FIRE ISLAND DANCE FESTIVAL returned to Fire Island Pines for its 18th awe-inspiring edition, raising a record-breaking $374,260 through three weekend performances. FIRE ISLAND DANCE FESTIVAL 18, the hottest charity event of the season in the Pines, was presented July 20-22 and was produced by and benefitted Dancers Responding to AIDS, a program of Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS.
Humorist, actor, and writerMo Rocca hosted the event, which featured a diverse mix of world-renowned and emerging dancers, dance companies and choreographers. The program celebrated an eclectic array of ballet, modern, tap, hip-hop, Broadway, and contemporary dance performed outdoors at a landmark bay-front home against the stunning backdrop of the Great South Bay.
The festival included five new works, choreographed by Rob Ashford, Monica Bill Barnes, Rennie Harris, Edwaard Liang, and Lizzie MacKenzie.
This year’s fundraising total surpassed the previous record, set just last year, by more than $30,000. In its 18 incarnations, FIRE ISLAND DANCE FESTIVAL has raised more than $2.9 million.
“It doesn’t seem that long ago that we first came out to Fire Island Pines and raised $8,000 with 10 performers on a make-shift dance floor,” said Denise Roberts Hurlin, founding director of Dancers Responding to AIDS. "And the reasons we do it today are just as strong and resonant as they were 18 years ago. We’re fighting to end the stigma that surrounds this disease and to make sure that no one facing these intense personal challenges does so in isolation or shame.”
This year’s festival featured a piece created especially for the event by Rob Ashford, the Tony Award-winning choreographer and director whose work currently can be seen on Broadway in the hit revival of Evita. The piece illuminated the evolution of a couple’s relationship, seen through pairs of dancers reflecting their youthful courtship, their passion for each other and a period of pent-up tension. The dance featured Broadway performers Helen Anker, Marty Lawson, Mayumi Miguel, Karine Plantadit, Charlie Sutton, Ryan Watkinson, Charlie Williams, and Samantha Zack.
Fire Island Dance Festival 18 also included these performances:
Ballet Hispanico debuted “A Verme,” an intimate pas de deux choreographed by Liang. “A Verme” translates from Spanish as “to see me,” and with a swelling string-based instrumental, the couple reflected the title with intensity.David Grenke Performance Projects delivered a reconstructed look at “Vespers,” danced for the first time by two men and exploring the emotional intensity of one man deeply mourning the loss of another.The Bang Group and Eric Bourne of Parsons Dance presented a special performance July 20 as part of an exclusive festival kick-off event for Leadership Supporters at Whyte Hall.
Rocca, a regular on “CBS News Sunday Morning,” star of Cooking Channel's “My Grandmother's Ravioli” and a featured panelist on NPR's hit weekly quiz show “Wait, Wait...Don't Tell Me,” brought a healthy dose of wit and satire to the festival.
Rocca explained he first became a lover of dance as a teenage usher at The National Theatre in Washington, DC, during what he was sure was “the third national tour of Cats.” Demonstrating nimbleness and lightness on his feet, Rocca ran through an agile series of Jellicle dance moves from the show. And later he shared his own dance trick: a one-handed cartwheel while holding a glass of water.
FIRE ISLAND DANCE FESTIVAL 18 was sponsored by The New York Times and United Airlines.
Dancers Responding to AIDS, founded in 1991 by former Paul Taylor Dance Company members Denise Roberts Hurlin and Hernando Cortez, relies on the extraordinary compassion and efforts of the performing arts community to fund a safety net of social services for those in need. As a program of Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS, DRA supports more than 400 AIDS and family service organizations nationwide as well as the essential programs of The Actors Fund. Through these organizations and programs, DRA and Broadway Cares help to ensure that those in need have access to medicines, counseling, a healthy meal, a safe place to sleep and emergency financial assistance.
For more information, please visit Dancers Responding to AIDS online at dradance.org, like us on Facebook at facebook.com/DRAdance or follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/DRA_Dance.
Photo Credit: Danny Roberts
Sidra Bell New York
Project Moves Dance Company
David Grenke Performance Projects
Ballet Hispanico
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