Showing posts with label 2014-15. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 2014-15. Show all posts

Friday, March 20, 2015

April 2015: OF BREATH AND BODY Dance Concert

Amethyst Weburg, Walter Fogler, Lisa Drew in "Of Mist and Mercury" by Emily Steele
Ballet, hip hop, modern, postmodern...Influences from Mexico, Africa, Egypt, Asia...Themes of identity, relationship, inner turmoil...How a hunter feels about animal prey, how women endure the Dust Bowl... All explored and evoked in movement, in expressions Of Breath and Body. 

Of Breath and Body is on the Van Duzer Theatre stage Thursdays-Saturdays, April 9-11 and 16-18 at 7:30 p.m. with a 2 p.m. matinee on Sunday April 19. Tickets are $10/$8 seniors and students, with a limited number of free seats for HSU students at each performance, from the HSU Box Office (826-3928) or at the door.  Sharon Butcher, Artistic Director. Produced by HSU Theatre, Film & Dance.

Media: Cover: Urge Magazine of Eureka Times Standard,Mad River Union, North Coast Journal, Humboldt State Now
Allie Phinney in "Reverence"
Seven student choreographers and three faculty members present their latest works in this year’s HSU dance concert, Of Breath and Body.

The ten dances range from a solo by senior Allie Phinney (“Reverence”)... 
Shannon Adams, Nikia Klat, Matt McGovern, Camille Ruiz, Walter Fogler in "Standing Here, With Red Feathered Gods"
...to a work for 24 dancers by Artistic Director Sharon Butcher (“Standing Here, With Red-Feathered Gods.”)
Lauren Baker in Amethysts Weburg's "Signal the Shake"
“Signal the Shake” by senior Amethyst Weburg won the Audience Choice Award at the fall 2014 Choreographer Showcase. “She’s from a multi-generation Arcata family,” Sharon Butcher said, “and she’s got a great work ethic. It’s great to see her have fun with this energetic dance celebrating women.”
Fiona Melia and Dante Gelermino in their dance, "Variations of Two."
Fiona Melia and Dante Gelermino explore personal relationships, while Claire Patterson is inspired by Dorothea Lang’s photographs to evoke the lives of women enduring the 1930s Dust Bowl.
Lauren Baker, Claire Patterson (standing) in Walter Fogler's "The Life We Choose"
Several students this year are science majors combined with dance majors or minors. Walter Fogler, a graduating Cellular Molecular Biology major (along with Interdisciplinary Dance) explores the flow within human relationships in “The Life We Choose.” Senior Emily Steele, who majors in biochemistry, evokes the flow of natural processes in “Of Mist and Mercury.”  Majoring in Marine Biology, Emily Pinckney looks at inner turmoil in “Hello Darkness, My Old Friend.”
Allie Phinney, Hannah Moss, Nathalie Mostrel in Shoshanna's "Hepcat Hafla"
The faculty-created dances share an accidental theme of crossovers. “Shoshanna always plays in that Middle Eastern crossover area, and this year Linda Maxwell, who has done a lot of study in Mexican Folklorico, is doing something of a crossover with modern Latin jazz,” Butcher said. “Eugene Novotney from our Music faculty introduced me to a score by Christopher Rouse that uses hula rhythms. So my dance is to that music, with a nod to the things I love about traditional hula.”

OF BREATH AND BODY: The Dances

Camille Ruiz, Nikia Klat, Cassandra Cree, Lauren Baker, Lisa Drew
        Signal the Shake

 Choreographer: Amethyst Weburg
Dancers: Allie Phinney, Camille Ruiz, Cassandra Cree, Emily Mensing, Julia Kandus, Lauren Baker, Lisa Drew, Nikia Klat, Samantha Ortega.

 A fusion of jazz and tap with a nod to East Indian dance traditions, celebrating women.
Claire Patterson and Walter Fogler
  Voces...del pasado y del presente 

Choreographer: Linda Maxwell
Dancers: Ambar Cuevas, Amber Rivas, Cassandra Cree, Claire Patterson, Fiona Melia, Hasti Srabi, Ingrid Hodel, Jonny Wisan, Matt McGovern, Nikia Klat, Samuel Hernandez, Shannon Adams, Walter Fogler.

 “Voices...past and present” explores traditional Mexican folklorico dance as it meets contemporary Latin styles, with traditional music from Veracruz and a Mexican techno band.
Amethyst Weburge, Lisa Drew, Walter Fogler, Claire Patterson
  Of Mist & Mercury

Choreographer: Emily Steele
Dancers: Allie Phinney, Amethyst Weburg, Cassandra Cree, Claire Patterson, Lauren Baker, Walter Fogler.

Combining ballet and modern dance to explore flowing currents in such natural phenomena as mist and mercury.
Natalie Johnson, Luz Mejia (front), Hannah Moss, Nathalie Mostrel, Allie Phinney
  Hepcat Hafla 

Choreographer: Shoshanna
 Dancers: Jeanne Martin, Jenny Wright, Julia Kandus, Luz Mejia, Natalie Johnson, Nathalie Mostrel, Valerie Rios, Veronica Brooks, Allie Phinney, Cybil Nelson, Emily Mensing, Emily Pinckney, Hannah Moss.

 Blending American Tribal Style Belly Dance, jazz and swing with a dash of Egyptian Raks Sharqi in an exuberant celebration of passion and joie de vivre.
Emily Pinckney, Amethyst Weburg (back), Rebeka Staub, Lisa Drew (back)

   broken down, trembling

 Choreographer: Claire Marie Patterson
 Dancers: Amethyst Weburg, Camille Ruiz, Emily Pinckney, Lisa Drew, Rebekah Staub.

