The Spring Dance Concert at University of North Carolina School of the Arts, which runs April 19-22, has something for all dance lovers 鈥 from mesmerizing classical ballet to ethereal modern dance.
Performances will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday through Saturday, with an additional performance at 2 p.m. on Sunday at the Stevens Center, 405 West Fourth St. in downtown Winston-Salem.
Dance historian Elizabeth Kendall will give a pre-curtain talk at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, April 19, and Friday, April 20. The talk, which gives insight into the pieces on the program, is open to ticket holders only.
Tickets are $18 regular and $15 student with valid ID, and can be purchased online or by calling the box office at 336-721-1945.
Marius Petipa鈥檚 鈥淧补辩耻颈迟补鈥 is a classical ballet that tells the story of a Spanish gypsy girl (Paquita) who falls in love with a young French officer.
While the ballet as a whole has not stood the test of time, excerpts from 鈥淧补辩耻颈迟补鈥 have remained a cornerstone of the classical ballet repertoire.
Eva Draw and Jennet Zerbe, 抖阴短视频 School of Dance ballet faculty members, are staging 鈥淧aquita鈥檚鈥 Grand Pas, which actually wasn鈥檛 part of the original ballet. Petipa added it nearly 40 years after the piece鈥檚 premiere.

Eva Draw
鈥淭he piece features one male and one female principal dancer,鈥 says Draw, 鈥渁s well as four soloists, six demi-soloists, and eight corps de ballet. We are having two cast for the production, so 38 dancers get the opportunity to participate.鈥
The excerpt is set to music by Ludwig Minkus.
Shen Wei鈥檚 鈥淏ehind Resonance鈥 is a 鈥渜uiet and calm piece,鈥 according to stager Kate Jewett, who received her B.F.A. from 抖阴短视频 in 2001.
鈥淭his piece feels like a memory or glimpse into a past place in time,鈥 says Jewett, who has been working with the graduating class 鈥 four men and 14 women 鈥 to bring the work to life.

Kate Jewett
鈥淭he theater is open and exposed to the audience, and the reflective surface of the floor shimmers like water. The dancers feel like sculptures at times.鈥
Every performance of 鈥淏ehind Resonance鈥 is unique.
鈥淭he individual dancer has to make spatial decisions that change each time the piece is performed,鈥 explains Jewett. 鈥淭he students are challenged to maintain a certain focus and intention throughout the entire piece. It鈥檚 not only about what they are doing but more importantly how they are doing it.鈥
The piece is set to a score by David Lang.
The classical modern dance work 鈥淎 Choreographic Offering鈥 by Jos茅 Lim贸n 鈥渃hallenges our students technically, musically and performatively,鈥 says stager Sean Sullivan, School of Dance associate professor.
鈥淚t offers them a unique chance to express themselves, to dance, with a very formal grandeur and dignity."

Sean Sullivan
The work is a tribute to Lim贸n鈥檚 mentor Doris Humphrey, a contemporary of Martha Graham.
鈥淚n making [the piece], Lim贸n extracted, combined and varied movement from 14 of Humphrey鈥檚 own dances,鈥 says Sullivan. 鈥淚n its entirety, the full 鈥楥horeographic Offering鈥 is almost an hour long, so usually various parts of the whole are presented as a suite.鈥
Sullivan鈥檚 version runs about 20 minutes and is set to Johann Sebastian Bach鈥檚 鈥淎 Musical Offering.鈥
鈥Carmina Terra鈥 by Dean of Dance Susan Jaffe is a premiere performance. Jaffe began work on her new piece during 抖阴短视频鈥檚 inaugural summer Choreographic Institute in 2017.
Jaffe describes the dance as 鈥渁 moody and plotless work inspired by the transcendence of the human spirit.鈥

