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Wander & Wonder IV – Aug. 8-10, 2024

Wander & Wonder IV
A Site Specific Dance Tour

Founded in 2021 by Ethan Beckwith-Cohen and Missy Pfohl Smith/ BIODANCE, Wander & Wonder returns for year four!

Join us August 8 through 10, as we wander through the grounds of the RMSC and view site-specific creations of local choreographers, musicians, and movement artists.

This year we we are presenting two different programs.

Program A
Thursday August 8  at 6:30pm
Saturday August 10 at 5:30pm

Program B
Friday August 9 at 6:30pm
Saturday August 10 at 2:00pm

The final program will be followed by an open improvisation jam at 6:45pm! All movers and music makers are welcome to join us in the garden.

Tickets are free, with a suggested $10 donation. Ticket donation link!

Money raised at the event will between the artists presenting, and and Refugees Helping Refugees, a non-profit organization in Rochester, NY that serves refugees of Western New York. Huge thank you to the Rochester Area Community Foundation and Wegmans for their support of these events!

Dances at MUCCC – June 30-July 10

BIODANCE will preview a brand new dance for the camera, captured in May 2021, entitled “Numbered Days,” In program 1 of Dances at MUCCC. Livestreamed on June 30 at 8pm, the program is also available on demand until July 10. Our 2020 video “Pilgrimage” is also showing in Program 3. Join us and many other exciting and experimental dance artists for this virtual festival!

https://www.showtix4u.com/events/dancesatmuccc

PROGRAM 1

Dances filmed at MuCCC, as well as site-specific films created and submitted by the artists. Wed June 30 at 8 PMOn Demand Sat July 3 through Sat July 10.

Donna Davenport

Natalie Marino

Rose Pasquarello Beauchamp

Amy Slocum/Sullivan Dance Company

Frazee Feet Dance

MaryLee Miller

BIODANCE – “Numbered Days” (preview 2021)

PROGRAM 2

Seven dynamic dances filmed at MuCCC in June.Thurs July 1 at 8 PM

On Demand Sat July 3 through Sat July 10

Ethan Beckwith-Cohen

Sophie Nash & Lucy Mundschau

Laurie MacFarlane

Ruben T. Ornelas

Bethany Good

Solange Rodrigues

Anthony Alterio

PROGRAM 3

Five dance films created and submitted by the artists.Fri July 2 at 8 PM

On Demand Sat July 3 through Sat July 10

Gina Bonati

Nancy Hughes

Mariah Steele/Quicksilver Dance

BIODANCE – “Pilgrimage” (2020)

Ayako Kato & Jason Roebke

Covid-19 Statement

BIODANCE is committed to the safety of the dancers, collaborative artists, theatre staff and audiences. We will not rehearse or perform in person if it compromises the health and safety of the artists and/or the public. We are currently developing quarantined ways to create, continue and share our work. Please visit us on social media (Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BIODANCE1/) [Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/missypfohlsmith/ and #biodance1 and #b1odance] for updates.

Stay safe, stay home, keep moving, enjoy nature and your families, and be well!

Dances at MUCCC

BIODANCE is currently slated to provide a full evening of its original dances as part of the Dances at MUCCC Dance Festival, re-scheduled for July 22, 2020 at Multi-Use Community Cultural Center, 142 Atlantic Avenue, Rochester, NY. HOWEVER, we are committed to the safety of the dancers, artists, theatre staff and audiences. We will not perform in person if it compromises the health and safety of the artists and the public. We are currently developing quarantined ways to create, continue and share our work.

Please visit us on social media (Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BIODANCE1/) [Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/missypfohlsmith/ and #biodance1 and #b1odance] for updates.

