Susan
Anderson, Professor
Director of Dance USC
Artistic Director USC Dance Company
Susan Anderson began her career in Monterey, California
and credits her teacher Madame Olga Ziceva from Russia’s
Kirov Ballet with her ballet training. She continued her
dance studies at the San Francisco Ballet as a scholarship
student.
She received her MFA from the University
of California at Irvine under the legendary choreographer
Eugene Loring. Her
professional dance career was with Ballet Celeste of San
Francisco, Los Angeles Dance Theatre, and Moving South.
Professor Anderson is the founding director
of the USC Dance Company, USC Dance Conservatory, South Carolina
Summer Dance
Conservatory which hosts international students and world
renowned faculty and choreographers. Under her directorship
the dance program recently implemented the BA major in Dance
which is currently 40 majors strong. The BA degree track
in Performance /Choreography which began in 2004, has concentrations
in Ballet or Contemporary Dance. Also, in Fall 2006 the
dance program began the BA degree in Dance Education, a
K-12 Teacher Certification program in partnership with the
College of Education. The dance program now has
more than 60 course offerings and approximately 3,000 students
enrolled each year taking dance courses.
Some of Susan Anderson’s professional artistic works
includes the creation of 105 ballets such as Scheherazade,
Ondine, Taming of the Shrew, Planet
Dance with artist Blue
Sky, The Firebird, Phantom of the Night, Crown
Jewels, Sylvia, Carnival of the Animals, Pleasures of Paris,
Don Quixote,
and The Young Man and Death. She has choreographed
and taught master classes for Gus Giordano Dance Company
in Chicago,
the University of California, University of Buffalo, University
of Georgia , Several Dancers Core in Atlanta, Murray State,
Knoxville Dance Theatre, Loyola University, Inco Ballet in
Colombia , South America. and Stadtische Opera in Gera, Germany.
As a teacher she has had the privilege
of coaching and teaching Jessica Teague, Soloist with the
National Ballet
of Sweden, Jillian Murphy, Principal Ballerina with American
Ballet Theatre, Karen Gibbons Brown Artistic Director of
the Fort Wayne Ballet and most recently Chrissy Whitehead
who has been recently seen on Broadway in the musical of A
Chorus Line.
Her significant administrative and academic achievements
also include the awarding of 30 financial grants for the
USC dance Company, an invitation to the 16th Annual Fiesta
Espana with the USC Dance Company in Costa Del Sol, Spain,
Teacher Certification in Russian Ballet Pedagogy from the
Tbilisi Choreographic Institute, and being named USC Advisor
of the Year by USC Student Affairs. Her research on “Somatics
and Demographic Variables of Elite Female Dancers” has
been presented at the National Convention of the American
Association for Health, Physical Education, Recreation and
Dance, as well as having been published in several international
journals. She will continue her work in the reconstruction
of the Feuillet-Beauchamps notation of baroque dance, opera,
and ballet on her sabbatical this spring.
Dr. Mila Parrish
Associate Professor, Director of USC Dance Education Major
Dr. Mila Parrish is nationally and internationally recognized for her work in dance pedagogy, educational technology and multimedia development. She received a BFA in choreography and performance and K-12 Teachers Certification from the University of Michigan; an MA in Dance Education from Columbia University and a Ph.D. from The Ohio State University in Art Education. Her research and publications have established new trends in movement technology, K-12 integrated curriculum and teacher training in the digital arena. Parrish was a professional dancer and choreographer in NYC, performing with modern, ballet and theatre companies, most notably, The Jean Erdman Theater of Dance, with whom she toured nationally. Her company, Koshin Dance Theater has been presented at various NYC venues including DIA Center for the Arts, P.S. 122, the Morningside Dance Festival and St. Mark's Church. She is a Certified Movement Analyst (CMA) from the Laban Institute of Movement Studies in NYC with research interest in Labanotation, enhanced movement cognition, distance pedagogy and multimedia development. Mila has served on the board of the National Dance Education Organization (NDEO), Dance and the Child International (daCi), and the Dance Notation Bureau (DNB). Currently, she is the Director of Technology for NDEO. For five years she directed Moving Inventors a community arts school with a hands-on dance laboratory for teacher education. Mila is very active in professional development, leading seminars and workshops throughout the U.S. and in China, Finland, and the Netherlands. She has been on faculty at Columbia University, Ohio State University and Arizona State University.
Miriam
Barbosa
Dance. Assistant Professor. MFA, University of Fine
Arts of SP/Brazil.
