. The Morristown performance will include the New Jersey premiere of "Crosscurrent," a duet in which the physical tension between the dancers reflects a cultural clash. This tension abates as rival currents begin to mingle.

The other novelty on the program is actually a revival. Chen describes "Calligraphy II," which she created in 1995, as pivotal. It was the first dance in which she allowed herself to dip into the pocket where she kept her Chinese identity.

"I saw the calligraphy hanging in my living room, and I thought, 'Oh, gosh, the inspiration is right here in front of me. I walk past it every day,'" Chen says. "I found that I could look deeper and see movements and ideas. I realized it was time for me to go back to my roots and dig."

"Calligraphy II" turned into an ambitious collaboration with a commissioned score by American composer Joan La Barbara and a set designed by Myun Hee Cho. Under Chen's influence, La Barbara incorporated instruments and vocal effects from Beijing Opera. Yet she also employed chance procedures to write the score, adapting an avant-garde technique pioneered by John Cage. Cho created a backdrop and hanging panels decorated with a style of calligraphy called wild cursive.

Chen explains that most Chinese characters are written with several strokes of the ink brush, but in wild cursive each character is formed with a single stroke, bringing the act of writing closer to dancing. "It's more passionate and without restrictions," Chen says.

She adds that, like fine calligraphy, her choreography channels energy to achieve a harmonious balance between positive and negative space. Although "Calligraphy II" is an abstract work in which the dancers' relationships to one another remain as guarded and oblique as the metaphors in classical Chinese poetry, the performers' awareness of the space around them imbues the dance with strength and vitality.

Sharing the evening with "Crosscurrent" and "Calligraphy II" will be three dynamic group works inspired by various aspects of Chinese culture: "Bamboo Prayer;" "The Way of Five -- Fire," incorporating elements of martial arts; and "Mirage," which draws upon the folk dance traditions of Xinjiang Province in Western China.

"I focus on exploring what I think is the essence of Chinese tradition," Chen says. "Then I use those ideas as inspiration to create contemporary work."

Nai-Ni Chen to Perform at Liberty Health Gala

Liberty Health's May 8 Gala to Support Trauma Center and EMS
by Denise D. Gibson / The Jersey Journal
Thursday, April 16, 2009

Liberty Health will hold its annual Spring Gala on Friday, May 8, with proceeds to benefit the Port Authority Heroes of September 11th Trauma Center at the Jersey City Medical Center and the Jersey City Medical Center Emergency Medical Services (EMS). The events will take place at the Westin Jersey City, at 479 Washington Boulevard, from 6 to 11 p.m.

"The Gala affords us a good time to reflect on the past year, to take pride in our accomplishments and to confront the challenges that lay ahead." said Joseph F. Scott, FACHE, Liberty Health's president and CEO.

The Gala will recognize the role the Jersey City Medical Center EMS and Trauma Center played in serving as a triage for survivors from the World Trade Center's terrorist attack on September 11, 2001, and taking passengers from rescue boats and speeding them to safety in the miraculous airplane landing on the Hudson River on January 15, 2009.

Their responses to these emergencies, as well as hundreds of smaller life-saving efforts, have earned the Center and EMS citations and national commendations. Today, JCMS's Trauma Center and EMS employ the most up-to-date technology, with a response time that has been reduced to 6 minutes and 2 seconds, one of the best in the country.

The Gala will have an Asian theme, which will include a performance by the internationally acclaimed Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company. Asian fusion cuisine will be featured, with attendees dancing to the beat of the renowned Peter Duchin Orchestra. To purchase tickets or for additional information for the Gala, call (201)377-6057, or go to www.libertyhealth.org.

Friday, April 17, 2009

Join us at the Harlem School of the Arts this Saturday

Join the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company

Saturday, April 18
12:00 Noon

Harlem School of the Arts - Gathering Space
645 Nicholas Ave
(Take the A,C,D trains to 145th St.)
An informal showing of Nai-Ni Chen's most recent works,
including excerpts of "Mirage," "Quest" and "Crosscurrent."

There will be a Meet-the-Dancers/Q & A session
following the performance.


Admission is free and open to the public

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Nai-Ni Chen to Teach at Peridance in May


Nai-Ni Chen has been invited this year to teach an Intensive Summer Workshop at the Peridance Center, with an emphasis on Modern Technique and Repertory.