“Aria” in the KeyBank Rochester Fringe Festival Sept. 16-17

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:                                                   MEDIA CONTACTS: Missy Pfohl Smith

August 12, 2018                                                                      Email: [email protected]

Phone:585-201-1002

BIODANCE returns to KeyBank Rochester Fringe Festival

BIODANCE/Missy Pfohl Smith teams with media artist W. Michelle Harris, soprano Kearstin Piper Brown and chamber ensemble fivebyfive for an all-new show called Aria

Rochester, NY – Lush contemporary dance, opera, and media projection and live music create a new way of seeing the majestic Lyric Theater. This all-new panoply directed by Missy Pfohl Smith (Artistic Director, BIODANCE and Director, Institute for the Performing and Arts and the Program of Dance and Movement, University of Rochester), will surprise audiences with eye-popping visuals that shed new light on opera, history, and performance. From the co-creators of the sold-out shows Anomaly and Labyrinth at the Strasenburgh Planetarium, Aria will be performed by BIODANCE and media projection artist W. Michelle Harris (Associate Professor, RIT), with one of Rochester’s favorite chamber ensemble fivebyfive, and the magnificent soprano Kearstin Piper Brown!

“BIODANCE is excited, once again, to enter brand new territory, playing in a gorgeous space, the Lyric Theatre, one of Rochester’s architectural gems, in collaboration with long-time media artist partner W. Michelle Harris. We will collaborate for the first time with world renowned soprano Kearstin Piper Brown and with fivebyfive, a sublime modern chamber ensemble whose arrangements for flute, clarinet, piano, bass and electric guitar are stunning” says Missy Pfohl Smith, project director and choreographer. Dancers include Rose Pasquarello Beauchamp, Zachary Frazee, Sarah Johnson, Nanako Horikawa Mandrino, Jean Michael Rubingu, Missy Pfohl Smith.

Proud to be part of Keybank Rochester Fringe Festival for the 7th year, BIODANCE has delighted audiences and sold out Fringe shows at the Strasenburgh Planetarium and Geva Theatre Center’s Fielding Stage, and even performed for an estimated 13,000 audience members as part of Friday on the Fringe on top of the 177 foot “Tribute to Man” sculpture at Martin Luther King Jr. Park in collaboration with Grounded Aerial. BIODANCE is thrilled to be back with this all-new multi-disciplinary show.

This event is supported by a decentralization grant, a regrant program of the New York State Council on the Arts, with support from Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature, administered by the Genesee Valley Council on the Arts and Livingston Arts, a member-supported organization, as well as by the Max and Marian Farash Charitable Foundation and the Gouvernet Arts Fund.

Details:

Only two shows!

Sunday, September 16 and Monday, September 17 at 8pm

Lyric Theater, 440 East Ave. Rochester, NY 14607
https://www.rochesterfringe.com/tickets-and-shows/aria
BIODANCE website: www.biodance.orgPhone: (585)-201-1002

BIODANCE Social Media: facebook.com/BIODANCE1 and Twitter: @BIODANCE1

Parking: Parking lot across Prince St. or street parking

NOTE TO MEDIA: Interviews and photos are available upon request.

BIODANCE Dancers: Alex Alletto, Rose Pasquarello Beauchamp, Zachary Frazee, Sarah Johnson, Nanako Horikawa Mandrino, Jean Michael Rubingu, Missy Pfohl Smith

Biographies:

Choreographer, performer and collaborative artist, Missy Pfohl Smithdirects the Institute for the Performing Arts and the Program of Dance and Movement at University of Rochester and is artistic director for the contemporary repertory company, BIODANCE, based in Rochester, NY. Her work has continually sold out shows at Rochester Fringe, having been called “Gorgeous…astonishing…exceptional” and “a brilliantly crafted world of beauty, melody and calmness” by Rochester City News. She enjoys creating site specific work and recently created her second evening length show crafted for a 4 story planetarium in collaboration with a media artist, dancers, musicians and a visual artist. Missy’s viola and dance work with Bridget Kinneary is expanding to include new contemporary compositions by internationally known composers. Her choreography, performance and teaching has spanned across the US and internationally, most recently in Greece, Finland and Scotland. She is certified in Bill Evans Laban/Bartenieff-based pedagogy and also teaches choreography, dance on camera and contemporary dance and social justice. Before returning to Rochester in 2004, Smith was based in NYC for 12 years and performed and taught internationally with Randy James Dance Works and Paul Mosley, as well as apprenticing for the Erick Hawkins Dance Company.

