“This season is private for us,” Alison Manning, co-executive director of the Harkness Dance Middle, tells Observer. “We as an establishment are pointing to the truth that we’re in a cultural second the place ladies’s rights and our bodies and voices appear to be beneath renewed risk. Dance has all the time been an area for storytelling and truth-telling, and we consider that who tells the story issues. By centering ladies and female-identifying artists, we’re trying to amplify these voices which have been traditionally sidelined and create a season that’s as a lot a press release as it’s an inventive providing.”
Certainly, ladies have lengthy been sidelined within the dance area, and whereas progress has been made prior to now few a long time, there’s nonetheless extra work to be executed. In response to the Dance Information Mission’s most up-to-date experiences (of the 2023-2024 season), gender inequity is alive and properly. Of the two,221 ballet, modern, and trendy dance works offered at 116 performing arts facilities within the U.S., solely 31.4 p.c had been choreographed by ladies. Girls choreographed 30.2 p.c of full-length works and 32.3 p.c of mixed-bill works. Theaters with the most important seating capability programmed the smallest variety of women-made works (22.2 p.c). Of the 217 creative administrators main classically based mostly dance corporations within the U.S. and internationally, solely 65 (30.0 p.c) are ladies. And of the 202 choreographers at the moment holding resident positions in corporations, 90 are ladies (44.6 p.c) and 110 are males (54.5 p.c). Do not forget that the dance area is majority feminine—CareerExplorer knowledge reveals that 87 p.c of working dancers are feminine and 13 p.c are male.
However sufficient about numbers. When Manning and her staff selected the title “Girls Transfer the World” for this history-making season, the phrase “transfer” initially referred to bodily motion, however over time, the phrase began resonating for them in new methods. Motion may also suggest progress and momentum. “For hundreds of years, ladies have been shifting this artwork type ahead, however typically the ultimate visibility,” Manning mentioned. “And so transfer on this context additionally means, for us, to encourage, to create change, to say area.”
However sufficient about phrases. On to bounce! “Girls Transfer the World,” which runs from September by Could at 92NY, will characteristic performances from big-name choreographers and beloved hometown corporations, in addition to rising voices and worldwide artists. There can be an immersive opening celebration, six genre-spanning applications and three numerous festivals.


What to anticipate on opening night time
The season will open on September 13 with Swing Out Loud: Girls Transfer the World—half Genuine Jazz/Lindy Hop dance lesson, half swing dance occasion, half efficiency—led by Bessie Award winner LaTasha Barnes and accompanied by One BadA** Swing Band.
Regardless that the season’s mission is severe and carries vital weight, Manning needed to open it with a celebration. She mentioned, “I’m additionally attempting to drive us—’us’ which means 92NY and the artists on this program, and likewise the broader dance group in New York-towards this concept that within the face of all of this, we should have pleasure. We should have celebration, and we should uplift each other.”
As for who ought to lead the opening celebration, Manning instantly considered Barnes, who embodies so many qualities this season strives for—pleasure, resistance, illustration, legacy—and had been a part of 92NY’s inaugural Uptown Rhythm Dance Pageant final season.
Barnes comes from a protracted line of “movers and shakers and innovators” and is an internationally acknowledged tradition-bearer of Black American Social Dance. When requested how she felt about opening the season, she mentioned, “The phrase that’s coming to thoughts, truthfully, is ‘magnanimous,’ however which may be somewhat too flowery for what’s really taking place. It’s actually fairly humbling, and it’s actually inspiring for me.”
The night time will start with Barnes’ “very thrilling and enjoyable hybrid dance lesson,” beginning with Genuine Jazz for individuals who need to dance alone, adopted by Lindy Hop for individuals who need to be partnered. Then the ground will open for the swing dance occasion, interspersed with reside performances, “providing some perspective into how badass the ladies in New York swing are and the way badass their collective artistry is and might be.” Performers vary from younger protégés like Reyna Núñez to seasoned veterans “who simply swing their faces off like Gaby Prepare dinner, and a few of our most esteemed elders and ‘keepers of the flame,’ as we name them, however I’m calling them the ‘keepers of the beat.’”
92NY’s social dance nights are sometimes packed and intergenerational, drawing households with younger kids as much as folks of their 90s, dancing the night time away. “I hope everybody will come out to have a good time,” Barnes mentioned. “It’s ‘Girls Transfer the World,’ however we would like everybody within the area to have the ability to dance with us.”
The movers and shakers of the season
92NY’s dance historical past is rooted in American trendy dance. Harkness Dance Middle was based in 1935 by Doris Humphrey and attracted different trendy dance pioneers like Martha Graham, Katherine Dunham, Pearl Primus, José Limón, Paul Taylor, Merce Cunningham and Alvin Ailey. So it’s no shock that many of the applications within the season characteristic trendy and modern dance.


