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Dance

Highlights

  1. Kyle Abraham Is Fully in His Feelings About Now

    In “Dear Lord, Make Me Beautiful,” an evening-length dance, the choreographer considers what scares him but also what it might feel like to have burdens lifted.

     By

    “This is the first time I’m trying to make a dance that is really rooted in how I feel at this moment,” Kyle Abraham said of “Dear Lord, Make Me Beautiful,” which will be at the Park Avenue Armory.
    “This is the first time I’m trying to make a dance that is really rooted in how I feel at this moment,” Kyle Abraham said of “Dear Lord, Make Me Beautiful,” which will be at the Park Avenue Armory.
    CreditElliott Jerome Brown Jr. for The New York Times

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Speaking in Dance

More in Speaking in Dance ›
  1. A Star Ballerina Steps Into an Art Gallery

    Sara Mearns’s long lines, from her feet to her expressive fingers, come to exquisite life in this duet, choreographed by Jodi Melnick.

     

    CreditMohamed Sadek for The New York Times
  2. Watch Three Dancers Pony Step Into the Sunset

    A jaunty trio prances across the stage in Pam Tanowitz’s new work for Little Island.

     

    CreditMohamed Sadek for The New York Times
  3. Watch a Sisterhood of Budding Ballerinas

    Five students from the School of American Ballet perform an excerpt from George Balanchine’s classic “Serenade.”

     

    CreditMohamed Sadek for The New York Times
  4. Watch a Tap Dance That Transcends Time

    For her improvised solo to Max Roach and Cecil Taylor, Ayodele Casel said “the way in is to honor what you’re hearing.”

     

    CreditFletcher Wolfe for The New York Times
  5. Alvin Ailey’s Silky Creatures of the Night

    Two dancers from the Ailey company perform part of “Night Creature” on the roof of the Whitney Museum, where the choreographer is the subject of a major exhibition.

     By Gia Kourlas and

    CreditMohamed Sadek for The New York Times
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  10. An Appraisal

    The Singular Force That Was Judith Jamison

    She was always a goddess of dance — even before her triumph in “Cry.” The Ailey star turned artistic director stretched like there was no tomorrow.

    By Gia Kourlas

     
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