THEATRE PREVIEW
CELEBRATE DANCE FESTIVAL
Published in KPBS On Air Magazine August
2005
Some
people move to a community and take their time feeling it out, getting the lay
of the land, meeting folks individually or in small groups. Gina Angelique came
barreling into town a decade ago, started a dance company and initiated a
Celebrate Dance Festival in Balboa Park.
“The
dance community seemed fractionalized at the time,” says the 33 year-old
powerhouse, a San Diego native, mother of almost-two, dancer/choreographer,
founder of Eveoke Dance Theatre and long-time social activist. “We have
progressive, communal values, and we just decided to walk the walk. To become
exceptional leaders.”
And
so they did. Angelique’s soon-to-be husband, lighting designer Chris Hall, was
the producer. “We thought it’d be great to share something with the community,”
he said. “We came back to San Diego [from Irvine],” adds Angelique, “because,
with its border location and ethnic diversity, it seemed like the right place
to do the kind of edgy, community-based, political work we love to do.”.
With
the blessing of the head of arts and culture for Balboa Park, and the help of
administrative director (and veteran Eveoke dancer) Nikki Dunnan, they began a
project that has grown exponentially and is now marking its 10th
anniversary. The first Festival took place over two weekends, but that became
too unwieldy. By the third year, Angelique and Hall had trimmed it down to a
lean-mean, 3-day event in one weekend.
The
first year of the Festival, 15 groups participated and about 500 people showed
up to watch. This year, there are 75 groups involved, performing in four
different venues: the 660-seat Casa del Prado Theatre, the 400-seat Copley
Theater in the San Diego Museum of Art and on two outdoor stages along the
Prado: the Prado Stage (near the fountain and the Science Museum) and the Lily
Pond Stage, in front of … the lily pond. There will be free workshops in the
Casa del Prado dance studios, for those with and without prior training.
There’s even a hip hop class outdoors. Last year, over 10,000 people attended.
The
Festival mission is to unite members of the dance community into a “cultural
force” and to present their work to residents and visitors alike. There is no
entry fee for the audience, and no audition or performance criteria for the
participants. This populist approach, say Angelique and Hall, ensures complete
access for all, so “anyone can celebrate dance on both sides of the curtain.”
This “meaningful esthetic experience” is provided to everyone, unconditionally.
Angelique
likens her commitment to tithing. “Eveoke is giving our resources, spirit and
efforts to the community. We don’t take a dime, and we actually lose tons of
money. Every dollar we raise pays for the companies and designers.”
The
event costs about $67,000. Arts-friendly County Supervisor Pam Slater has been
the biggest source of funding from the outset, generating $10,000 this year for
the event. There are other public and private donors, big chunks come from the
Eveoke operating budget, and donations are solicited at the event. According to
Angelique, there’s no festival as big, as populist – or as free – anywhere.
“Dance
isn’t elitist or on the fringe,” says Hall. “It’s what everyone does; it’s a
social artform. It’s in every culture. And this event raises the water for all
the boats.” Adds Angelique, “Eveoke is ambitious about making San Diego the
most prolific center of quality dance. It’s one thing to talk about opening the
world of dance theater to bigger and more diverse populations, and turning
young people on to it, and another to really make it happen.”
This
year, for the first time, all the highest-profile dance companies in town will
participate, including Malashock Dance, McCaleb Dance and Jean Isaacs’ San
Diego Dance Theater. The San Diego Ballet will be represented, as will Lower
Left, which has been part of the Festival every year. The Ellis Wood dance
company comes in from New York, to be part of this event, and Raindance will be
here from Arizona. But side by side with these pros are 4 year-olds from dance
schools and the 90 year-old Daughters of Isis, a senior belly-dancing group.
For
the audience, it’s a low-risk way to sample the many dance opportunities
available in San Diego, and to determine which ones to spend money to see
again, over the course of the next year.
With
four performances going on simultaneously at any given time, some lasting 20
minutes, some 50, there’s a wide range of options, from world dance to cultural
dance, modern dance to ballet.
“Take
a risk!” Angelique exhorts potential onlookers. “It’s a small one.. in a
gorgeous environment, right in your backyard. Come out to the Park and witness
this duet of art and nature. See why so many people are so hot about dance
culture. There’s something so beautiful about watching artists using their
number one resource – their bodies – to express themselves. They give their
hearts and souls to you, the audience, as a gift. Go out and see if you can get
hooked!”
[The 10th annual Celebrate Dance
Festival runs August 26, 27 and 28
in Balboa Park, from 12-5pm on all four stages and 2-9:00pm in the indoor
venues]
©2005
Patté Productions Inc.