The workshop will take place May 25 - 29,
Monday - Friday 11:30 AM - 1:00 PM

Workshop Costs
:
Monday - Friday:$90
Single Class: $20

For more information or to register for the workshop, click here.

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

Rutgers' Confucius Institute Celebrates First-Year Anniversary

Performing Arts show planned for April 11

March 11, 2009

NEW BRUNSWICK, N.J. – The Confucius Institute at Rutgers University (CIRU) will celebrate its first-year anniversary with “The Splendor of Chinese Performing Arts,” which will showcase Chinese opera, dance and music.

The show will take place at 7 p.m., Saturday, April 11, at the Nicholas Music Center, 85 George Street, on Rutgers’ Douglass Campus in New Brunswick. Tickets are $20 general admission, $10 for students and children over the age of 8 years old.

The show will feature performances by two Kunqu opera masters from Shanghai, China, Maestro Zhengren Cai and Maestro Xunpeng Zhang. Other featured performers will be Nai-Nee Chen, award-winning dance/choreographer and director of the Chen Nai-Nee Dancing Company; Yi Yang, world-renowned master guzheng virtuoso; Tao Chen, internationally acclaimed Chinese flutist and director of the Melody of Dragon; Beijing opera artist Xinlai Zhou; and Peng Li, a face mask magic performer.

The first and only Confucius institution in New Jersey, CIRU had its opening ceremony in November 2007 and began operation in May 2008. The institute was established in partnership with Jilin University in China and with support from both Rutgers and the Office of Chinese Language Council International (Hanban) to promote quality Chinese language and culture education, and to serve as a resource center for Chinese studies in the state.

For more information on the Confucius Institute, go online to www.ciru.rutgers.edu.

Friday, March 27, 2009

NY Season Review on iDanz

Dance Review: Nai-Ni Chen’s Company Rides Magnificently on Cloud Nine at Baruch PAC

nai-ni_chen Celebrating twenty years of Chinese traditional and contemporary dance magic, Nai-Ni Chen's company enchants and amazes this past Saturday at the Baruch Performing Arts Center. A former member of Cloud Gate and a native of Taiwan, Chen has the stunning ability to fuse her Chinese heritage with her experience as an American immigrant, a fusion that creates her unique voice in dance. Nai-Ni Chen's diligently composed art is vividly alive in her dancers’ bodies. The two repertory works, Calligraphy II (1995) and Bamboo Prayer (1998), mesh well with the three premiers of Crosscurrent, Q (Quest) and the breathtaking Mirage. The dancers, who perform at forty venues a year, have crystal clear movement and are perfectly in tune with Nai-Ni’s vision.

Her movement style is not only deeply visceral, but also possesses a rare combination of impressive dancer physicality, choreographic vision and universal chi (energy). The backbone of Nai-Ni’s company is her impeccable artistry and storytelling genius. Her pieces softly grab you as they elevate Chinese culture and illustrate the beauty of the modern dance vernacular. This lucky audience continues to experience the ingenious art from start to finish as the talented company executes her mastery.

In Calligraphy II (1995), the stage is draped in black muslin strips with white Chinese calligraphy. The piece has been reworked several times according to sources, and the evolution has fruited fine results. The work opens with a single dancer tracing a choreographic sequence that is reminiscent of tai-chi. More dancers appear, and the same strength is seen in their bodies as they define space with clear intentions. The work builds slowly, as if teaching the audience the patience that is required to practice calligraphy. Eventually, one settles in and takes in the energy or “chi”, which is evident in all the movements.

Nai-Ni appears on stage in this piece with long silk sleeves and performs a striking solo. She is a captivatingly beautiful to watch as she puts her stunning technique on display. Her performance breathes life into the Asian dance styles while showing her love of dancing them.

The ribbon dance is the highlight of Calligraphy II as color after color cuts through the space, flying through air and encircling the dancers’ bodies. Ribbon dancers say, "to watch the end of the ribbon, to see the clarity of the performer." There are no weak strokes on stage in Nai-Ni’ Chen's company.

Bamboo Prayer (1998) is a seminal work about the resilience of women and the nobility of bamboo, each symbolic of the other. The long twelve foot poles stand erect in the beginning as the dancers just makes them quiver. Each section builds and is more beautiful than the last as the poles divide the space and compliment the bodies of the women. Each pole is bent, beaten and lain on top of the other. The dance highlights the versatility of bamboo and the subtle power of the female frame. If women are like the bamboo as Nai-Ni describes through movement, then more power to us!