Miriam Barbosa is the Associate Artistic Director
for USC Dance Company, Assistant professor with USC Dance
Program and former member of the Martha Graham Dance Company.
Ms Barbosa is also a Master Teacher in Gyrokinesis and the
Gyrotonic Expansion System of Movement. From 1992 to 2002
she has collaborated as artistic director and performed for
Dzul Dance Company based at the NY Conservatory of Dance.
Since 1993, Miriam has performed with the American Dance
Theater and choreographed for The Mexican Cultural Festival
(Fashion Institute of Technology/NY), Museo del Bario (NYCity),
the American Indians Community House/NY, Merce Cunningham’s
Choreographers Project, Women Dance Makers Project (NY),
as well as internationally for the Mexican Festival of Contemporary
Dance, The Institute of Theatre of Barcelona/Spain, and the
Cultural Center of SP/Brazil. She has been a faculty member
at Fashion Institute of Technology, SC Governor’s School
for the Arts and Humanities, Paul Taylor at the School of
Performing Arts in NY City, Giselle School of Ballet/Portugal,
Village Gyrotonic/NY, Nevada Festival Ballet, Martha Graham
School’s Teen Program, and the Institute of Theater
of Barcelona/Spain. She was awarded a scholarship in 1992
as a technique demonstrator at the Martha Graham School of
Contemporary Dance. Ms. Barbosa has trained Russian Classical
Ballet with Mr. and Ms. Dokoudovsky in NY, and Ballet Ana
Pavlova in Brazil. She has taken USC Dance Company to perform
for the Piccolo Spoleto Festival in Charleston, Sumter Opera
House, South Carolina Dance Festival, Spanish Heritage Celebration
and the American College Dance Festival in Mississippi. Ms.
Barbosa has choreographed several major works, including “7
Deadly Sins” with live orchestra to music by Kurt Weill
and set designed by Nic Ularu and “Catharsis”-an
artistic collaboration with Argentinean Visual Artist Marcelo
Novo to music by Astor Piazzola, which has been awarded a
grant from the Sumter County Cultural Commission to be premiered
at the Patriot Hall Performing Arts Center. She has choreographed
for the “Brimming Tides” exhibition, inspired
by Brian Rutenberg, at the State Museum. She has performed
her duet from “Pandora’s Box” at the Piccolo
Spoleto and she has been invited to perform in Rome, Italy
in 2006. Recently, she has taught as guest artist in Europe
for the Lisbon Dance Co., the Conservatory of Dance in Lisbon
and the Ballet School Ginasiano in Porto/Portugal. She has
also received permission from the President Juliu Horvath
of Gyrotonic Headquarters to develop a choreographic work
on gyrotonic system of movement in collaboration with NY
choreographer Adriana Thompson to be presented at the Olympic
Auditorium of Rome/Italy in May 2008. Miriam has choreographed
for the Lisbon Dance Company in Europe and she has been part
of the professional dancer’s workshop with the Martha
Graham Co. in NY during the summer 07. Ms. Barbosa has been
awarded grants from USCeRA, USC College of Arts and Sciences,
SC Arts Commission, Arts Institute, Knight Foundation and
Time Warner to collaborate artistically with the Martha Graham
Center, ETV, and USC Dance Co. for an educational documentary
on the development of the masterpiece “Sketches from
Chronicle” choreographed by Martha Graham in 1936.
Most recently Miriam Barbosa has founded the SC Contemporary
Dance Co. to guest as a performer with the Martha Graham
solo from Chronicle at the Charlotte Dance Festival 07/NC.
She is grateful for collaborating in her recent choreographic
work for the USC Dance Co., “The Divine Comedy," with
guest choreographer Brenda Nieto and Scenic Designer/ USC
Theatre Professor Nic Ularu.
Stacey
Calvert
Distinguished Artist in Residence. Instructor of Ballet, Dance USC.
Soloist, NYC Ballet.
Stacey Calvert was born and raised in Columbia, South Carolina and began her ballet training at the Calvert-Brodie School of Dance, studying with her Mother and Godmother. In 1980, Ms. Calvert entered the School of American Ballet, the official school of the New York City Ballet—and remained there for three years. She joined New York City Ballet’s corp de ballet in 1983. In 1992, Ms. Calvert joined William Forsythe’s Frankfurt Ballet. She returned to New York City Ballet in the winter of 1993. Ms. Calvert was promoted to the rank of Soloist in 1994.
