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4th Annual Hudson Valley Dance Festival Raises Record-Breaking $136,767

By: Oct. 12, 2016
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Dance lovers and performers alike gathered on the shores of the Hudson River on October 8, 2016, to celebrate the fourth annual Hudson Valley Dance Festival in Catskill, NY. The two performances at Historic Catskill Point raised a record-breaking $136,767 for Dancers Responding to AIDS, a program of Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS. The shows featured performances ranging from tap to ballet to contemporary by acclaimed dance.

In the event's four years, Hudson Valley Dance Festival (#hvdance) has raised an impressive $460,397 for the most vulnerable among us. The money raised helps Broadway Cares/Equity Fights AIDS provide grants to AIDS and family service organizations nationwide, including nine based in the Hudson Valley.

Caleb Teicher & Company opened the show with an excerpt from Variations, a tap number creatively set to Johann Sebastian Bach's classic "Goldberg Variations." Three performers - Teicher, Brittany DeStefano and Emma Wylie - lit up the stage with energetic choreography, alternating between frenetic taps and gentle brushes, providing a contemporary narrative to Bach's well-known melody.

Kyle Abraham/Abraham.In.Motion previewed a stunning solo excerpt from Dearest Home, an interactive dance piece focused on love and loving across various age groups and self-identified subcultures. Performing in gripping silence, Connie Shiau, the spellbinding soloist, explored the depths of love and connection through a mix of bold, striking movements and fluid, elegant motion.

Kenkel debuted an electrifying duet called Seduction Sweet, which explored an intoxicating dynamic between a seductress and the object of her desire. Inspired by the energy of the late '60s and set to the vocal stylings of Aretha Franklin, this simultaneously sensual and high-energy piece, danced by Bahiyah Hibah and Nicholas Palmquist, displayed Kenkel's fierce choreography and Broadway sensibility.

The co-creators of MADBOOTS DANCE, Jonathan Campbell and Austin Diaz, shared For Us, a stirring response to June's Orlando massacre at Pulse nightclub, which targeted the LGBT community. The duo channeled their charged emotions into a poignant and inspiring modern dance piece, set to a soundtrack of the voices of Judy Garland and Shirley Bassey. For Us premiered this summer at Dancers Responding to AIDS' Fire Island Dance Festival.

Jennifer Muller/The Works performed an excerpt from Alchemy, a four-movement piece about transformation, drawing inspiration from the four elements: air, fire, earth and water. The excerpt shared was the air and fire portions of the piece. The world-renowned contemporary company entranced audiences with powerful, kinetic movement to a medley of electronically driven songs from techno artists Andy Stott, Kangding Ray and John Talabot.

Closing was the all-male dance troupe Les Ballets Trockadero de Monte Carlo, performing a playfully parodied of the pas de deux from Le Corsaire, one of classical ballet's most famous excerpts. The audience smiled in delight and frequently applauded as the refined ballerinos presented the traditional form in an imaginative, unexpected way.

Following the event, VIP ticket buyers joined the performers for an exclusive reception at the recently revamped Joe's Garage, an elegant event venue in downtown Catskill. The nine Hudson Valley area organizations receiving grants in 2016 are Albany Damien Center and Alliance for Positive Health in Albany, Animalkind and Columbia-Greene Community Foundation in Hudson, Matthew 25 Food Pantry and Community Hospice in Catskill, Hudson Valley Community Services in Hawthorne, Hudson Valley LGBTQ Community Center in Kingston and TOUCH (Together Our Unity Can Heal) in Congers. The support helps ensure those in need have access to lifesaving medications, counseling, nutritious meals, women's health services and emergency financial assistance.

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 the essential programs of The Actors Fund, including the HIV/AIDS Initiative and The Dancers' Resource as well as more than 450 AIDS and family service organizations in all 50 states. For more information, please visit Dancers Responding to AIDS at dradance.org, on Facebook at facebook.com/DRAdance, on Twitter at twitter.com/DRAdance, on YouTube at youtube.com/DRAdance and on Instagram atinstagram.com/DRAdance.



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