Another standout work is the premiere of Q for “Quest”. Singling out one dancer is difficult as all the company members are worth the ticket. However, Noibis Licea from Cuba takes the audience to another level when he starts his solo. Blessed with full bodied flexibility and amazing focus, he captivates with every movement. The work expresses primal angst as he beats his bare chest. His lines are beautiful, especially in the movements that pitch sideways before flawlessly returning to center. It is unclear why, with a piece entitled ‘quest’, Nai-Ni keeps the dancer confined to such a small space. Yet, Noibis breaks through the limited space with his moments of intense passion before resolving the piece on a quieter note as he walks slowly in a circle around himself.

Chen's latest work, Mirage, takes a journey on the Silk Road through the eastern-most part of China’s Xinjiang province. The piece is reminiscent of a time spent in Egypt where the road ahead constantly blurs, and the dusty heat creates dancing visions. The trace imagery of Indian dance styles is seen as the dancers beat their heels on the floor and snake their heads from side to side. The dancers, grouped together in three rows, move hypnotically closer and then further away. They sway and then join bodies in order to become multi-limbed spirits.

Nai-Ni uses the color of parched earth to introduce visions of sweltering heat. Clever invention shows itself in the layering of costumes, which includes a transition from velvet textured browns to overlaid skirts of deeper blue and watery purple. Nai-Ni returns to the stage to dance the dance that represents the curious state of not knowing if the vision is real, but not caring. Her watery presence marks the transition into fantasy.

Each section holds something up before your eyes that is joyous and mesmerizing. The driving score from Glen Valez has so many layers, and the dancers animate each one beautifully. The trios are hypnotic as each dancer moves together, but individually catches different highlights in the music. This gives their performance an improvisational and illusive rhythmic feel. I love this!

Some people in the audience loved it a little too much and started snapping ‘unauthorized’ pictures of the work. But, the iDanz police stepped in to squash that nonsense by tapping his shoulder. He looked back at me (with press kit and sharpened pencil in hand) before quietly turning off his camera.

Don’t steal art! Nai-Ni Chen worked extremely hard to create this new work, and a great success at that. This is a company that I will be following for many years to come.

Photography by Michael Cuno

iDANZ Critix Corner
Official Dance Review by Sasha Deveaux
Performance: Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company
Choreographer: Nai-Ni Chen
Venue: Baruch Performing Arts Center
Performance Date: March 14, 2009
www.iDANZOnline.com

Saturday, February 21, 2009

City Parks Foundation Presents Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company

Sunday, July 27, 2008
From 3:00 PM to 6:00 PM
Jackie Robinson Bandshel

With the allure of a singular brush stroke, the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company gently glides across the stage with color, lyricism and the subtle whisper of Chinese tradition. Ms. Chen’s unique repertoire is a seamless blend of ancient rituals and modern concepts, which has earned her multiple accolades over the years. While they have appeared at international festivals in Poland, Korea, and China, the company, in residency at the Harlem School of the Arts, has also been presented by some of the most prestigious concert halls across the United States, from the Joyce Theater in New York to the Cerritos Center in California.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Celebrating the Chinese New Year of the Ox

For Immediate Release
November 11, 2008

Contact: Nancy Nicolelis
718.898.7002

Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company Celebrates the Year of the Ox at
South Orange Performing Arts Center (SOPAC)
January 24 and 25, 2009

Golden Phoenix Award to be presented to Dr. Jane Aronson,
Founder of Worldwide Orphans Foundation,
at Chinese New Year Banquet Gala on Sat. January 24th, 2009

Fort Lee, NJ - The Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company will celebrate the Year of the Ox at the South Orange Performing Arts Center in South Orange, NJ with a colorful and diverse program of music and dance that includes new and innovative works, as well as the traditional Chinese music and dance favorites.

The Company's celebration will include its annual Chinese New Year Banquet and Performance. This year, at the Banquet on Saturday, January 24, the Company will honor renowned adoption medicine specialist Dr. Jane Aronson, Founder and Executive Medical Director of the Worldwide Orphans Foundation (WWO), which is headquartered in Maplewood, NJ.