Some choreographers, like Yue Yin (whose firm YY Dance Firm will current the world premiere of Elsewhere on October 17 and 18), Heidi Latsky (presenting the discuss/efficiency Who Am I Now? on January 10 and 11), and Aszure Barton have longstanding relationships with 92NY. Though Andrea Miller has taught at Harkness Dance Middle, her critically acclaimed firm GALLIM will carry out BLUSH for the primary time on their stage on April 30 and Could 1. The French-Canadian Hélène Simoneau Danse will carry out the world premiere of Late Bloomer on November 14 and 15, and Jodi Melnick and New York Metropolis Ballet principal Sara Mearns will broaden the panorama with the crossover ballet-contemporary world premiere of Superbloom (Dancing into Choreographic Kinds) on March 27 and 28.
Barton, who can be closing out the season with An Night with Aszure Barton on Could 21, explains that, “92NY has been residence to generations of unbelievable people breaking new floor, and being a part of this ongoing evolution of dance is deeply significant.” The one-night-only efficiency will showcase the breadth of her fashion whereas bringing collectively “a few of the most beautiful dancers” she’s had the privilege to work with through the years, from Hubbard Avenue Dance Chicago, Gauthier Dance//Dance Firm Theaterhaus Stuttgart, and elsewhere.
Then there are the festivals
The Uptown Rhythm Dance Pageant (“Which I’m,” Manning says, “no pun supposed, tremendous jazzed for!”) returns for the second yr on March 2-8. The applications at 92NY are co-curated by Manning and faucet sensation Michelle Dorrance and co-presented with Works & Course of on the Guggenheim and Dormeshia’s Girls within the Shoe Faucet Convention.
The week-long competition will embody performances, discussions and lessons “that remember the facility, artistry and cultural influence of girls in rhythmic dance.” This yr’s roster of all feminine and female-identifying artists will carry out faucet, hip hop, flamenco, Kathak, road dance, Irish step, Appalachian flatfooting and extra.
The Future Dance Pageant returns for its fifth yr on April 17-18 (the On-line Dance Movie Pageant can be streaming on April 16-23), uplifting rising choreographers and filmmakers as all the time, however this yr the candidates, panelists and curators will all be ladies and female-identifying.
And, in response to Manning, for the primary time, the season will embody a “wildly thrilling and onerous to tug off” day-long competition on February 21 devoted to Indian classical dance and music: What Flows Beneath Us: A Pageant of India’s Classical Arts in Cross-Cultural Dialogue, curated by famend Kathak artist Rachna Nivas. The daytime program will embody performances by musicians and dancers from the North Indian and South Indian lineages, conventional meals and “area for gathering throughout generations.”


Nivas says that whereas ladies have had a sophisticated historical past with Indian classical dance over its 2000-year existence, they’re at the moment properly represented and revered within the area. The imbalance is extra apparent in Indian classical music, so she is thrilled to spotlight feminine lead musicians alongside just a few male accompanists. “It’s actually fairly extraordinary to have a competition like that for us, as a result of we don’t…,” right here she pauses and laughs knowingly, “…that’s completely not the case, normally.”
Nivas is grateful to have been surrounded by so many unbelievable ladies, her ‘dance sisters,’ who had been additionally coaching along with her guru, Pandit Chitresh Das. “He would always inform us, and inform the viewers when there was one, that ladies had been extra highly effective and stronger than males, and that males wanted to know that. Which was actually radical.”
The competition will culminate in a night efficiency of SPEAK, a collaboration between Nivas, Rukhmani Mehta, Michelle Dorrance and Dormeshia, accompanied by an all-female Indian classical and jazz ensemble. This dialog between Kathak and American faucet picks up the place one other one left off. Nivas’ trainer, Das, collaborated with Dorrance’s, Jason Samuels Smith, in an all-male present known as India Jazz Suites (2005). Due to that relationship, Nivas and Dorrance have recognized one another for years. “Sooner or later,” Nivas says, “I assumed it was time for us to jot down a brand new chapter of this dialog between Kathak and faucet, and have the women give it a go.” SPEAK premiered in California in 2017 and even toured to India, however this New York premiere is to not be missed.
“I’m so grateful for this daring, brave factor that Alison and the remainder of the staff at Harkness Dance Middle are making,” Nivas mentioned. “It’s simply one other testomony to when ladies come collectively, the sky’s the restrict for what might be completed.”
All performances for “Girls Transfer the World” can be held within the historic Kaufmann Live performance Corridor and in Buttenwieser Corridor on the Arnhold Middle at 92NY. Tickets can be found right here.
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