BIODANCE is a non-profit contemporary dance company founded in 2002 that collaborates with multi-disciplinary artists and is the only true repertory company in Rochester, performing work by a roster of recognized choreographers including Missy Pfohl Smith, Bill Evans, Randy James, Ivy Baldwin, Jeanne Schickler Compisi, D. Chase Angier, Laura Regna and Courtney World. BIODANCE explores social, political and environmental issues through its works always through dance, sometimes with text, film, music, and ice cream. BIODANCE interacts with and outreaches to its community members and across the country in a variety of ways through performances, workshops, benefit concerts, interactive lecture-demonstrations and classes at venues such as Geva’s Nextstage, Hochstein Concert Hall, the Strasenburgh Planetarium, MUCCC and more. Over the past eight years, BIODANCE has been providing free dance and movement workshops to the Senior Center at Community Place of Greater Rochester. Recent collaborators have included the musical artists of Sound ExChange, digital media artist W. Michelle Harris, visual artist Allen C. Topolski, and the leading choral/orchestral ensemble Rochester Oratorio Society. BIODANCE has received Community Arts Organization Grants from the Arts and Cultural Council for Greater Rochester, New York State Council on the Arts and the NYS Legislature, from the Rochester Area Community Foundation, the Max and Marian Farash Charitable Foundation, among other grants to create new work, to interact with its community and to produce various annual home performance seasons. City News chose BIODANCE two years in a row for a Best of Fringe Award in the First Niagara Rochester Fringe Festival.

Michelle Harrisis a media artist and a professor at Rochester Institute of Technology. Her work mixes digital and material to engage the audience while addressing the roles of women in American culture. Her work (solo and collaborative) has been shown at such diverse venues as the ACM SIGGRAPH, World Maker Faire, and the reActor International Conference on Digital Live Art, as well as regional venues such as the Baobab Cultural Center, Community Folk Art Center, Schwienfurth Memorial, and Four Walls. She has done visuals for performances in collaboration with choreographer Juanita Suarez (ImageMovementSound festivals and the Be Here Now ensemble), Sound ExChange orchestra, and BIODANCE (Rochester Fringe  ‘17, ’16, ’15, ’13 Festivals). She received her BS in Computer Engineering from Carnegie Mellon University, and a MPS in Interactive Telecommunications from New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts (where she had the honor of interning with Troika Ranch). Michelle has been an ongoing collaborator with Missy Pfohl Smith at University of Rochester and BIODANCE, and plans to continue to collaborate with the company in 2018.

