
Dances for a Small Stage 25!
This is one of the most exciting ones yet! It's been almost 10 years and 25 not so small shows!
check out the line-up... i can't wait to see what happens.
Happy New Year!
Just gearing up for another exciting show!Dances for a Small Stage @ the 'Bolt
Dances for a Small Stage 23-I am very excited about our 23rd installment of Dances for a Small Stage. In the past nine years we have evolved into a well-oiled machine turning out exciting, thought provoking works that entertain and challenge our audiences. To keep our “small” series fresh and cutting edge I have decided that it is time to take more artistic risks and move in a slightly different direction with this show.
For me, one of the most exciting and rewarding elements of the Dances for a Small Stage Series is to watch as artists and audience alike work to overcome the challenges presented by the physicality of the space and to see the work that evolves as both engage in a wonderfully intimate experience. In order to take advantage of this unique element of our series, this installment will experiment with a “character based” show that will introduce original, daring and innovative ideas into the series and the community.
In order to help us launch into this new adventure I have invited two of the most skilled character performers in Vancouver to help curate and host the evening. I am thrilled to have Tara Cheyenne Friedenberg and Billy Marchenski return to the Small Stage to host our show. Both are amazingly talented performers who have each presented very successful character work on our Small Stage in the past. They in turn have invited artists to develop solo characters who will use dance, pantomime, music and physical theatre to develop their own pieces for the Small Stage. We are happy to welcome Kim Tuson, Delia Brett and David Raymond, Tiffany Tregarthen from Out Innerspace as well as Susie Burpee (from Toronto) to our 23rd installment of Dances for a Small Stage.
I can hardly wait to see what happens! The possibilities are endless.
Sit back, relax, enjoy a drink and get ready for a wild ride!

Happy New Year, dance lovers! To say I’m really looking forward to Dances for a Small Stage 22 would be an understatement. I’m thrilled. I’m excited. I’m counting the days (135, to be exact).
Why am I so hot under the collar? It’s simple: in Dances for a Small Stage 22, one of the hottest contemporary dance companies (Ballet BC) in the country will be rocking out on our small stage.
I’ve known Ballet BC Interim Artistic Director Emily Molnar for eons. Since picking up the reins last year, she’s fired up Ballet BC with a fresh, crisp, clear vision. And her enthusiasm for Dances for a Small Stage 22—when her dancers will perform choreography by some of the world’s most visionary dancemakers (including Margie Gillis, Gioconda Barbuto, and American choreographer Lauri Stallings, who recently collaborated with Outkast’s Antwon ‘Big Boi’ Patton on a new work for the Atlanta Ballet; check out a clip at http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xbVpYmVDvXs)—is one of the reasons why it’s quickly becoming one of the don’t-miss events of the 2010 season.
It’s a time of firsts for Dances for a Small Stage. First time collaborating with Ballet BC. First time a single company of dancers will perform the work of multiple choreographers. And yet, despite the many firsts, you can still expect the same rough-and-tumble cabaret setting, the same stage, the same short vignettes, and the same yummy beer at affordable Legion prices. As always, you’ll get an experience you won’t find anywhere else in Vancouver: a champagne taste on a beer budget.
Follow this blog and I’ll take you behind-the-scenes and make sure you’re up to date with all the news from the epicenter of this staggering collaboration. Got questions? Post them here and I’ll do my best to answer them.
Ballet BC. Dances for a Small Stage. June 16-18, 2010. It’s going to be epic. Don’t miss it!
-Julie-anne Saroyan