The Kennedy Center's Festival of China promises rare glimpses of art from half a world away. But Tuesday at the Eisenhower Theater, it was a familiar Western work that offered the biggest surprise, as ...
With the magical glow of a spotlight, grandiose sets and geometrically perfect choreography, the National Ballet of China’s “Chinese New Year (A Ballet In Two Acts)” performance transformed the ...
The Beijing Overseas Cultural Exchange Center hosted a Chinese and Western dance dialogue on Wednesday, featuring renowned ...
Two US lawmakers, including the chair of a hawkish congressional committee, are raising concerns about the John F. Kennedy Centre for the Performing Arts' decision to host the National Ballet of China ...
Is it Chinese ballet? Is it acrobatics? Is it gymnastics? Whatever it is, audiences are finding the unique dancing of Shen Yun Performing Arts incredibly beautiful and enchanting. “It was just ...
NEW YORK — The middle of August in New York usually means slim pickings for dance. So the debuts of two ballet companies at Lincoln Center on two consecutive August weekends would have stood out, even ...
Kansas City Ballet dancers Cameron Thomas and Amanda DeVenuta in the Chinese Dance in 'The Nutcracker' in 2018. "The Nutcracker" is a December tradition for audiences big and small, at elaborate ...
On the outside, it appears to be like any other shopping plaza along Babcock Boulevard in Ross Township.But once you’re inside Yanlai Dance Academy, you are transported an ocean away, coming ...
Dance culture is widespread at Duke University. As the semester comes to a close and many dance groups on campus hold their spring showcases, The Chronicle put together a look into the first five ...
Unlock access to every one of the hundreds of articles published daily on BroadwayWorld by logging in with one click. Atlanta Chinese Dance Company will share a message of unity in diversity through ...
Performances in N.Y.C. Advertisement Supported by Critic’s notebook Two companies making their debuts at Lincoln Center showed promise, but also a dispiriting sense of the familiar. By Brian Seibert ...