Kearstin Piper Brown is a soprano who recently made her San Francisco Opera debut covering the role of Dame Shirley in the world premiere of John Adams’s Girls of the Golden West. Recently, Ms. Brown performed with Rochester Oratorio Society in the Vaughan-Williams Dona Nobis Pacem and Emancipation Oratorio. She also toured Israel as Bess in Gershwin’s masterpiece, Porgy and Bess. This season Ms. Brown will return as a guest artist with the Chaliapin Festival at the Kazan Opera Theater in Russia and in the spring, she will also begin work singing the lead role in the new opera, Promised Land: An Adirondack Folk Opera. Next season brings Ms. Brown back to the West Coast for Barber’s Knoxville: Summer of 1915 with the San Jose Chamber Orchestra and a return to San Francisco Opera to sing the Clara in Jake Heggie’s, It’s a Wonderful Life.Ms. Brown also made her debut with the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra under conductor Robert Spano in the role of the High Priestess in Aïda, and was also invited to sing concerts under the auspices of the Lebanon Symphony and Chorus, Cincinnati Opera and the Finger Lakes Opera Company. In previous seasons she was heard as Violetta with Utah Lyric Opera, Musetta with Dayton Opera, Micaëla with Arbor Opera Theater, and Clara in Porgy and Bess at the Teatro di San Carlo. She performed Euridice in Gluck’s Orpheus with Opera Memphis, and she portrayed the role of Mrs. McDowell in the world premiere of Rise for Freedom: The John P. Parker Story by composer Adolphus Hailstork with Cincinnati Opera. She also sang with the Center for Contemporary Opera in New York as Epiphany Proudfoot in the world premiere of Mark Scearse’s Falling Angel. Ms. Brown also made her successful return to Utah Festival Opera as Bess in Porgy and Bess and Sarah in Ragtime. Ms. Brown has performed the role of Bess worldwide with Opera Kazan, Skylight Music Theatre, Dayton Opera, Virginia Opera, Utah Festival Opera and the Belarusian State Philharmonic Orchestra, Minsk. Ms. Brown starred in a gala concert Our Songs – The Music of African American Composers at the Bruno Walter Auditorium at Lincoln Center with Opera Ebony, and the year before she was heard at Jazz at Lincoln Centerunder the auspices of the Licia Albanese-Puccini Foundation. The versatile soprano has also sung with the American Spiritual Ensemble, toured with the 3 Mo’ Divas (sister group of the 3 Mo’ Tenors), and scored an early success as Sarah in the Light Opera Works Chicago regional premiere of Ragtime, earning her a “Best Actress in a Musical” nomination from the Black Theater Alliance in Chicago. She recently made her triumphant returned to the role in with the Utah Festival Opera. Highlights of Ms. Brown’s performances as a concert soloist include an appearance at the Palais Augarten in Vienna, a gala of American music with the Moscow City Symphony Orchestra, Handel’s Messiah with the Lebanon Symphony, a concert with the Rochester Early Music Festival, the Festival Classique’s Opera Under the Stars concert with the Residentie Orkest in The Hague and the Edison Awards Gala 2010 with the Amsterdam Sinfonietta, both of which were televised LIVE in the Netherlands, as well as concerts with the Pasadena Symphony and Pops, the Cedar Rapids Chorale and Symphony, and the Hines-Lee Opera Ensemble at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts. A native of Alexandria, Virginia, Ms. Brown is a graduate of both Spelman College and Northwestern University.

fivebyfivebegan as a project idea in 2015 to perform music by Brooklyn, NY based composer Missy Mazzoli. The flutist of the group, Laura Lentz, heard Mazzoli’s ensemble Victoire at the Detroit Institute of the Arts back in 2014 and fell in love with her music. fivebyfive evolved into the present quintet of Laura Lentz (flute), Marcy Bacon (clarinet), Sungmin Shin (electric guitar), Eric Polenik (bass) and Haeyeun Jeun (piano), and is based in Rochester, NY with an active performance and teaching schedule. Missy Mazzoli’s work Magic with Everyday Objectsfor fivebyfive’s instrumentation still remains one of the ensemble’s favorite pieces to perform. fivebyfive’s mission is to engage audiences in the collaborative spirit and creativity of modern chamber music by commissioning, arranging and performing a wide range of works for its instrumentation. Forging a variety of community partnerships and presenting interactive educational programs, fivebyfive brings music born out of today’s culture to concert halls and classrooms. In 2017 the ensemble became a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization. The quintet has received funding from New Music USAThe Farash Foundation and the Decentralization Grant of New York State for its programs, and actively collaborates with artists across a variety of disciplines, including poets, dancers, visual artists and musicians across the genres.

 

 

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BIO/DANCE & Social Justice in The Fringe Sept. 17, 22, 23, 26

Dear friends of BIODANCE,

I am proud of this work, and humbled by the generosity and depth of the work of the artists involved in this show. BIO/DANCE & Social Justice is a collection of work that brings various reflections and diverse perspectives of inequality in society today. Following sold out houses during The Rochester Fringe Festival for the past two years, BIODANCE returns to Geva Theatre Center Center’s Fielding Stage, featuring all new premieres of choreography, performance, music and sculpture in four different programs.