This year there will be two performances to celebrate the Year of the Ox at SOPAC: Saturday, January 24, at 2PM, and Sunday, January 25, at 2 PM. Continuing one of its most colorful traditions, at 4 PM on both Saturday and Sunday, the Company will host a festive New Year Banquet and Gala on the premises of SOPAC. A12-course Chinese New Year Banquet will be prepared by award-winning chef Ni of the Chinatown Restaurant in Harrison, NJ, which was awarded a five star rating from the New York Daily News food critic.

Ticket prices for both the banquet and performance are $95 per Adult and $39 per Child. Tickets for the performance only are $35 per Adult and $19 per Child. For those who have already purchased tickets for the performance from SOPAC, the additional cost of the banquet is $60 per Adult and $20 per Child

About The Celebration of Year of the Ox

On the Chinese lunar calendar, each year is symbolized by a different animal, and each cycle is represented by one of the five fundamental elements that the ancient Chinese believed made up the universe: Metal, Wood, Water, Fire, and Earth.

This auspicious 4707th Chinese New Year is the Year of the Wood Ox. To celebrate this great occasion, the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company will perform some of the most treasured traditional dances performed at the Chinese New Year—the Lion Dance and the Dragon Dance. Originated during the Tang Dynasty more than 3,000 years ago, these dances celebrate the coming of the spring and the harmony between nature and humankind. Showcasing the diversity of the traditional and contemporary Chinese performing arts, the company will perform a colorful folk dance from the Xingjian Province, an area near Central Asia on the Silk Road.

Besides the traditional favorites, choreographer Nai-Ni Chen will also premiere a new dance she has choreographed, New Frontier, which will be accompanied by live music performed by four-time Grammy Award-winning musician Glen Velez (www.GlenVelez.com).

This special Chinese New Year Celebration also will present some of the most skillful craft artists in New Jersey’s Chinese-American community in SOPAC’s lobby on the day of the performance. More Info about the performance and the Company can be found online at: www.nainichen.org

About World Wide Orphan Foundation (WWO) and Dr. Aronson

Founded in 1997, WWO’s mission is to transform the lives of orphaned children around the world by addressing their unique needs through medical, developmental, psychosocial and educational programs. WWO programs are designed to take children out of anonymity and help them to become healthy, productive members of their communities and the world. Among WWO’s worldwide endeavors is a humanitarian program in China. Dr. Aronson also has served as a medical consultant and provider to numerous American families who have adopted children from China, many of whom regularly attend the performances of the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company throughout the U.S. For more info on Dr. Aronson and WWO, please visit: www.wwo.org.
# # #

What: Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company Chinese New Year celebration
Where: South Orange Performing Arts Center (SOPAC)
One SOPAC Way, South Orange, NJ 07079
When: Saturday, January 24th, 2 PM and Sunday, January 25th, 2 PM
(each performance followed by a New Year Banquet at 4 PM)
Tickets: Performance and Banquet: $95 per Adult; $39 per Child
Performance Only: $35 per Adult; $19 per Child
Group discounts and special packages are available.

To Order Tickets
Call: 973. 313.ARTS (2787)
Online: www.sopacnow.org

Special sponsorship packages are also available:

Individual Contributor Package, $120: Includes one Performance and Banquet ticket and a DVD signed by the dancers.

Corporate Table Package, $2,000: Includes Performance and Banquet tickets for 12 Adults and 2 Children, a half page ad in the event program and a DVD signed by the dancers.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Review by Joel Benjamin for TheatreScene.net

TheatreScene.net

The NAI-NI CHEN DANCE COMPANY offers six works combining an Asian sensibility with western modern dance styles danced by eight terrific, talented performers.




NAI-NI CHEN DANCE COMPANY
at the Ailey Citigroup Theater

by

Joel Benjamin


Nai-Ni Chen, a Taiwan native, brought her attractive company to the Ailey Citigroup Theater for two performances on May 23rd & 24th (at 8 p.m.). She showed six works all inspired by events, sites and legends of her native China.


"Raindrops" for four women dressed in pale, long, tunics over brighter-colored pants, was an homage to her hometown, Keelong, known as Rain Harbor. To the sounds of bells and bongs the four dancers--Julie Fiorenza, Chu-Ying Ku, Teri Miller & Lindsay Parker--rose out of a group pose into little worlds of their own in different sections of the stage. They came together in pairs and threes, skittering and lunging and finally, carrying lovely parasols, playfully interacted in elegant, picturesque ways. They ended in a tight group, posing quietly. "Raindrops" had an almost picture postcard feel, tempered by the light sensuality of the free-flowing modern dance steps.

