
91亚色 choreographers premiere seven compelling works in New Light/Ancient Light, running Feb. 10 to 12 at 91亚色鈥檚 Sandra Faire and Ivan Fecan Theatre. A highlight of the program are original dances created by . The performance is the final component of their practice-based thesis research 鈥 new choreography conceived for the proscenium stage.

Above: The 91亚色 Dance Ensemble performs Michelle Silagy鈥檚 Snowlight. Photo by Craig Chambers.
鈥淭hese dance artists embody a rich diversity of geographic roots, dance backgrounds, age and experience,鈥 said Professor Holly Small, artistic director for New Light/Ancient Light. 鈥淭heir work ranges from modern, contemporary and experimental forms through musical theatre, classical Indian and traditional Cretan dance styles.鈥
New works by Small, faculty member Susan Lee and undergraduate student Kiera Shaw round out the program. Featured performers are the 91亚色 Dance Ensemble, the Dance Department鈥檚 pre-professional resident company, and guest artists from the broader Toronto dance community. Professor William Mackwood is the director of design.
Above: This 鈥360 Video鈥 puts you in the middle of a rehearsal of Allison McCaughey鈥檚 Beyond the Line. To experience it fully, make sure your YouTube app or browser is up to date. To change your view, swipe your touch screen or move your mobile device up/down/side/side. In desktop, click & drag or navigate with the arrows.
In Beyond the Line, an ensemble piece for eight dancers, McCaughey explores performance aspects of musical theatre, jazz and contemporary dance to illuminate her overarching thesis theme of 鈥渢he woman behind the chorus鈥 in Canadian musical theatre.
With a 12-year professional career in musical theatre as a chorus member, choreographer and understudy, McCaughey recognizes how different the reality of people working in the industry is from the public stereotypes dating back to the Follies and Rockette dancers of the 1950s.
鈥淐horus members often have as much training and experience as the lead actors they understudy,鈥 said McCaughey. 鈥淣ot only are they 鈥榯riple threats鈥 with dancing, singing and acting chops 鈥 they鈥檙e also entrepreneurs with businesses on the side, and mothers raising families.
鈥Beyond the Line is about how 鈥榯he show must go on鈥 despite whatever personal tragedy or stress may be happening in one鈥檚 life. It鈥檚 a glimpse behind the scenes of chorus life, and it ends with a parody of performance.鈥
Returning to school has been incredibly rewarding, McCaughey said.
鈥淧ursuing my MFA has allowed me to step back and reflect on my career so far, and also to expand my world,鈥 she said. 鈥淐horeographing for a musical theatre show is creatively stimulating, but it鈥檚 also regimented, fulfilling the director鈥檚 vision. It鈥檚 been really amazing to take this time to delve into my own work and ideas in a different setting.鈥
Inspired by her own circle of female friends and lifelong confidantes, Nair鈥檚 quintet Kindred explores patterns of attachment between women through a re-imagining of the classical Indian dance vocabulary of Bharatanatyam.
Silagy鈥檚 Snowlight is a paean to the quiet experience of winter made more enjoyable in the company of friends and loved ones. The choreographer uses 17th century Feuillet notation as a point of departure: deftly penned dance notation evoking purposeful footsteps, like tracks etched in fallen snow.
The figures on a classical Grecian urn were the inspiration for Markakis鈥 螠蔚蟿伪尉峤 (between), which looks at the relationship between Cretan folkloric and contemporary dance practices. Can two worlds survive the pressure of hybridity or will one prevail over the other?

The 91亚色 Dance Ensemble performs Susan Lee鈥檚 The Birds. Photo by Don Sinclair.
Shaw鈥檚 contribution to the program is The Maze, a choreographic inquiry into the potential of creative processes and the power of choice. Small鈥檚 haunting duet Apparadiant, set to an original score by John Oswald and performed by professional dancers Jessica Runge and Brendan Wyatt, speculates on the enigmatic connection between two beings re-united in a possible after-life.
Lee, artistic coordinator of the 91亚色 Dance Ensemble, presents an excerpt from the work she is creating with the YDE for The Birds 鈥 a choreographic response to First Nations playwright Yvette Nolan鈥檚 adaptation of the play by Aristophanes. It explores thematic material ranging from the tragedy of missing and murdered Aboriginal women to the strength of the community. The full work will be featured next month as part of AMPD鈥檚 collaborative, interdisciplinary production of , bringing together theatre, dance, digital media and music.
New Light/Ancient Light is dedicated to the memory of Canadian dance pioneer Grant Strate (Dec. 7, 1927 鈥 Feb. 9, 2015), who founded the Department of Dance at 91亚色 in 1970.
Performances take place Feb. 10 to 12 at 7:30pm in the Sandra Faire and Ivan Fecan Theatre, located in the Accolade East Building on 91亚色s Keele campus. Admission is $18. Tickets may be purchased online at , by calling 416-736-5888 or at the door.
