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April 2006

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A Catch-Up List

Blind Date:
Our most recent performances were in Denver and Beaver Creek, CO; the next one is in Princeton, NJ. The work continues to evolve. The focus now is on tinkering with Peter Nigrini's video contribution to adjust it to the structural changes we've made to the piece. It is now one act, the ending is completely changed, certain sections have been dropped. So if you have seen it already, I invite you to come look again!

Harlem Home:
Things are looking more than promising with our Board of Directors, City Government, Federal Government and Administration proceeding in a methodical and ever more excited direction towards our goal of our joining the "125th Street Cultural Corridor." I want to express my gratitude to the city's Department of Cultural Affairs and Economic Development Corporation for their belief in us and their partnership. Stay tuned for happy developments in the next few weeks.

Hungry People:
There was an unfortunate misquote in the NY Times on April 5 following the much anticipated Creative New York conference at the Museum of Modern Art. Hosted by the City of New York, the Rockefeller Foundation, the Partnership for New York City and the Center for an Urban Future, this conference presented a report that was an attempt to take a clear eyed overview of what plagues New York's future as a creative center and to describe that situation in the most comprehensive and inconclusive language. The report has found that New York runs the risk of slipping from its traditional leadership role as a place that is defined by diversity, innovation and ambition. There were two panels and I sat on the second. Its purpose was to shed light on the study's findings and, if possible, to make suggestions. At one point during the first panel, the conversation seemed to flounder briefly as the very successful "captains of industry" on stage were attempting to determine how acute the aforementioned crisis was. I interjected from the audience "We need more hungry people in this room!" A look of concern crossed many faces as they assumed I was playing the poverty card in the face of several billionaires in a seven hundred million plus cultural palace evoking the specter of class warfare. The NY Times reported me as saying my dancers are desperate. What I actually said was, having been in touch with former dancers of my company who are now attempting to build their own companies, like so many "start up enterprises" in NY's creative core, they were feeling despairing, and a bit desperate about the future. I was evoking the image of the hungry artist, alienated yet again and feeling with each passing year a greater distance from the success that New York has traditionally offered to innovators, dreamers and the bold. Taken as a whole the day was an essential, but frustrating exercise in getting different sectors to speak to one another. Everyone is curious to see what the follow thru will be!

The Company:
We've been in workshop mode for the past few weeks (when not touring). Pure inquiry is always exciting, though there is desire to find product at the end of each session, an impulse that must be restrained as what is there to be gained is oftentimes slow growing and invisible… We have been giving attention as well during this period to our teaching program in the making. Anyone interested in attending upcoming classes and our summer workshop please contact info@billtjones.org

Spring Awakening:
I am once again collaborating with a director (Michael Meyers) as choreographer rehearsing a new musical. Spring Awakening is a musical adaptation of the legendary play of the same name by Frank Wedekind. The play was a scandal from the time it was first written (1893) and not allowed to be performed in London until 1963. I highly recommend reading it and do hope that you will come and see the musical at the Atlantic Theater in June.

So, as you can see, everything is in full flower and for that I am full of gratitude and awe! Speaking of spring: We at the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company would like to welcome Alexander Oyelana Strozier, the newest member of the household of board member Shola Olatoye and her husband Matthew Strozier!

Happy Spring,

Bill T. Jones


-- Bill T. Jones (Monday, April 17, 2006)

Recent News

◊ Fela!
June 24, 2008

Bill T. Jones to Direct and Choreograph Fela! Off-Broadway

"Tony Award winner Bill T. Jones will direct and choreograph the world premiere of Fela!, a new musical based on the life of groundbreaking African composer, performer and activist Fela Anikulapo Kuti. Featuring a book by Jones and Jim Lewis, Fela! will feature Kuti's music performed live onstage by the band Antibalas and other members of the New York Afrobeat community. Its limited off-Broadway run begins previews at 37 Arts on July 29 with opening night set for September 4, and will play through September 21."

Read Article at Broadway.com
Read Notice in New York Times
For more information and tickets, visit FelaOffBroadway.

◊ 25th Aniversary
June 4, 2008

THE BILL T. JONES/ARNIE ZANE DANCE COMPANY TURNS 25

Plans include three premieres, an off Broadway show, the opening performances of BAM's Next Wave Festival, national and international tours

Consider the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company's 25th anniversary celebration a launching pad for its future. And what a future it promises: premieres, new venues, and a cornucopia of new ideas.

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Upcoming Performances

Chapel/Chapter
June 26-July 6, 2008
Jacob's Pillow Dance Festival
Doris Duke Theater
Becket, MA
Purchase Tickets


July 10-12, 2008
American Dance Festival
Durham, NC
Purchase Tickets

A Quarreling Pair
September 30-October 3, 2008
Brooklyn Academy of Music
BAM Next Wave Festival
718-636-4100
Purchase Tickets

Other Events

June 26, 2008  7:30 pm
June 28, 2008  11:00 pm
June 29, 2008  12:30 pm

Bill T. Jones will be featured on a show entitled Basic Black: A Conversation with bill T. Jones on WGBH and affiliate PBS Stations. WGBH Channel 2.

October 28, 2008

7:30 PM
Harlem Stage Gatehouse
Breaking Ground with Bill T. Jones, A Community Dialogue Series
"Harlem, Cultural Capital: Naming the Future"

For tickets: www.harlemstage.org