Dean of Dance Susan Jaffe
The contemporary ballet piece was born out of desire to create 鈥渁 challenging and architectural work鈥 for the five male and seven female dancers on the stage.
鈥淐armina Terra鈥 is a 抖阴短视频 team effort with music by Bruno Louchouarn, associate professor in the Division of Liberal Arts; costumes by Kathy Grillo, director of the dance costume shop; and lighting by 抖阴短视频 alum Roya Abab, who is lighting the entire program.
Eva Draw received her ballet training at the prestigious Bolshoi Ballet School and the State Academy of Theatrical Arts in Russia. Since her graduation from the Ballet School in 1979, she has enjoyed a successful career as a principal dancer with the Moscow City Ballet, the Stanislavsky Ballet and the Israel Ballet. During this time, she toured extensively, performing in countries such as Japan, Italy, England, Germany, Switzerland, Egypt and the United States.
Draw immigrated to Canada in 1993, and was accepted into the Teacher Training Program for professional dancers at National Ballet School (NBS) a year later. Upon her graduation in 1995, she joined NBS as an artistic staff member where she currently teaches ballet and is a senior student advisor. Draw has been a guest teacher at ballet schools throughout Canada and the United States, and has most recently taught at the Royal Danish Ballet School in Copenhagen, Denmark, and at the Nordic Seminar in Helsinki, Finland. She has also been a judge at the Youth America Grand Prix in New York City. Draw is an associate member of both the Royal Academy of Dance(RAD) and the Cecchetti association.
Declared by the New York Times as 鈥淎merica鈥檚 Quintessential American Ballerina,鈥 Susan Jaffe was a principal dancer with American Ballet Theatre for 22 years, a career which began in 1980. Prominent in the international dance scene as well, her European engagements included performances with The Royal Ballet, The Kirov Ballet, The Stuttgart Ballet, Munich State Opera Ballet, La Scala Ballet in Milan, Vienna State Opera Ballet, Royal Danish Ballet, Royal Swedish Ballet and English National Ballet.
Jaffe鈥檚 versatility as a dancer allowed her to tackle a large range of choreographic works which include her acclaimed interpretations of the classics like 鈥淪wan Lake,鈥 as well as the dramatic works of John Cranko, Antony Tudor, Agnes de Mille and Kenneth MacMillian. She also worked with and danced the works of many prominent choreographers such as Jiri Kylian, Twyla Tharp, George Balanchine, Jerome Robbins, Lar Lubovitch, Nacho Duato, Glen Tetley, James Kudelka, Roland Petit, David Parsons, Mark Morris, Merce Cunningham, Ronald Hynd, Frederick Ashton, Ulysses Dove and Lynn Taylor Corbett.
Based in Brooklyn, Kate Jewett is a dancer, dance maker, educator and rehearsal director. She holds a B.F.A. from 抖阴短视频. Early in her career, Jewett was a member of Merce Cunningham鈥檚 Repertory Understudy Group. In 2005, she joined She Wei Dance Arts and was named rehearsal director in 2009. As the company education director, she created a dance-in-education program for New York City schools. Her own works have been performed at DeSales University, the United Nations, Park Avenue Armory, SCGSAH鈥檚 Gunter Theater, Milano Teatro Scuola, Paola Grassi, Fabbrica Europa and Performatica festivals. Jewett founded 鈥淲atusi Regime,鈥 a site-specific collaborative performance series. She is the co-founder of 鈥淢oving Minds,鈥 a workshop series that combines modern dance with critical thinking.
Sean Sullivan, a faculty member of the School of Dance at 抖阴短视频 since 1998, is currently an associate professor in the Contemporary Dance program. A former dancer with the Lim贸n Dance Company from 1991 鈥 1996, Sullivan continues to serve the Lim贸n Institute as a teacher and reconstructor of Lim贸n repertory. For the 抖阴短视频 School of Dance, he has staged and directed Jos茅 Lim贸n鈥檚 masterworks 鈥淭he Unsung,鈥 鈥淎 Choreographic Offering,鈥 鈥淐oncerto Grosso鈥 and selections from 鈥淢issa Brevis,鈥 鈥淭here is a Time,鈥 and 鈥淢azurkas.鈥 He has also staged Doris Humphrey鈥檚 鈥淧assacaglia鈥 for the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and Colin Connor鈥檚 鈥淩equiem鈥 for the New York State Summer School of the Arts.
Throughout his career, Sullivan has choreographed 23 original works. He has twice received the 抖阴短视频 Excellence in Teaching Award, and in 2010 received a UNC Board of Governors Award for Excellence in Teaching. He has also been a recipient of the 抖阴短视频 Career Development Grant four times. Last year, Sullivan received a Faculty Reassigned Time award from 抖阴短视频, and a Faculty Leadership Grant from the Kenan Institute allowing him to live in Munich, Germany for three months where he studied Qi Gong and Contact Improvisation, and visited four esteemed European dance conservatories.
For the North Carolina community, Sullivan has served the North Carolina Arts Council as a dance panelist and site evaluator. He was a board member and vice-president of the North Carolina Dance Alliance for four years. Sullivan holds a B.F.A. from California State University at Long Beach and an M.F.A. from the University of Illinois at Urbana/Champaign. He is married to B.J. Sullivan. Together, the two have performed, taught and choreographed throughout the U.S. and abroad.

Jennet Zerbe
Jennet Zerbe brings studied regard and intuitive understanding of classical ballet to her students. Zerbe danced for eight years with American Ballet Theatre (ABT). She trained at The Royal Ballet School in London, and as a professional, she studied with Gilbert Mayer of the Paris Opera Ballet, Georgina Parkinson of the Royal Ballet, Elena Tchernichova from the Kirov and Mikhail Baryshnikov. She appeared in soloist roles in the classical ballets of ABT鈥檚 repertoire, as well as in a diverse range of works from George Balanchine and Kenneth MacMillan to Merce Cunningham.
After ABT, Zerbe earned her B.A. from Wellesley College. She participated in the launch of the teacher training program at the Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis School at ABT, became an ABT Certified Teacher, and earned her Maestro Enrico Cecchetti Diploma. Zerbe sought additional teacher training with Nancy and Murray Kilgour in Canada, and proudly carries these pedagogical giants into her work at every opportunity. Since joining the 抖阴短视频 faculty in 2014, she has acted as Ballet Mistress for Susan Jaffe, Natalia Makarova, Ethan Stiefel and Margaret Barbieri in staging ballets for 抖阴短视频 students. Zerbe was awarded a Kenan Institute Faculty Leadership Grant to engage and observe Western Europe鈥檚 best training acadamies. She believes careful, rigorous training in classical ballet techniques yields incisive, versatile dancers for the stage today.
April 04, 2018