Thurs. Sept. 17 at 6pm
Tues. Sept. 22 at 8:30pm
Wed. Sept. 23 at 7pm
Sat. Sept. 26 at 7pm

Choreographers include:
Donna Davenport, Lev Earle, Equal Footing Dance,
Kelly Johnson, Kelly Ferris Lester, Missy Pfohl Smith, Marcia Vanderlee and the Umoja Drummers,
and
Allen C. Topolski, sculptor
Joe Mangano, composer

Mark Wenderlich, Lighting Designer

Performers include:
Drew Bellavia, Sarah Canny, Wayne Cleveland, Jeanne Schickler Compisi, Kathleen Dalton, Donna Davenport, Maureen Gorman, Maureen Gorman, Kelly Johnson, Sarah Morell Johnson, Kelly Ferris Lester, Alaina Olivieri, Laura Regna, Julie Schlafer Rosette, Elizabeth Strano, Ashley De Los Santos, Becky Geisinger, Khalid Saleem, Stuart Tsubota, Marcia Vanderlee, Phil Vanderlee, Ashley Owen, Tina Green, Isaiah Harris, Rachel Vinciguerra, Kaitley Wozer.

TICKETS
Online:  rochesterfringe.com (no extra booking fees)
Phone: 585-957-9837 (fees apply)
Box Office: One Fringe Place (corner of Main and Gibbs St.)
In Person: Venue door one hour before start of show

For more info and artist bios, visit facebook.com/BIODANCE1

Sept. 17 Program includes work by Donna Davenport, Kelly Johnson (Tiger Lily), Missy Pfohl Smith, Kelly Ferris Lester and Allen C. Topolski.

Sept. 22 Program includes work by Donna Davenport, Lev Earle, Kelly Johnson (Tiger Lily), Missy Pfohl Smith, Marcia Vanderlee, Khalid A. N. Saleem and Allen C. Topolski.

Sept. 23 Program includes work by Donna Davenport, Lev Earle, Kelly Johnson (Tiger Lily), Missy Pfohl Smith, and Allen C. Topolski.

Sept. 26 Program includes work by work by Donna Davenport, Equal Footing Dance, Kelly Johnson (Tiger Lily), Missy Pfohl Smith, Marcia Vanderlee and Khalid Saleem, and Allen C. Topolski.

This project is made possible with funds from the Decentralization Program, a regrant program of the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature
and administered by Livingston Arts, a member supported
organization.

Missy Pfohl Smith, Artistic Director, BIODANCE

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BIODANCE performs with Grounded Aerial Sept. 18

BIODANCE kicks off The First Niagara Rochester Fringe Festival in Headliner Show with Grounded Aerial!

September 18th at 8:00pm

Emotionally charged choreography. Amplified in mid-air. Ready for a visceral, innovative combination of modern dance and uniquely rigged aerial elements with jaw-dropping moments? A theatrical performance of mind-and-body-bending choreography and vibrant interactive characters, Grounded Aerial uses the dimensions of each performance space to craft site-specific dynamic shows never to be duplicated anywhere else.  BIODANCE joins them on “A Tribute to Man,” the sculpture installation in Martin Luther King Jr. Park in Manhattan Square.  A new breathtaking high is coming. Look up, Rochester.

  • Show Length: 25 minutes
  • Ticket Price: Free
  • Genre: Multidisciplinary
  • Venue: Martin Luther King Jr. Park at Manhattan Square: Martin Luther King Jr Park at Manhattan Square
  • Ages: All Ages
  • Show Times: 9/18 at 8:00pm
  • How to Best Enjoy:  Bring a blanket or lawn chair.  Food trucks will be there!

Bach Without Boundaries in Fringe

BIODANCE Artistic Director Missy Pfohl Smith joins violist extraordinaire Bridget Kinneary in Bach without Boundaries, a premiere work that explores the relationship between dancer and musician.

Thursday Sept. 24, 2015 – 9:30-10:15pm

Saturday. Sept. 26, 2015 – 12noon-12:45pm

RAPA at School of the Arts:  Black Box Theatre 45 Prince St. Rochester, NY 14607

Tickets:  $8 General/$3 Students

Online: rochesterfringe.com (no extra booking fees)

Phone: 585-957-9837 (fees apply)

Box Office: Once Fringe Place (corner of Main and Gibbs)

In Person: Venue door one hour before start of show.

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