Tag Archive | "reality dance show"

Dance on TV: Is it Hindering or Helping the Art Form?


By Stephanie Wolf.

It’s no longer surprising to turn on the television during primetime and come across a reality show with a dance-centric theme. Whether a competition series, a behind-the-scenes exposé or an awards show, television’s dance offerings have multiplied greatly over the last decade. While there are obvious advantages to the mainstream exposure, the repercussions that may come from such a Hollywood-ized vehicle cannot be overlooked. As the dance artists living out the reality of the profession, we have to ask, do the pros outweigh the cons?

Tapper, choreographer and director Jason Samuels Smith believes television is an advantageous outlet for dance. He has choreographed and performed on several programs, including Fox’s So You Think You Can Dance and ABC’s Dancing with the Stars. Because of the tremendous exposure he receives on these shows, he says he’ll continue to work in television. “I think the exposure is the key component for these mediums and without them we wouldn’t reach the same amount of people,” explains Smith.

Established choreographer and dancer Jimmy Locust—who has performed with recording artists like Paula Abdul, Janet Jackson and Michael Jackson—is no stranger to dancing in front of a camera. He agrees that television and film is an effective way for dance to expand its audience scope. However, he can’t deny that he’s disappointed in the way dance is often portrayed on TV.

Jason Samuels Smith

Jason Samuels Smith. Photo by Matthew Murphy.

“In my career…dance was always kind of looked at as crème de la crème…They put a lot of effort into presenting it,” says Locust. Now, he turns on the television, catching snippets of some dance reality shows, and finds himself disheartened by the amplification of negative motivational tools directed towards young dancers. There is a “belittlement to the dancer on the show,” he expresses. Locust understands ratings are the driver behind this. Television viewers love drama, and will come back week after week for it. Yet, he feels all of this often-scripted mayhem can befuddle the actual art.

This is the very reason Locust decided to create his own reality series, Locust Under 5, a web-based show that takes viewers into the classroom at the Locust Performing Arts Center. He’s hoping to use cameras to send a positive message about how dance can empower kids and help them grow into strong individuals.

There’s also this notion of fame. In an era of reality television, anyone can become a star. Many contestants from competition series leave the show not with aspirations of dance, but aspirations of being famous. “The [television] industry takes the dance bug out of them,” says Locust. Yet, Smith doesn’t think television is at the source of this shift in artistic priorities. He assures that true artists will continue to pursue and hone their craft, while those who seek out fame solely will use any means to obtain it.

Smith acknowledges this exposure, whether positive or negative, doesn’t necessarily translate to getting more butts in the seats for live dance. He says, “I think [these shows] encourage people to be aware that dance exists, but it doesn’t necessarily encourage that audience to support live dance performances.” Therefore, he encourages dance professionals to push harder and find new ways to promote and cross-promote live performances to different audiences.

Dancer and Choreographer Jimmy Locust

Jimmy Locust. Photo by Jim Kahnweiler

Los Angeles Ballet has embraced dance on television and decided to see how it could work the growing interest to its favor. In 2012, Thordal Christensen and Colleen Neary, the artistic leaders of the fledging company, commissioned works from two popular, LA-based SYTYCD choreographers, Sonya Tayeh and Stacey Tookey, for the NextWave LA series. While both choreographers’ pieces received less than rave reviews from the Los Angeles Times, Christensen and Neary’s efforts to perhaps appeal to a different type of audience are noteworthy, especially considering LA’s commercial-saturated dance scene.

Since dance has exploded onto primetime and cable networks, studio enrollment is up and more boys are getting involved with dance. And several of these shows have opened up a plethora of opportunities for the next generation of dancers, launching the careers of many young talents. “Overall it’s a positive spring board for the dance community,” says Locust.

This fad isn’t likely going anywhere any time soon. In the future, Smith envisions seeing a larger variety of shows to feature the abilities of both amateur and professional dancers. He’s hopeful the tap community will gain more prevalence on these programs, shaking up the content and making things really interesting. Additionally, he’d like to see “more homegrown grassroots programming that really features the current and classic styles that are making an impact in the world of dance today.”