"Incense," danced by Ms. Firorenza, Ms. Miller and two men, Noibis Licea & Qiao Zeng, has meant to recall the lightness of a rising incense haze, but came ac=oss as much heavier in tone. The dancers, all in white, the men barechested, kept grouping and regrouping, swooping about the stage using un=ulating gestures and some light lifts. Sometimes three dancers danced against a faster moving soloist and sometimes they formed two couples but most often they danced alone, coming together in a sculptural pole in which three dancers crouched together while one hovered above them, raised arms lightly moving as in a benediction. The incense imagery simply didn't come across, not helped by a score by Joan La Barbara which featured humming over harsher, machinelike sounds.

"On the River of Dreams" showed the closest thing to an emotional relationship in the entire program. To a boinging score of percussion and strings by Forr=st Fang, Lindsey Parker and Ziao Zeng portrayed a ferryman and his fare who= according to the Ms. Chen's program note, was the "spirit of the water."&n=sp; Mr. Zeng, barechested, in loose black pants, hoisted a long bamboo pole pulling Ms. Parker, in rose & gray along with him. (Costumes by Karen Young.) Using swift, flatfooted steps, they travelled about the stage, often entwining. The ferryman's pole was used to lift his passenger and became, in turn, a bridge over the water, his oar and a symbol of high connection to his spirit. She leapt at him and hung off the pole, movements interrupted by more peaceful periods of movements
tranversing the stage. Ms. Chin created a lovely picture here with just the hint of sexuality.

"The Way of Five, No. 2 - Fire" was a part of a longer work dealing with the five elements of Chinese mythology: wood, fire, water, metal and earth. Dressed in tights. Chen's bright red costumes and moving to a score of cello against drums by Tan Dun), the five dancers followed the pattern set by earlier work and kept coming together and then apart, with the lone man, Mr. Licea, lifting some of the women. The movements had a slightly sharper quality and the ending in which all fall into slides on their stomachs along a good portion of the playing was exciting.

"The Way of Fire, No. 3 - Water" opened the second half of the program. The six dancers wore lovely, translucent white robes designed by Anna-Alisa Belou and danced to a multi-dimensional and subtle percussion score commissioned from Gerald Chenoweth. The featured movement motif here was softly treading whirling, perhaps to indicate the water theme. Again, the dancers worked in groups against each other and combined undulating upper body movements with curlicue arm gestures and, again, the work ended in a sculptural pose with one lovely dancer on top gesturing out to the audience.

The final work was, by far, the most interesting movement-wise. "Unfolding" was ori=inally performed out of doors at Wave Hill in the Bronx and this expansiveness showed even on the smallish stage of the Ailey Center. The three men (now including Wei Yao), barechested and in dark pants were discovered curled up on the stage as the four women in layered, diagonally patterned costumes in red, gold and blue entered and variously touched and rearranged them. The men variously carried and lifted the women and moved amongst them creating many combinations of partners. This was the first work to have large jumps and some movements that resembled martial arts jabs and falls. The music by Harry Lee featured voices humming and shouting above percussive sounds and it created a lively environment in which the dancers related combatively in almost a battle of the se=es in which both sexes pretty much moved the same way. "Unfolding" built to a solid climax of jumps.

NAI-NI CHEN DANCE COMPANY has eight terrific dancers who are completely immersed in Ms. Chen's style of movement which combines a kind of Martha Graham-lite with Asian gestures and philosophy. They are all beautiful to look at and very much involved in whatever they are asked to do.

However, Ms. Chen needs to introduce some humor into her work. The works were almost too beautiful, lacking any deep emotion and sexuality. Mind you, the ballets weren't dreary or even too dark, just too meditative with say too many slow motion movements, as if the dancers were moving through water. The moods of these six works were made to seem different through the brilliant lighting Susan Summers and A.C. Hickox. Ms. Chen's over-achieving program notes didn't help, either. She clearly wanted u= to understand what inspired her to choreograph each piece, but fewer words and clearer choreography would paint the pictures better. Each of the program notes could have been reduced to ten words and have a stronger effort, letting the audience decide what each work meant.