Since joining the Company, she has danced numerous featured roles including George Balanchine’s Apollo, Ballo della Regina, The Four Temperaments, The Nutcracker (Hot Chocolate), Stars and Stripes, Symphony in C, Tschaikovsky Piano Concerto No. 2, Western Symphony, and Who Cares?, as well as Jerome Robbins’ The Four Seasons (Winter) and Interplay. In addition, she has been featured in Peter Martins’ Ash and Barber Violin Concerto as well as William Forsythe’s Herman Schmerman. During the inaugural season of NYCB’s Diamond Project in 1992, Ms. Calvert originated a principal role in John Alleyne’s Bet Ann’s Dance. During the Company’s 1994 Diamond Project, she originated principal roles in Lynne Taylor-Corbett’s Chiaroscuro, John Alleyne’s The New Blondes, Trey McIntyre’s Steel and Rain, and Kevin O’Day’s Viola Alone...(with One Exception). For The Diamond Project in 1997, Ms. Calvert originated principal roles in O’Day’s Open Strings and Angelin Preljocaj’s La Stravaganza. In addition, she originated principal roles in Mr. O’Day’s Huoah, Dvorak Bagatelles and Badchonim. Ms. Calvert has danced in Europe with a touring group, and has travelled extensively in the United States and abroad with the New York City Ballet.
In the spring of 2006, 2007 and 2008, she presented, for USC, Ballet Stars of New York, with principal dancers from the NYC Ballet Company including Wendy Whelan, Albert Evans, Nilas Martins, Tom Gold, Nikolaj Hubbe, and Yvonne Borree and the USC Dance Company. The 2006 star-studded evening included Apollo, Agon, and Tarantella, all works by the legendary choreographer George Balanchine. This gala evening has become an annual event for the USC Board of Dance.
Kyra Strasberg
Distinguished Artist in Residence. Instructor of Ballet, Dance USC.
Principal,
Boston Ballet.
Kyra Strasberg is a former Principal dancer from the Boston Ballet, known for the artistry and human quality that she brought to the stage. Among her many roles are Odette/Odile, the Lilac fairy, Myrtha, the Sugar Plum Fairy, Medora, Cleopatra, and Fate in Choo San Goh’s Romeo and Juliet. Her Balanchine repertoire includes Diamonds, Emeralds, Rubies, Tzigane, Mozartiana, Serenade, Who Cares?, and Apollo among others. She has worked with Mark Morris, Twyla Tharp, Bebe Miller, Ben Stevenson, Lila York, and Suzanne Farrell. Her incredibly well-rounded background makes her fantastically suited to teach and coach our students. Through her rich past, Ms. Strasberg continues to bring much energy and excitement to the USC Dance Company. She is responsible for bringing in for the 2008-09 season Lila York’s modern classic, Celts.
Cindy Flach
Adjunct Dance Faculty - Jazz, Musical Theatre, West
African, Tap. BA, Webster University.
Cynthia Flach, is a nationally known choreographer of stage
musicals. She is a graduate of Webster University and has
worked extensively in the South and Mid-West. With over
125 stage musicals to her choreographic credit, she has
worked with summer stock, universities and community theatres.
She has been on the dance faculty at USC since 1988. Ms.
Flach has staged Pop Concerts and full stage productions
for the South Carolina Philharmonic. Cindy specializes in
Jazz, Musical Theatre, West African and Tap instruction.
Marissa Freeman
Adjunct Dance Faculty, Program Coordinator -SC
Dance Conservatory, SC Summer Dance Conservatory. BA,
Butler University.
Marissa was born and raised in Manhasset, NY. She studied
in NY with Irina Lebedeva, Kaleria Fedicheva, Svetlana
Caton-Noble and Ali Pourfarrokh. She graduated magna
cum laude with a BA in Dance from Butler University.
Ms Freeman
danced many principal and soloist roles with the Butler
Ballet. Upon graduation, she toured to St. Petersburg,
Russia, where she studied and performed with the Rimsky
Korsakov Conservatory, under the directorship of Nikita
Delgushin. She has danced professionally for the Eglevsky
Ballet of NY and Columbia City Ballet. She is currently
a ballet instructor and Program Coordinator for the USC
Dance Conservatory and South Carolina Summer Dance Conservatory.
Anna Dragoni-Logan
Adjunct Dance Faculty - Dance Appreciation, Ballet.
