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December 2024

MSP 181: Chicago

By Podcast

PODCAST 181: Chicago

Release Date: 12.23.24

TO DOWNLOAD PODCAST OR LISTEN:

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    • Spotify: Follow and Listen HERE

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Five Voices, One City: Unpacking Chicago’s Dance Community, with Kristina Fluty, Alyssa Gregory, Rahila Coats, Michael McStraw, and Helen Lee

Episode 181: Show Notes

In this episode of Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast, we dive deeply into the vibrant and diverse world of Chicago’s dance scene. Joining Erin are five incredible voices, each bringing a unique perspective on what makes this city’s dance community so dynamic, expansive, and full of life. Featured in this episode are Kristina Fluty, Alyssa Gregory, Rahila Coats, Michael McStraw, and Helen Lee — five Chicago-based dance artists who capture the spirit and energy of this thriving artistic hub. Together, they share how living in Chicago has shaped their careers and creative journeys, and explore how the city’s geography influences its dance community. We explore the work being created there, the support systems and resources that have been most valuable in their growth, and delve into an overview of opportunities for residencies and funding. Plus, each artist reflects on what keeps them curious, inspired, and energized within the Chicago dance world. Tune in for a lively and insightful conversation that captures the essence of this incredible dance community. Enjoy!

Key Points From This Episode:

  • Setting the scene for the Chicago-focused episode.
  • We are introduced to our five guests: Alyssa Gregory, Kristina Fluty, Rahila Coats, Michael McStraw, and Helen Lee.
  • How living in Chicago has influenced their careers and artistic journeys.
  • Our guests help situate Chicago for listeners unfamiliar with the city and how it shapes the dance community.
  • We dive in and discuss the Chicago dance scene and the work being made.
  • Resources and support systems that have been the most valuable to our guests throughout their careers.
  • An overview of the opportunities available for dance residencies and funding within the Chicago dance scene.
  • Dance education hubs and the overall dance class vibe in Chicago.
  • Each guest talks about what keeps them curious, interested, and excited about their dance lives in Chicago.

ABOUT Kristina Fluty

Connect: Molly Shanahan Spiral Body

Kristina Fluty has called Chicago dance company Molly Shanahan/Mad Shak her artistic home since 2003. She is one of the inaugural certified teachers of Shanahan’s Spiral Body Techniques® and works with Shanahan to develop the framework and disseminate the teachings. The Feldenkrais Method® and Contact Improvisation (more than 25 years of personal practice) are also largely influential in her creative work and pedagogy. Early training includes a BA from Point Park University, time on scholarship at the Trisha Brown studios, and the early ‘aughts downtown NYC dance scene with instructors/choreographers such as K.J. Holmes, Miguel Gutierrez, and David Dorfman.

Kristina has taught and/or coached movement at the University of Milwaukee-Wisconsin, Columbia College Chicago, the Lou Conte Dance Studio/Hubbard Street Dance Chicago, Dovetail Studios, Chicago Movement Collective, the University of Chicago, Lyric Opera, Mordine and Company, Thodos Dance Chicago, BoneDanse, and Synapse Arts. She has choreographed theatrical intimacy at Steppenwolf, Porchlight, TimeLine, Marriott, and Remy Bumppo in Chicago, as well as one gig at Center Theater Group in Los Angeles. She has danced with many choreographers and companies in venues such as Joyce Soho, Tangente Montreal, the Athenaeum, Links Hall, Millennium Park, and Ruth Page, and continues to perform as much as possible. 

Her MA and certifications in Laban/Bartenieff Movement Analysis and Movement Pattern Analysis are from Columbia College Chicago. Currently, Kristina is an Associate Professor at The Theatre School at DePaul University, where she teaches movement to actors in the BFA and MFA conservatory programs.

ABOUT Alyssa Gregory

Connect: The Process website, The Fly Honeys, Arts + Public Life

Alyssa (Uhh-lee-sa) Gregory is a Chicago based performer, choreographer, teaching artist, and arts administrator.  She’s worked with some of Chicago dance’s greatest including Erin Kilmurray, The Moving Architects, Joanna Furnans, The Leopold Group, Jenn Freeman/Po Chop, and The Fly Honey Show.  She holds a Bachelors of Fine Arts in Dance & Choreography from Virginia Commonwealth University and a  Masters of Arts in Performing Arts Administration from Roosevelt University.  She has worked in Marketing, Communications and Social Media for the Dance Presenting Series, Honey Pot Performance, The Fly Honey Show, the Arts Club of Chicago and is currently Communications Manager at Arts + Public Life. She is also host of The Process Podcast which highlights the creative process of Chicago dancers, dance makers and all-around booty shakers.  (she/her)

 

