Love Lost & Found Program III Dance NOW! Miami Season Finale
Two world premieres at Dance NOW! Miami's Love Lost & Found Program III, Friday, May 8 in Lauderhill, and Saturday, May 9 in Aventura
Date & Time
Price
$20 - $50
Venue
(954) 777-2055
Event Description
Love really is the pulse that creates the rhythm for our human – and animal – lives. Sometimes it slips away, sometimes it is found again, but love in the end is what brings us meaning. For their season finale, Dance NOW! Miami’s (DNM) Program III features two world premieres that examine this universal emotion, and three repertory works. May 8 is in Broward with second night in Miami-Dade at the Aventura Arts & Culture Center.
The first world premiere is "Love-less: Dance of the Last Moho braccatus" is a new contemporary ballet from Co-Artistic Director Hannah Baumgarten, inspired by the fate of a small black-and-yellow Hawaiian songbird facing extinction due to habitat destruction and climate change. It is a real story of paradise lost, of true love, and ultimately of the frailty of the world. The piece includes an original score based on the bird’s actual calls by Italian composer Federico Bonacossa, costumes from Haydee and Maria Morales, a dramatic set inspired by the species tree tops existence from designer Bruce F. Brown and video art by Co-Artistic Director Diego Salterini.
The program’s other world premiere is "Traces,"" choreographed by Salterini and featuring the full company of ten dancers. It “traces” the universal search for love, belonging and self-discovery, through one woman’s journey. The evening also includes "Deco-de, the first full-stage production of Salterini’s homage to the Art Deco design and architecture, a Miami signature style, commissioned for its international centennial.
“When times are tough, I have often returned to nature for inspiration and renewal,” said Baumgarten. ”In my new piece, I’m trying to understand how we all cope with unexpected loss and face our own extinction. Added Salterini, “We dance and we create, to bring love and real emotions to the stage, and to our audiences."