In conclusion, whether reality television is helping or hindering the progression of dance is not a black-and-white issue. The ever-increasing popularity of this type of programming makes it that much more important for the dance artists to look at these shows with a critical yet constructive eye. Yes, drama makes for good television—no one can deny that—but dancers, directors and choreographers must take into account what it is they hope to create from putting dance on air. Do they want to make good TV or do they want to make good art?

Photo (top): A Contestant shows off her moves at the Los Angeles, CA auditions for So You Think You Can Dance, Season 10. © 2013 Fox Broadcasting Co. Photo by Beth Dubber/FOX

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Dance on TV: What’s on?


By Stephanie Wolf.

We love it, we hate it, we love to hate on it…Dance is popping up all over the television stratosphere and everyone has plenty to say about it. This spring is chock full of dance-centric programming. Here are some of this season’s offerings, proving that America is thirsting to see more dance on the boob tube.

So You Think You Can Dance

Last summer, America picked ballet dancers Chehon Wespi-Tschopp and Eliana Girard as their Season 9 winners. Now, auditions are already underway for the tenth season of Fox’s reality competition So You Think You Can Dance. Dancers from around the country and a variety of different dance backgrounds are leaving it all on the stage in the hopes that they’ll be crowned “America’s Favorite Dancer”.

Season 10 returns to the small screen this summer.

Dance Moms

Now in its third season, the reality series Dance Moms is still going strong. Abby Lee Miller’s style of ‘tough love’ teaching isn’t for everyone, but the ratings are showing that viewers come back for more of her antics each week. The series follows the drama and dance happening at Miller’s competitive dance school in Pittsburgh, PA. It even inspired a spin-off series, set in Miami at Victor Smalley and Angel Armas’ Stars Dance Studio.

Dance Moms airs on Lifetime Tuesdays at 9/8c.

So You Think You Can Dance, Melanie Moore and Cyrus Spencer

Cyrus Spencer and Melanie Moore dance in Season 9 of SYTYCD. ©2012 FOX Broadcasting Co. Photo by Mike Yarish

Breaking Pointe

Breaking Pointe premiered last May on the CW Network and, despite low ratings, returns this summer for a second season. It’s a reality series that promises to provide an inside glimpse into the elite world of professional ballet, highlighting Salt Lake City’s Ballet West.

The first season was heavier on the drama rather than the dancing, but Season 2 is rumored to deliver new ‘characters’ and more insight into the rigors of a professional ballet career.

Dancing with the Stars

ABC’s smash hit reality series Dancing with the Stars returns for its sixteenth season Monday, March 18, 2013. The network has yet to announce which TV personalities, celebrities, athletes and singers/musicians will be dancing for America’s votes this season—you can actually visit the website and contribute your thoughts on who you think should have a chance at the big disco ball.

Recently, the show has expanded its dance genres to reach beyond the ballroom staples with styles like Bollywood, ‘Freestyle’, the Hustle, Jazz and even Bhangra; thus giving the show a more SYTYCD-esque feel.

Bunheads

With witty writing by Amy Sherman-Palladino and quick dialogue delivery from Broadway veteran Sutton Foster, ABC Family’s Bunheads is a surprisingly funny and interesting show. Sherman-Palladino builds an odd, insular world in Paradise, CA, where the residents are a little loopy: your ballet teacher might accidently spray you with mace, the whole town comes out for trivia night and the local barista takes hours to make your latte. You’ll see many familiar faces from Sherman-Palladino’s previous quick-witted series, Gilmore Girls. The series doles out plenty of snarky lines that are often pulled from pop culture, politics, and literature as well as well choreographed dance sequences. ABC Family just aired its “Winter Finale”, but all the episodes can be seen online at http://beta.abcfamily.go.com/shows/bunheads.