ABOUT Rahila Coats

Connect: Instagram @rahilacoats

Rahila is a movement artist based in the Midwest. She has performed new works and repertoire by Abigail Sena Atugah, Kofi Anthonio, Judith Brin Ingber, Karen Charles, Marciano Dos Silva Santos, Drew Lewis (House of DOV), Carl Flink, Kevin Iega Jeff, Ohad Naharin, Andrea Miller, Robert Moses, Leslie Parker, Uri Sands, Chris Schlicting, Erin Kilmurray, Anna Martine Whitehead, and Tali Wertheim- Agranionik and more in and outside the US dance community. Her works have been shown through the support of Danceworks Chicago, Thodos Dance Chicago, Synapse Arts, Co.mpany Projects, Twenty Percent Productions, Jerusalem Jazz Festival, and the University of Ghana- Legon. In 2021 she received Chicago’s 3Art’s Make A Wave Award along with 120 Chicago based artists. She toured nationally with Red Clay Dance Company from 2021-2024, and currently performs in Anna Martine Whitehead’s FORCE! An Opera in 3 Acts. Rahila regularly performs and composes music with the music collective Family Junket.

ABOUT Michael McStraw

Connect: Chicago Dance History

Michael McStraw, Executive Director of Chicago Dance History Project (CDHP), is a member of and an outstanding advocate for the Chicago performing arts community. As a professional dancer, musician, arts administrator, dance educator, board member, and arts patron, Michael has been a positive and constant influence in the community for 40 years. Raised in Western Pennsylvania, his life includes a BS degree in Geology from Allegheny College, a Master of Fine Arts degree in Modern Dance from the University of Michigan, and a stint as an agricultural extension agent in the Peace Corps in Sierra Leone, West Africa. He danced extensively with the area’s premier contemporary dance companies, including Mordine & Company Dance Theater, an organization he also managed, Jan Erkert & Dancers, and DanszLoop Chicago, of which he was a founding member. Prior to joining CDHP, Michael was honored to serve as Giordano Dance Chicago’s Executive Director for 13 years. He is an experienced marketing, operations, and project management professional with special skill in developing strategic long-term solutions for complex business issues. Michael has twice served three-year terms on the Illinois Arts Council Dance Panel, is past President and Board Member for See Chicago Dance, Chicago’s dance marketing and advocacy organization, and has mentored young artists/administrators within Pentacle’s Help Desk program. After serving six years as an ex-officio member of the Harris Theater for Music and Dance’s Board of Trustees, representing that organization’s Resident Companies, Michael was appointed as a full Trustee in June 2022. Michael was celebrated as the Chicago Tribune’s “2022 Chicagoan of the Year in Dance.”

(Photo by Todd Rosenberg, courtesy of Giordano Dance Chicago)

ABOUT Helen Lee

Connect: Momentum Sensorium

Helen Lee (they/she) is a Queer Asian Chicago-born interdisciplinary artist raised by immigrant parents from South Korea. They received an MFA with a focus in Performance and Film from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a BA in Dance with a minor in Theatre from the University of Hawaii at Manoa. They have been a company member for The Humans, Tangentz Butoh Performance Group (Lori Othani), Aloha Dancers and Friends of Polynesia, understudied with Iona Contemporary Dance Theatre, been a guest artist for IS/LAND, and studied with Eiko Otake, Tadashi Endo, and Molly Shanahan. They have been teaching yoga, meditation and mindfulness since 2007. That same year, they formed Momentum Sensorium, a project-based company that has created and choreographed for See Chicago Dance, Out of Site, APIDA Arts Festival, and sometimes in unconventional locations such as lighthouses, train stations, and attics. Much of their work focuses on the senses, death, and the entanglement of light/shadow, joy/grief, celebrating Asian voices and Black and Asian allyship. They have presented works in the US, South Korea, Japan, Germany, Iceland, Finland and Canada. Helen was selected for 2022 Newcity Breakout Artist and 2024 Chicago Dancemakers Forum Lab Artist. They have had residencies at Chicago Artists Coalition, Chicago Cultural Center, Links Hall and High Concept Labs at Mana Contemporary. They are a frequent performer and improviser for Cristal Sabbagh’s Freedom From Freedom To series at Elastic Arts and is currently part of Tend for Khecari.

MSP 180: Tristan Ching Hartmann

By Podcast

PODCAST 180: Tristan Ching Hartmann

Release Date: 12.9.24

TO DOWNLOAD PODCAST OR LISTEN:

    • Apple: Subscribe, Listen, Rate Us HERE

    • Spotify: Follow and Listen HERE

    • Any Smartphone Podcast app: Subscribe and Listen

Crafting a Fulfilling Life In Dance with Tristan Ching Hartmann

Episode 180: Show Notes.

What does it take to craft a fulfilling life in dance? For Tristan Ching Hartmann, it’s a blend of resilience, curiosity, community, and an unshakable love for movement. From her shy beginnings in Ventura, California, to performing with the Margaret Jenkins Dance Company in San Francisco, Tristan’s journey has been anything but conventional. She reflects on transformative moments, including commuting long hours for ballet classes, finding her artistic home with Robert Moses’ Kin, and reinventing herself as a jazz dancer during her time in London. Tristan delves into how her teaching practice reignited her creativity, her experiences taking on choreography, and the life lessons she’s learned from Argentine Tango. She also shares the profound impact of a serious spinal injury that temporarily halted her dancing and how it led her to redefine her relationship with movement. Now dancing into her late 40s, she offers insights on adapting training, cherishing every moment in the studio, and navigating the physical demands of her art. Her passion for building community and mentoring younger dancers reflects her deep commitment to the art form and those who practice it. Join us for an inspiring conversation that explores what it truly means to craft a fulfilling life in dance!