Born in Italy, Anna Dragoni-Logan brings 20 years of professional
experience in dance and theatre on stage, screen and television. An active member of Corps de Ballet International, certified
as a Ballet Teacher at the Royal Academy of Dance of London
(Elementary to professional levels), Ms Dragoni has studied,
also, with master teachers such as, Ivêtte Chauviré (Paris,
France – Classical Repertoire), Ricardo Nuñez
(Argentina – Classical Repertoire), Gianine Loringett
(France – Jazz), Celia Southern (Great Britain – Jazz),
Chuck Wilder (USA – Tap), Connie Spadanuta (USA – Tap),
Irina Ghrighebina (Russia – Character dance), Marise
Flasche (Teatro Piccolo di Milano – Mime), Clyde Barrett
(USA – Afro, Jazz), Arthur Turnball (Australia – Merce
Cunningham & Limon Method), Dan Wagoner (USA-Contemporary).
She also has received her BFA in performance and choreography
from Columbia College, Columbia, SC.
As a professional performer on the European stage she has
participated in the musicals Barnum and A Chorus Line (Sheila)
and in the plays: Miles Gloriosus, The Birds, The Player,
The Straw Hat, Deus Ex Machina, Some Like it Hot, to name
a few. She participated in various tour productions in Europe
and Australia. Her first visit to the United States was as
the Assistant Director and choreographer of the American
Tour Company production of A Chorus Line.
She has worked in film and television alongside of Oscar
winner
Murray Abrams, Vittorio Gassman, Alberto Sordi, and
Gigi Proietti.
Ms Dragoni is also a member of the South Carolina Shakespeare
Company; she has appeared in the productions: Julius Caesar
(Soothsayer), Macbeth (Witch), and The Man of La Mancha (The
Housekeeper).
She is the Italian instructor and official translator at
Language Espresso.
Dale Lam
Adjunct Dance Faculty - Jazz. Dale is the founder, artistic director and choreographer
of Columbia City Jazz Dance School and
Company, named "One of the Top 50 Dance
Companies in the US" by Dance Spirit
magazine. She has a BA in Theatre and Speech from
the University of South Carolina and received additional
theatrical training from
Jim Baffico of Carnegie-Melon and is now in her second year
on staff at the
University of South Carolina Dance Department. She received
extensive dance
training with Frank Hatchett at the Broadway Dance Center
in New York and continues to work with
top instructors from New York and California. Dale
has taught master classes at the Kiradjiev Cultural Center
in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, the American School in Singapore, and for the Singapore
Dance
Association at Lasalle College of the Arts.
She is in great demand as a choreographer and travels extensively
each year, setting a diverse body of original work throughout the country.
In addition, she
teaches master classes at studios and dance conventions across
the United States, has judged many dance
competitions including Star Systems Nationals in
Las Vegas, and had conducted several successful after-school
programs in
South Carolina.
Dale performed for the King of Norway during an overseas
tour of “Godspell”
and was a principal dancer during a European USO tour to
Turkey, Greece,
Spain and Italy. She was dance captain for the Southeastern
Theatre
Conference Summer Repertory in Fairfield, Tenn. and a principal
dancer in "
Hooray for Hollywood" at Carowinds. Dale was the head
of the jazz faculty for
the Myrtle Beach Dance Experience for two seasons and has
been featured in “Dance Spirit” and “Dance
Teacher” magazines
for her inspirational lyrical jazz choreography.
Brenda Nieto
Adjunct Dance Faculty - Contemporary Dance.
Brenda Nieto-Kirschbaum is an adjunct member of the USC Dance Program faculty, and former member of both the Martha Graham Dance Company and the National Ballet of Mexico. Born in Guanajuato Mexico, she began her dance education at the University of Guanajuato, studying Cuban Ballet Technique with Tulio de la Rosa and Graham Technique with Guadalupe Trejo, while performing with Foro Libre of Contemporary Dance. Brenda continued her dance studies at the School of National Ballet of Mexico under the direction of Guillermina Bravo. She was awarded a Coca-Cola scholarship to study at the Martha Graham School in New York City, where she completed the Professional Trainee Program. In NY she also was a member of Dzul Dance Company and Nina Buisson Contemporary Move, among others. As a former member of the Martha Graham Dance Co., she performed such Graham masterpieces as Primitive Mysteries, Sketches from Chronicle Maple Leaf Rag, The Owl and the Pussy Cat, Diversion of Angels, Appalachian Spring and Acts of Light. She has been invited as a guest artist of Casa de la Cultura Guanajuato State in Mexico and San Luisito Cultural Center in Mexico. Nieto’s choreography has been performed internationally and in the US since 1997. The Divine Comedy was her first collaboration (with Miriam Barbosa) as choreographer for the USC Dance Company. Brenda is also a certified instructor of the Gyrotonic® Expansion System of movement.