In the end, the NAI-NI CHEN DANCE COMPANY displayed an original artist=c vision, fine performances by eight beautifully trained dancers, great cos=umes and lighting and a yearning for depth not quite found. The works were never uninteresting to the eye, but more variation would have spiced up the show.


NAI-NI CHEN DANCE COMPANY
Nai-Ni Chen, Artistic Director and Choreographer
Dancers: Selena Chau, Julie Fiorenza, Chu-Ying Ku, Noibis Licea, Teri Miller, Lindsey Parker, Wei Yao & Qiao Zeng

at the Ailey Citigroup Theater
405 West 55th St.
New York, NY 10019

Saturday, May 17, 2008

NY Season Release in Chinese




陳乃霓舞團
週五, 六 (五月廿三日及 廿四)
于艾力劇場 公演
水 火

本週五, 六 (五月廿三日及 廿四) , 華裔現代舞蹈家陳乃霓將率領她的精華
舞者于 405 W 55 ST ( 9th Ave) 艾力劇場 (Ailey Citigroup Theater) 演出她
的最新作品(五行之二) 水 ,(五行之一) 火 , 以及她近年發展的數支代表性的作
品。

陳乃霓舞蹈團是紐約哈林區著名哈林藝術學校的駐校藝術團體。她個人在新州潛心
發展以天地的自然為師的舞蹈語言,並在主流社區中發揚中華文化的真精神。以她
在文化大學中所受到的中國古典文化的熏陶,加上她從美國各現代舞蹈宗師的課堂
作品中,領悟到的兼容並包、寬大自由的情懷,自創一派。她的風格獨特,與一般
時下的前衛風格完全不同。在紐約舞蹈節中演出時,紐約時報主要舞評珍妮佛‧鄧
寧曾說:[ 陳乃霓慧眼獨具,妙法自然,她的編舞手法極具自信,如海中的暗濤洶
湧,使舞蹈進入一個個新的高潮 ]。由於她的努力不懈,她的舞蹈團已發展為美國
舞蹈界中極少見的純表演性質的職業舞蹈團。她的藝術成就,並得美國國家藝術基
金會的認同,年年的巡迴演出,在美國各大劇院佳評如潮。在歐洲及亞洲也到極高
的評價。去年,她得到美國總統藝術協會的獎金,巡迴墨西哥七大城。

最近, 星條報(Star Ledger) 專業舞評強森(Robert Johnson) 指出 她的舞蹈[
優雅具活力,充滿了無形的氣勢],波士頓鳳凰報權威舞評希高(Marcia Siegel)
說 [ 她的舞蹈將中華文化的養料帶入了現代舞的世界]。

這次演出,除了她的最新作品(五行之二) 水 以及(五行之一) 火 之外,
陳乃霓將演出她的兩首得意作品-- 香 及 衍。 香 以希臘神壇雕塑為主題,由作
曲家瓊芭柏拉(Joan La Barbara) 作曲。 衍是數年前,陳乃霓得到中大西洋藝術
基金會(Mid-Atlantic Arts Foundation) 藝術獎金與韓國丈鼓(Chang-Go)名家李
伍碩聯手合作,發展以易經中天行健為題的越界現代舞(Cross-Cultural Contemporary
Dance)。

觀眾若想看陳乃霓舞蹈團的演出,請早訂票 ( 成人$30 / 學生$15 ),訂票電話(800)650-
0246 (留言),網址: www.nainichen.org
劇院地址是 405 West 55 Street (9th Ave), New York, NY 10011. 門口售
票。

Wednesday, May 14, 2008




Combat and rain
Nai-Ni Chen at John Hancock Hall
By MARCIA B. SIEGEL
The Phoenix
May 13, 2008 11:58:40 AM



Taiwanese choreographer Nai-Ni Chen danced with Cloud Gate Dance Theater before moving to New York in 1982, and her work, like theirs, is a suave amalgam of traditional Chinese elements and modern dance. Chen’s company of 10 dancers appeared Saturday night at John Hancock Hall, sponsored by the Foundation for Chinese Performing Arts. The program demonstrated how the traditions can nourish contemporary dance, with practical tools like movement and symbolic objects as well as philosophical and literary themes.