Dance Academy

This teen-oriented, scripted Australian drama can be caught this spring on TeenNick or you can catch up with all of the seasons on Netflix. The show is about Australian teenaged dancers attending the prestigious National Academy of Dance. The characters come from varying backgrounds and dance experience, making an eclectic group of individuals that become quick friends. A guilty pleasure for sure, the show has an abundance of dancing to counteract the romantic and friendship entanglements. The cast and crew just wrapped on filming the third season, which is set to premiere in Australia in mid-2013.

Photo (top): Tom Green dancing as ‘Sammy’ in Dance Academy Season 2. Photo courtesy of ABC TV Australia.

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They’ve Got All The Right Moves


Dance Informa was invited to take a dance class with Travis Wall, Teddy Forrance, Nick Lazzarini, and Kyle Robinson of Shaping Sound to promote the July 31 release of their new weekly reality dance show All The Right Moves.

By Tara Sheena.

Travis Wall is a visual musician, and he will be the first to tell you so. “I feel I take music and I shape sound. My musicality…was always what I was best at. So, I ran with that,” he confidently tells me in a packed studio at Broadway Dance Center last Monday evening. Thus, his company Shaping Sound was born out of this desire to control music with nothing else but the human body. “I feel like I am a musician, but I don’t play an instrument, I play my body,” he says.

Other musicians in this symphony of movers are the three co-founders of Shaping Sound: Teddy Forrance, Nick Lazzarini, and Kyle Robinson. Their new show on Oxygen, All The Right Moves, which starting airing last week, profiles their journey of running their dance company from the inside out. Rehearsals, performances, and drama can and will happen.

“I’ve always said we should have our own T.V. show,” Wall quips, “I was like, ‘This is our opportunity.’” After shopping the idea around to a few networks, Oxygen jumped at the show. The deal subsequently closed on January 2, 2012. By February, camera crews were hard at work filming the newly birthed company in rehearsal, and continued filming until just last week. “Everything that we did is current for our audience,” Wall revealed. “It’s not like, ‘Oh, we filmed this six months ago…It’s current with what we’re doing as a dance company, so it’s good.’”

This dance company is already a force to be reckoned with, despite the fact that the company has only had a few official performances. With a roster of artists ranging from So You Think You Can Dance alums (including Season 8 winner, Melanie Moore) and the best and brightest of the commercial world (some of the dancers having worked with Adele and Lady Gaga), it’s no wonder when it came time to cast his company, Wall went straight to his group of talented friends.

“It’s why we started Shaping Sound. We wanted to give our friends jobs,” Wall said. “There’s not really an outlet for [commercial contemporary dancers] past things like So You Think You Can Dance, so we wanted to give dancers an afterlife.”

And, putting your friends together proved to be a perfect situation for Wall, adding it was a dream to work with them everyday in the studio, especially when he was used to choreographing by himself for so long. “The [choreographic] process with the dance company is very different and I learned a lot about it,” he stated.

It helped that most of the dancers had worked with him in other contexts before, whether it was a Dancing with the Stars gig or onstage at a convention, so they were already familiar with the type of movement style he wanted.  “They know what to do and where to go,” he says of his dancers, “It’s easier to clean and to get what I want.”

And, he wants a lot. Wall has large aspirations for Shaping Sound; make that, arena-sized. He sees the same popularity demanded by pop stars in a 20,000-seat concert venue for his dancers. “We could go on tour and have thousands and thousands of people scream our name because we are dancers. Not singers. Not actors. Dancers. And, that’s what I want for Shaping Sound,” he states with pure enthusiasm.

Well, if anyone can do it, it’s Travis Wall and this team of talented artists.

Catch All The Right Moves every Tuesday night on Oxygen.

Photo: Travis Wall, Teddy Forrance, Nick Lazzarini and Kyle Robinson from All The Right Moves. Photo by Andrew Eccles, Oxygen Media

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SYTYCD’s Nigel Lythgoe Collaborates with Son Simon and Ovation TV for New Series ‘A Chance to Dance’


By Stephanie Wolf.

