Los Angeles Times

Festival aims to lift dance

Debbie Allen and Nigel Lythgoe plan to showcase local and global companies.

- By Makeda Easter

Dance moguls Debbie Allen and Nigel Lythgoe are organizing a new two-week festival next spring featuring local and global companies including Ailey II, Bodytraffi­c, Syncopated Ladies and Heidi Duckler Dance, performing at venues across L.A. County.

The goal of the Los Angeles Internatio­nal Dance Festival, which will run from April 11 to 26, is to showcase and build support for L.A.’s vibrant dance scene, Allen and Lythgoe said.

“I want more people to want to dance,” Allen said. “I want more people to come to concerts and support dance.”

Lythgoe said they are “trying to shine the light on something that has been there for a long time. Because for too long companies themselves have been doing their own thing but apart from each other.”

The festival folds in previously planned dance engagement­s including Tanztheate­r Wuppertal, founded by revolution­ary German choreograp­her Pina Bausch in 1973, at the Music Center’s Dorothy Chandler Pavilion downtown; the multimedia production “Bollywood Boulevard: A Journey Through Hindi Cinema Live” at the Younes and Soraya Nazarian Center for the Performing Arts in Northridge; and Jacob Jonas’ annual dance concert on the Santa Monica Pier.

It also features new dance engagement­s including a night with Allen; Lula Washington Dance Theatre and Syncopated Ladies; Ailey II, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater’s junior company; and performers from “So You Think You Can Dance,” the competitio­n series for which Lythgoe is cocreator, producer and judge. Allen and Lythgoe said they hope to include hip-hop dance battles, free street festivals, performanc­es from local cultural dance companies and dance workshops throughout the county.

The initial spark for the festival began with a vocal misstep last year, Lythgoe said.

He was speaking on a panel with Allen about dance in L.A. at the Wallis Annenberg Center for the Performing Arts in Beverly Hills. At one point, the conversati­on turned to the challenges and needs of the L.A. dance community, especially the lack of recognitio­n.

“What I stupidly said was what L.A. needs is a dance festival,” Lythgoe said, before members of the audience quickly reminded him of numerous other festivals in the city.

“There we were in front of all these people, and we just grabbed the brass ring,” Allen said. “We started organizing right then and there.”

Allen is particular­ly inspired by Australia’s Brisbane Festival, an arts event that engages the city with dance, theater and music performanc­es.

Over the last year, Allen and Lythgoe met with leaders in the dance community to plan the festival. In August, the two met with modern and contempora­ry choreograp­hers including Los Angeles Dance Festival founder Deborah Brockus, Invertigo Dance Theatre’s Laura Karlin, JazzAntiqu­a’s Pat Taylor, commercial choreograp­her Galen Hooks and representa­tives from arts venues. They gathered at Allen’s dance studio in Baldwin Hills to discuss the festival’s itinerary and brainstorm ideas.

Although Allen and Lythgoe hope the festival can take place every other year, one of the major challenges in organizing the event is securing funding from sponsors.

“The big thing is everything has got to pay for itself,” Lythgoe said. “We have got to sell tickets in order to make this work.”

 ?? Lawrence K. Ho ?? JACOB JONAS the Company, seen performing “Crash,” is on the schedule of the new dance festival.
Lawrence K. Ho JACOB JONAS the Company, seen performing “Crash,” is on the schedule of the new dance festival.

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