Chen’s movement style was showcased in the opening piece, Raindrops, for four women. Wearing pastel silk halter-top jumpsuits with flying panels of silk front and back, the women clustered together at first, revolving and lifting their arms with palms upraised. They skimmed across the floor in tiny sidesteps and tilted swirls, their torsos undulating in elegant zigzags and curves. With small sudden jumps or abrupt tumbles to the ground, they’d interrupt their swift trajectories, then recover.

The music, by three composers (Henry Wolff, Robert Rich, and Sainkho Namtchylak), changed from high, resonant bells to deep gamelan gongs to rhythmic drumming with Jew’s harp and electronics. After the meditative beginning, the women danced with rice-paper umbrellas, possibly celebrating the rain they’d been praying for. Then they returned to their quick running and jumping patterns for a lively celebration.

Following Chinese dance conventions, Chen’s men and women almost always dance separately, or at least in separate styles. But though the women looked decorative and moved in small spheres most of the time, they never looked cute or doll-like to me. In fact, with the incorporation of martial-arts skills, they could oppose the men in contests of attack and evasion — a duet or a duel with fans in The Way of Five — No. 2, an escalating group counterpoint of dominance, submission, and recuperation in Unfolding.

To show the classical roots of these encounters, Chen included a dance for an acrobatic warrior from China’s Kunqu opera, as adapted and performed by Yao-Zhong Zhang. A former actor with the Shanghai Kuan Opera troupe, Zhang stomped on his platform shoes, stroked the long feathers streaming out of his headdress, and twirled two spear-like batons while doing helicopter turns.

In Chinese opera, you overcome your opponent with athletic prowess and intimidate him by means of resplendent costumes, headgear, and make-up rather than brute force. Weapons evolved into fans, to deceive and surprise. Similarly, long sleeves attached to a robe could conceal and, when flung out around the character’s body, dazzle and distract. Nai-Ni Chen described gorgeous white halos and ripples around herself in Passage to the Silk River. But she wasn’t only manipulating the sleeves, she was dancing herself, in clever chaîné turns and flourishes that animated the silk.

Six women carried eight-foot-long rods in Bamboo Prayer, making the flexible props into extensions of their bodies. Held vertical as the dancers ran in circles, the sticks swayed like saplings. Thrust along the floor or placed in certain patterns, they could link the dancers, provide grids for stepping games, or perhaps even invoke magic spells.

Chen’s program notes told us about the legends and metaphysical images that underlay all these dances. Lindsey Parker represented the spirit of the river and Qiao Zeng the fisherman getting his sustenance from her spring floods. But watching the dance, I thought they could have been lovers or even lifelong companions on a fateful journey, as he poled an invisible boat and she hovered around him.

For the finale, Festival, the whole company joined in a procession of dancing, tumbling, flag dances and a calligraphic extravaganza of long silk scarves in bright colors, foaming and spurting above the stage.

Monday, May 05, 2008

Nai-Ni Chen Teaches Technique and Repertory Workshop at Peridance


Nai-Ni Chen will be conducting an intensive workshop at Peridance

June 9-13
11:30 am

Call Peridance at 212-505-0886
or visit Peridance

Peridance Center
International Dance School
890 Broadway
6th Floor
New York, NY

NAI-NI CHEN DANCE COMPANY SEEKS DANCERS FOR OUR 2008-09 SEASON

The Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company is seeking full-time male and female dancers for
our 2008-09 season.
Strong dance technique and
performance background are required.


All ethnic backgrounds are welcome.

Appropriate attire required; leotard preferred.
Please bring current résumé and photo to the audition.

National touring and
educational programs year round

Work begins in July 2008
Call the Company to make an audition appointment at 800-650-0246

or email matthew@nainichen.org


Auditions
June 12 & 13, 2-6 pm

Callback
June 16, 12-4 pm

at
Harlem School of the Arts
645 St. Nicholas Ave. (between 141 & 145 Sts)
New York


Subways
A/B/C/D to 145 St

To find out more about the Company,
visit our website
www.nainichen.org

REMINDER!
Join us for our 2008

New York Season!
Ailey Citygroup Theater
May 23 & 24 at 8 pm


Call for tickets: 800-650-0246
or visit
Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company

Adult
$30
Student/Senior/Child
$15

Ailey Citigroup Theater
405 W. 55 St.
New York, NY