Eric Morris
Instructor/Production Manager, MFA Western Illinois
University
In his twenty-five years of professional theatre Eric has
taught, painted, assisted, designed and implemented production
management for trade shows, ballet, opera, regional theatre,
Off-Broadway, Broadway, universities and professional training
programs. He is a former recipient of the TCG/National Endowment
for the Arts Design Fellowship. His articles and stories
have appeared in Painter’s Journal, Business Lexington,
Sandhills Magazine, and others. In his spare time he writes
novels and makes music with his band The No Nos.
Kitty Magoffin Sutton
Adjunct Dance Faculty, Dance Appreciation
Kitty Magoffin Sutton graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in English from the University of South Carolina, where she was a Carolina Scholar and a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Omicron Delta Kappa, and Delta Delta Delta. She received her Juris Doctor from the University of South Carolina School of Law. While there, she clerked at the Fifth Circuit Solicitor's Office and for the House Judiciary Committee. She received a Master of Arts in English from the University of South Alabama. She was an attorney with the law firm of Helmsing, Lyons, Sims and Leach in Mobile, Alabama where her practice focused on litigation. More recently, she worked with the law firm of Pritchard and Elliott, LLC in Charleston, South Carolina. She has served on the faculty in the Department of English at the College of Charleston and at Trident Technical College and in the Writing Center at the Citadel. Kitty has been an Adjunct Professor in the Department of Theatre and Dance at the University of South Carolina and assisted in editing the textbook used in the instruction of Dance 101. She has two wonderful children, Jack (12) and Sarah (10).
Dr.
Michael James
Accompanist
Dr. Michael James has been a professional musician for over forty years. He studied piano and piano pedagogy with Ruth Slenczynska, Max Camp and David M. Ferguson. He performed as a soloist with the Southern Illinois University (Edwardsville) orchestra and the Belleville Philharmonic Orchestra (Belleville, IL) and taught piano and music theory in various colleges for thirteen years before beginning his doctoral program in piano pedagogy in 1986 at the University of South Carolina. Graduating with his D.M.A (1994), he went on to co-present at the 1998 and 1999 World Piano Pedagogy Conventions. Later these presentations became a two-part article, “Celebrating 100 Years of Piano Teaching in America,” published in American Music Teacher. Since 1993 James has focused on collaborating with dancers. In 2005 he performed the Gottschalk Grand Tarantella with the USC Orchestra, dancers Tom Gold (NYC Ballet soloist) and Sarah Coates. Currently, as the musician in the Dance Program at USC, he plays for classes, composes dance music, rehearses and performs with the dance company and teaches Music for Dancers. His other activities include playing for the Carolina Ballet and South Carolina Summer Dance Conservatory at Columbia, SC, teaching piano and training dance accompanists. In the past, he has played for the South Carolina Governor’s School for the Arts and Humanities, Dance Department of Columbia College (SC), the SERBA Festival (Greenville, SC 1998) and the Corps de Ballet National Meeting (Columbia College 2003). His sensitivity to dance movement and ability to collaborate in the classroom and on stage has inspired dancers throughout South Carolina. In 2005 he produced a recording, “Music for Ballet Class” with Professor Patty Graham (Columbia College). In 2008 one of his compositions, “Meditation,” was choreographed by Stephanie Wilkins and is now a part of the repertoire of the Power Company, a modern dance company centered in South Carolina and lead by modern dancer, Martha Brim.
Rona Avery
Administrative Specialist
Raised in an art and music family, Ms. Avery has an extended
history of administrative supports within the Arts. In her
earlier years she worked in the music industry and during
this time Rona studied Photography, Advertising Design and
Broadcasting at various Universities. She was the Assistant
in the Department of Continuing Education at Rhode Island
School of Design for 10 years. Rona then accepted a position
to the Department of Architecture for another four years as
the Assistant to the Department Head. From there she worked
for the award winning architect, Friedrich St.Florian, Professor,
RISD, Architecture and winner of the World War II Memorial
Design Competition. She managed Friedrich St.Florian’s
private practice as well as marketing and assisting the architect
with all administrative support for the WWII Memorial project.
Once the WWII Memorial project was under construction she
went to work for Brown University in the John Nicholas Brown
Center, an historic Brown family home left to the University.
Rona was the assistant to the Director, Assistant Director
and the Historic Site Manager. JNBC is partially a touring
museum which also holds events, lectures and exhibits. It
is also used for Graduate students studying “Public
Humanities.” In the Fall of 2006 she moved to Columbia,
SC where she is currently Administrative Specialist for the
Dance program, she assists with the daily operations of the
Dance program, under the Department of Theatre and Dance.
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