Key Points From This Episode:

  • An introduction to Tristan Ching Hartmann and her unique movement journey.
  • How a childhood dance class sparked a lifelong passion for movement and artistry.
  • Tristan’s deep connection to ballet and her love for its precision, grace, and classical music.
  • The balancing act of pursuing dance while meeting her family’s academic expectations.
  • How Stanford shaped her journey, leading to modern dance and joining Robert Moses’ Kin.
  • The pivotal role of Robert Moses in Tristan’s early professional career and artistic growth.
  • Recovering from a serious spinal injury and the life-changing decision to travel and reflect.
  • How moving to London allowed Tristan to reinvent herself and explore jazz and the West End.
  • Her transformative experience teaching and discovering new ways to connect with students.
  • Returning to the stage with Margaret Jenkins Dance Company in her late 40s.
  • How Tristan adapts training to stay active despite the physical challenges of aging.
  • Tristan’s insights into Argentine Tango as a life lesson in feeling and responding.
  • Reflecting on her love for building community and mentoring the next generation of dancers.

ABOUT Tristan

Tristan Ching Hartmann (she/her) was born and raised in Southern California.  She took her first dance class in the garage of her babysitter’s friend, and doesn’t remember a time (thankfully) when she didn’t dance.  She took ballet, jazz, and tap at local schools in Ventura until a fellow student Tristan idolized decided to start commuting to the Westside School of Ballet.  Tristan followed.  Tristan trained at Westside and spent summers at the San Francisco Ballet School until she graduated high school and entered Stanford University.  At Stanford, Tristan took her first modern dance, a rigorous Cunningham technique class taught by Diane Frank, as well as commuting up to San Francisco to study with Alonzo King, Arturo Fernandez, Carmen Rozestraten, and Summer Lee Rhatigan.  Tristan also began working with Robert Moses at this time.

Tristan graduated from Stanford with a B.A. in English and M.A. in Education, and moved up to San Francisco the next day.  She danced with Robert Moses’ Kin for 11 years, collaborating with incredible artists such as Sara Shelton Mann, Robert Henry Johnson, Joanna Haigood, Marcus Shelby, Somei Yoshino Taiko Ensemble, and Youth Speaks.  In March 2006, not searching for a better experience, just a different one while she could still dance, Tristan retired from Robert Moses’ Kin.  Two weeks after retiring from the company, Tristan learned she needed immediate cervical spine surgery; the following week, she and her husband, Mark, made the decision to travel after she had recovered.

While traveling, Mark was offered a job in London.  There, Tristan took the opportunity to reinvent herself—coming back to her love for jazz, getting an agent, and starting the West End audition circuit.  In 2009, Tristan danced at the BRIT Awards in a special tribute to the Pet Shop Boys featuring Brandon Flowers and newcomer Lady Gaga.  Tristan and Mark spent two years in London before moving back in 2010 to be closer to Mark’s father who had been diagnosed with a gliobastoma.

Back in San Francisco, Summer Rhatigan invited Tristan to join the faculty of the San Francisco Conservatory of Dance.  It was an oasis of learning, creation, and thought—fueled by teaching artists like Christian Burns, Alex Ketley, Eli Nelson, Miranda LaValle, Bobbi Jene Smith, and Tom Weinberger, as well as the students themselves.  Here, Tristan was able to refine her teaching skills and– thanks to Summer’s encouragement and support– began leading creative writing sessions and making work for the first time.

A big hole was felt—and is still felt—when the Conservatory closed in 2018.  Not feeling ready to teach anywhere else, Tristan instead invited some friends and former students to play around in the studio.  These play sessions led to a couple small solos and duets, which were eventually performed to live text by Christine No and Nick Jaina in a show produced by Red Light Lit. They were performed again in a collaborative show with Nol Simonse, Kara Davis, Victor Talledos, and Manuelito Biag in March 2020, days before shelter-in-place began.

And then, of course, the pandemic.  A huge ellipses for us all… A different experience for everyone and yet, somehow similar in its wonderings and grief, whether acknowledged or not.

In 2021, at 47 ½ years old, and 14 years after she had first expressed interest in working with the company, Tristan joined Margaret Jenkins Dance Company, thanks to the generosity and open-minded vision of its director.  When not in the studio with MJDC, Tristan enjoys a weekly movement practice led Sara Rudner, travelling with her husband, hosting a writing happy hour, gently exploring Argentine tango, and dreaming/collaborating with her friends.

PC:  Peter Teigen

 

 

Podcast produced by: The Moving Architects
Interviewer: Erin Carlisle Norton