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MFA
Dance Show Features Cutting-Edge Choreography

MFA in Dance candidates (l to r): Stephen Ursprung,
Donna Mejia, Rebecca Hite, Stephanie Simpson, and Autumn
Welt. |
Northampton,
Mass.—An exciting
and eclectic mix of dance styles will come to life February
2, 3, and 4 at 8 p.m. in Theater 14, Mendenhall Center for
the Performing Arts, in a program of thesis project presentations
choreographed by graduate dance students Rebecca Hite, Donna
Mejia, Stephanie Simpson, Stephen Ursprung, and Autumn Welt.
The projects portray a wide
variety of styles, including contemporary dance, hip-hop,
Arab-American fusion, and tango. They will take you on a
journey through good and evil, to a party with a surprising
turn of events, through your deepest fears, and more.
The seven new and innovative
works presented in the program are the thesis projects of
the choreographers, who are completing their Masters of Fine
Arts degrees in performance and choreography in the Smith
College Department of Dance. The MFA degree entails two years
of specialized training for candidates who have strong ability
and interest in pursuing dance at the graduate level.
Tickets are $9 general admission,
$5 for students and seniors. Reservations are recommended
and may be made by calling (413) 585-ARTS (2787).
Rebecca
Hite is a second-year
MFA candidate in the Smith Department of Dance, where she
is currently a teaching fellow in the Five College Dance
Consortium. She began dancing at the age of 6 at the Dance
Center of Danvers (Danvers, Mass.), where she competed regionally
and nationally for many years. Rebecca graduated with a BA
in choreography and performance/English literature from Connecticut
College, where she worked with renowned artists such as David
Dorfman, Lisa Race, Adele Myers, Heidi Henderson, Nicholas
Leichter and Jeremy Nelson.
As a transnational fusion dance
artist, Donna Mejia has enjoyed a front row seat
in the emergence of a new genre of dance called "Tribal Fusion." Her
distinctive aesthetic dialogs the secular dances of North
Africa and the Arab world with American hip-hop dance and
sub-genres of electronic dance. This form provides a rich
arena for the study of cultural imperialism, gender representation,
and electronic globalization. Donna also teaches the Brazilian
Silvestre Dance Technique and is a primary representative
after 20 years of practice. In October of 2011 she was selected
by the Fulbright Association to present the 2011 Selma Jeanne
Cohen Fund lecture for International Scholarship in Dance,
notably for her paper “Digital
Diasporas and Transnational Dance Communities: The Effects of the Internet on
Identity Formation and Collective Cultural Memory.” She balances her time teaching
at Smith, directing the Sovereign Performance Collective, and touring internationally
to teach, lecture, and perform for private sponsors, festivals and community
organizations. Donna is contentedly addicted to music and sewing, and is honored
to parent a spirited and amazing daughter.
Stephanie
Simpson received her
undergraduate degree from Emerson College. Before returning
to school, she lived in Los Angeles where she was a member
of two modern dance companies, Intersection Dance Project
and Louise Reichlin & Dancers. In addition, she performed with a variety of theatres
throughout Southern California and was a back-up dancer for several up-and-coming
pop artists. Stephanie has choreographed more than 20 musicals on both the east
and west coasts. In 2009, she won an NAACP Award for Best Choreography for Ragtime:
The Musical.
Stephen
Ursprung is a second-year
MFA student at Smith. He graduated with a degree in economics
and Italian studies from Brown University, where he ran Fusion
Dance Company, imPulse Dance Company, and was a guest dancer
with Dance Extension (in collaboration with the American
Dance Legacy Institute). This past summer he had the great
honor to perform at the Confluences VI Conference in Cape
Town, South Africa. He has performed work by Paul Taylor
and Pilobolus and choreographed promotional videos and events
for Columbia Records (Sony/BMG Music Group).
Autumn
Welt is from Saco, Maine. She received her bachelors degree from
Elon University in North Carolina in 2008. For two years
she performed and choreographed with a Maine dance company
called Sonar Dance and was involved with The New England
Dance Project. She has also performed at the Ogunquit Playhouse
in Ogunquit, Maine in their 2009 production of A
Chorus Line.
While at Smith she has performed in Chris Aiken’s piece Fall
Over Water and will also perform
in Rebecca Hite’s piece Molt, both being presented at ACDFA in February. Post
graduation she is looking forward to a project she is collaborating on with visual
artist April Lynn. |
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