As the dance community continues to debate over how to bring dance to a larger audience, some individuals are making strong efforts to etch the art form’s way into mainstream culture. With hit television shows like ABC’s Dancing with the Stars and FOX’s So You Think You Can Dance, the average Jane and Joe are becoming interested and gaining awareness of the blood, sweat, and tears that dancers pour into the profession. Starting this summer, Ovation TV – the nation’s only “multi-platform network” devoted entirely to arts culture – is taking this cause to the next level. In collaboration with television juggarnauts, Simon and Nigel Lythgoe, Ovation is gearing up to premiere a brand new kind of dance on television experience called A Chance to Dance.

Excited to be an integral part of arts advocacy in America, Ovation’s Senior Vice President of Programming Kris Slava claims that A Chance to Dance will further prove “how art makes for compelling TV with mass audience appeal.” Slava is also “jazzed” to work with two of television’s most recognizable reality TV personalities, siting Simon and Nigel’s combined commitment to the arts and “a track record for making addictive TV.”

Michael Nunn and William Trevitt

The feeling is mutual. “Simon and I are thrilled to be working with Ovation, a network that truly speaks to our artistic passions,” says Nigel Lythgoe. He and his son Simon have a close relationship and have been working together for over 20 years. They have already experienced huge television and ratings success with shows like American Idol and So You Think You Can Dance. Now, they plan to use their respective production companies, Nigel Lythgoe Productions (NLP) and Legacy Productions, to continue to “tap into an insatiable craving for dance on television.”

However, A Chance to Dance is different from any other dance series currently on television, offering a documentary feel versus the reality show competition formula Americans have grown accustomed to. It follows former Royal Ballet dancers Michael Nunn and William Trevitt of BalletBoyz as they audition hopeful dancers, narrow down the talent, and launch an American dance company. “The show is based on exactly what [Nunn and Trevitt] do for a living,” explains Simon.

Simon met Nunn and Trevitt a few years ago through a mutual friend, while visiting North London. He had the pleasure of observing a BalletBoyz rehearsal and says, “I knew instantly they were something very special.” And special they are…they have experienced great success around the world, but have yet to tap into American talent. The idea for the series came from Nunn and Trevitt, but incorporating the Lythgoes and their years of television expertise will surely help make the show a huge success.

Dancers audition for the company.

Every episode will be unique, showcasing the very real “trials and tribulations of forming a dance company under extreme conditions.” Viewers will witness the two work with “a limited amount of time and resources” to nurture young, talented dancers and produce a final performance.

The series starts with Nunn and Trevitt scouring the country for dancers. Dancers will go through a rigorous audition process, without the typical glamour of a series produced in a television show. If the dancers show promise in the open auditions throughout the country then they will move on to New York City, where they will be put to the test with an “intensive dance boot camp.” From this crop of dancers, Nunn and Trevitt will select twelve to perform in a finale gala, a charity event for the arts. Out of these twelve individuals, only eight will tour with the BalletBoyz. The final eight will make up the American company, which will be based out of Manhattan and perform a variety of dance styles all over the country.

Simon speaks passionately about furthering the arts in America because, ultimately, all parties involved hope to see more results from the show than merely high ratings. “Sadly in these tough times, the first thing that gets cut is arts funding. I’m hoping this show will highlight how talented American dancers are and ensure the next generation has the same opportunities for success.” Through series like A Chance to Dance, as well as organizations such as the Actor’s Fund and Dizzy Feet Foundation, Simon hopes to help the arts continue to thrive. But he also emphasizes the potential of a united front within the dance community. “Combining strategies, staying ahead of the curve, using every means possible to promote companies through new media…and old media — it’s the only way dancing will flourish. The public needs to be informed about the arts in order to watch and appreciate dance.”

A Chance to Dance will premiere on August 17, 2012 on Ovation TV. For more information, visit Ovation at ovationtv.com.

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