DR. SCHAFFER & MR. STERN
PRESENT
WRITING IN THE SKY
As
co-directors of the Dr. Schaffer and Mr. Stern Dance Ensemble, Karl Schaffer
and Erik Stern make dance accessible and math fun – a feat the two
dazzling dancer/choreographers will prove on Friday and Saturday, February
27-28, with a presentation of their unique show, Writing in the Sky, at the
Mello Center in Watsonville.
In
addition to their work as dancers and choreographers, Mr. Stern is an
award-winning Professor of Dance at Weber State University in Utah, and Dr.
Schaffer is one of five local artists holding the title of 2004 Artist in
Residence at the Henry J. Mello Center for the Performing Arts.
Writing
In The Sky, a celebration of 17 years of the Dr. Schaffer and Mr. Stern Dance
Ensemble, will feature Schaffer and Stern as well as special guest Gregg
Lizenbery.
Since
its creation in 1987, the Dr. Schaffer and Mr. Stern Dance Ensemble has toured
throughout the U.S. and Canada; Karl and Erik recently returned from a
two-month North American tour, including performances at the Kennedy Center in
Washington, D.C. and the Annenberg Center in Philadelphia. Their 1990 show, "Two Guys Dancing
About Math," has been performed over 500 times.
The
entertaining duo now returns to where it all began – Santa Cruz County
– for a retrospective concert at the Mello Center. Planned as a final home season concert
before Mr. Stern takes a professional hiatus, the show celebrates 17 years of
engaging and thought-provoking dance for all ages: a cornucopia of intelligent
fun for adults and children alike.
Writing
in the Sky gathers the best of the ensemble’s imaginative,
mathematically-inspired work into one evening. Works to be presented include:
~
The Flying Machine, a dance exploring Chinese legends about the origins of
flight as told through the use of oversized Tangrams (a Chinese puzzle form).
~
Signs, in which Erik and Karl demonstrate the all-too-human habit of making
symbols out of everything.
~
Faux Paws, a video dance for eight hands with luscious symmetries and
surprises.
~
Lost Soles, a piece in the ensemble’s tradition of tap dances for the
thinking person.
Other
dances include the imaginative Shadowed Flight; the magical humor of
Stationary; and the lyrical duet, Wind Tunnel. Not to be missed is the ensemble’s On the Problem of
the Rotation of a Solid Body about a Fixed Point, which San José Mercury
critic Judith Green called "a trio for two men and a basketball." The pieces are tied together by
playful interludes involving audience interaction.
Schaffer
notes, "Within this concert we have incorporated music and choreography
from several important collaborators." He acknowledges Scott Kim, the puzzle-master columnist for
Discover Magazine; Rick Walker, a founding architect of the world beat movement
and past member of Tao Chemical and Worlds Collide; and musician Jack Spence,
who died tragically in 2003.
Karl Schaffer, Ph.D., teaches math at De Anza College in Cupertino, California as well as dancing and choreographing professionally. Erik Stern teaches dance at Weber State University in Ogden, Utah; he received the Weber State Endowed Scholar/ Artist award for 1999-2002 and has an MFA in dance from the California Institute for the Arts. He performed with Tandy Beal and Company for ten years. Gregg Lizenbery, co-choreographer of the dance Shadowed Flight, is an internationally acclaimed dancer who chairs the dance department at the University of Hawaii in Honolulu.
For
more about the Dr. Schaffer and Mr. Stern Ensemble and their classroom
activities for teaching math and the performing arts, visit their web sites:
http://www.schafferstern.org and http://www.mathdance.org
Bring
the family to Writing in the Sky and come early on February 27 and 28 to enjoy
an interactive lobby display featuring math marvels and activities, puzzles and
refreshments, from 6 PM to 7:30 each evening.
WRITING
IN THE SKY
Friday
& Saturday, February 27 & 28, 7:30 PM
Admission:
$15 Adults, $12 Seniors/Students
$10
Children 12 and under
Tickets:
PVPAA (831) 763-4047
(The Mello Center is at the corner of East Beach and Lincoln Streets in Watsonville.)
Presented
by the Pajaro Valley Performing Arts Associations’s Artist in Residence
Program
Writing
in the Sky is funded in part by the Cultural Council of Santa Cruz County. The Dr. Schaffer and Mr. Stern Dance
Ensemble has received funding from the National Endowment for the Arts and the
California Arts Council. The Artist in Residence Program at the Mello Center is
funded in part by grants from The Community Foundation of Santa Cruz County and
Granite Construction.
“…hilarious, top-notch entertainment that will make you pause to question both their genius and their sanity”
– Honolulu Advertiser
“…that delectable find – low tech, homespun performances built with intellectual rigor, glinting invention and offbeat wit” – Hayward Daily Review