 Postmodern evocation of  farm women enduring the 1930s Dust Bowl, inspired by Dorothea Lang’s photographs.
Allie Phinney
  Reverence 

Choreographer: Allie Phinney
Dancer: Allie Phinney

 A modern solo exploring the complex relationship between hunter and animal prey.
Lauren Baker, Claire Patterson, Cassandra Cree
The Life We Choose

 Choreographer: Walter Fogler
 Dancers: Camille Ruiz, Cassandra Cree, Claire Patterson, Kassie Guimapang, Lauren Baker, Rebekah Staub, Walter Fogler.

 Athletic modern piece with a contemporary twist, suggesting struggles and unspoken boundaries within a relationship.
Fiona Melia, Dante Gelormino
Variations of Two 

Choreographer: Fiona Melia and Dante Gelormino
 Dancers: Dante Gelormino, Fiona Melia

 A postmodern approach to risk and reward in the collision of two dancers.
Camille Ruiz, Nikia Klat, Shannon Adams, Samantha Ortega, Walter Fogler, Matt McGovern
  Standing Here, with Red Feathered Gods

 Choreographer: Sharon Butcher
Dancers: Alyssa Krueger, Amanda Johnson, Austin Silavong, Ayanna Wilson, Camille Ruiz, Edgar Ocelotl, Emily Mensing, Emily Pinckney, Emily Steele, Ginger Greenlee, Hilde Isachsen, Ingrid Hodel, Jenny Wright, Justin Betancourt, Kassie Guimapang, Kirsten Williams, Lamont Douglas, Matt McGovern, Moira Winchell, Nikia Klat, Samantha Ortega, Shannon Adams, Valerie Rios, Walter Fogler.

 Inspired by ancient Hawaiian hula, to a score by contemporary American composer Christopher Rouse.

Friday, February 20, 2015

February 2015: HSU Film Showcase

HSU filmmakers get their first audience while the public has its first opportunity ever to see new student films at the HSU Film Showcase, a free event on February 20 in the Van Duzer Theatre.

 “This is our first celebration of all four film production courses since our film major launch in fall 2013,” said filmmaker and film professor David Scheerer. “We’re especially excited for this big-screen premiere of films produced in our Senior Capstone course, taught for the first time last spring. These are festival quality films by creative and hard-working emerging filmmakers.” 

 “Each film is the result of countless hours invested by HSU Film students collaborating with their crews, staff and faculty both in and out of the classroom to express their unique vision and aesthetic.” 

 Andrew Baird’s Deep Sleep and Jassen Lloyd’s Cafe Americain are products of the new Senior Capstone course. Wil Guilfoyle’s  Connection and Jim Simmons’ Old Dudes were created in Film Directing.

 Advanced Production is represented by Turner Bazen’s Moldy Love, Channing Salazar’s The Carpet Sweeper, and Forge by Savannah Carpenter, Zane Critch and Andrew Baird. 

 Melissa Zeigler and Aaron Silviera made Superbad in Intermediate Production, while short films by Alex Orozco, Wil Guilfoyle, Nick Handcock and Tobias Worrall represent the Beginning Production class.

 “To put his or her work on public display for the first time is the ‘moment of truth’ for every artist,” Scheerer said. “Every filmmaker will be watching their own work for the first time at the Showcase, because they’ll be experiencing it through the eyes of its first audience.” 

 The HSU Film Showcase presents student films of 2014 on Friday February 20 at 7 p.m. in the Van Duzer Theatre. Admission and parking are free. No ticket necessary.  Produced by HSU Department of Theatre, Film & Dance. 

Media: HSU Now, Mad River Union

Sunday, February 15, 2015

Film Showcase: The Program


FILM 315 - FILM I / Beginning Production (16mm + HD)

 Alex Orozco: Prometheus Unbound – 2:50
Wil Guilfoyle: Allegory – 1:37
 Nick Handcock: Forever – 1:53
Tobias Worrall: The Bookshop – 3:56

 FILM 372 – FILM II / Intermediate Production (16mm + HD)

 Melissa Zeigler & Aaron Silviera: Superbad -4:30

 FILM 415 – FILM III / Advanced Production (16mm + HD)

 Turner Bazen: Moldy Love - 9:40
Channing Salazar: The Carpet Sweeper – 8:00
 Savannah Carpenter, Zane Critch & Andrew Baird: Forge - 7:20

 FILM 425 / Film Directing (HD only) 

Wil Guilfoyle: Connection – 10:07
 Jim Simmons: Old Dudes – 10:06

 FILM 475 - FILM IV / Senior Capstone (16mm + Pro HD)

Andrew Baird: Deep Sleep – 11:42
Jassen Lloyd: CafĂ© Americain – 10:28

Saturday, February 14, 2015

February 2015: LOS PAJAROS (The Birds)

Two “free-range homeboys” create a utopia for our time—and it’s for the birds.

HSU Theatre performs LOS PAJAROS (The Birds), a contemporary musical satire adapted by the Chicano American performance troupe Culture Clash and directed by Dell’Arte’s Michael Fields, for two weekends: Thursdays through Saturdays, February 5-7 and 12-14 at 7:30 p.m., with a 2 p.m. matinee on Saturday February 14 in the Van Duzer Theatre. Tickets are $10 general/$8 students and seniors, with a limited number of free tickets for HSU students at each performance, from the HSU Ticket Office (826-3928) or at the door. Produced by HSU Department of Theatre, Film & Dance.

Sunday, January 25, 2015

Foxx (played by Geo Alva) and Gato (Ivan Gamboa) are “a couple of sorry-ass immigrants” who want a better life. They’re searching for a bird who was once a man, to ask him if he’s seen a perfect place for them from the sky.