Posts Tagged ‘World Premiere’

So Much to Experience!

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

In less than five months, the Ringling International Arts Festival will be alive in Sarasota. The rich diversity of scheduled performances, exhibitions, and special events will provide an enriching experience for any arts enthusiast. The Festival will include world and US premieres, plus several works commissioned specifically for the Ringling International Arts Festival.

But who and what to see? Your choices include: contemporary art paired with Old Masters paintings, orchestra and chamber music, cabaret, traditional and experimental theater, Flamenco dance, contemporary dance, and so much more. Before single performance tickets go on sale this Friday, visit the Ringling International Arts Festival YouTube channel to preview video clips of the artists’ performances.

Then be sure to let us know who you plan to see.

Elevator Repair Service Theater

Friday, February 20th, 2009

Elevator Repair Service

Elevator Repair Service

Elevator Repair Service Theater
World Premiere

Thursday, Oct 8: 8:00 p.m.
Friday, Oct 9: 5:30 p.m.
Saturday, Oct 10: 2:00 & 8:00 p.m.
Sunday, Oct 11: 2:00 p.m.
Cook Theatre
Tickets: $25, $20, $10

Internationally acclaimed theater company Elevator Repair Service (ERS) continues their compelling experiments in literary adaptation. Founded in 1991 by John Collins, a veteran of The Wooster Group, ERS is known for its intoxicatingly original work, tapping sources from film to novels to television, and combining slapstick comedy, hi-tech and lo-tech design, and its own style of choreography. Taking a collaborative approach to theater making, this radical ensemble delves into a new, multilayered narrative piece for its Festival premiere.

“…famously venturesome…” – The New York Times

“Elevator Repair Service works with intelligence and imagination…” – Variety

Elevator Repair Service Theater’s new work is commissioned by the Ringling International Arts Festival.

Aszure Barton & Artists / OtherShore

Friday, February 20th, 2009

Aszure Barton Artists

Aszure Barton Artists

Aszure Barton & Artists - World Premiere
OtherShore - The Snow Falls in the Winter

Thursday, Oct 8: 8:00 p.m.
Friday, Oct 9: 2:00 & 8:00 p.m.
Saturday, Oct 10: 5:30 p.m.
Mertz Theater
Tickets: $30, $25, $20, $10

One of Canada’s most talented young choreographers, Aszure Barton is rapidly carving out a place for herself on the international dance scene. Currently the Resident Choreographer for Les Ballets Jazz de Montréal, Ms. Barton has choreographed new works for Mikhail Baryshnikov, Sydney Dance Company, The Martha Graham Dance Company, and the Broadway stage. Drawing from classical ballet and contemporary dance vocabularies, Barton plumbs the human psyche to craft a new work that explores the visual architecture of movement, color and sound.

“Aszure Barton is a skillful choreographer with a very interesting mind.” – The Village Voice

“Barton is clearly brilliant… The layers of tension are disturbing and delicious.” 
San Francisco Chronicle

Aszure Barton’s new work is commissioned by The Ringling International Arts Festival.

Founded by Sonja Kostich and Brandi Norton (former dancers with American Ballet Theatre and Trisha Brown Dance Company, respectively), OtherShore debuted in 2008 with a program of commissioned works, including The Snow Falls in the Winter. Created by Annie-B Parson and co-directed by Paul Lazar of Big Dance Theater, The Snow Falls in the Winter was named one of Dance Magazine’s “10 best choreographies in 2008.” A poignant dance-theater piece, it borrows from Eugene Ionesco’s The Lesson, exploring notions of training and teaching, examining the cusp between right and wrong, true and false, artifice and reality. 

“Riotously, beautifully more than its parts…” – The New York Times

We’ll continue to wonder where else this ambitious troupe will take us.” – Dance Magazine

“The Snow Falls in the Winter reinforces two already-evident impressions: These dancers have many talents; this enterprising young group deserves a bright future” – The Village Voice