San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

Small company thinking big

Sadie Weinberg’s 5-year-old LITVAKDANC­E expands its reach with guest artists from Mexico, Seattle and Portland, Ore.

- BY MARCIA LUTTRELL Luttrell is a freelance writer.

LItvakdanc­e, the fivemember contempora­ry dance company based in North County, has expanded its reach far beyond San Diego.

It has crossed borders, traveled over state lines and danced its way into schools, libraries, indoor theaters and outdoor stages.

Founded in 2018 by ambitious dance-maker Sadie Weinberg, the company expresses a range of cultures and styles of movement through dance.

At Thursday’s popular Dancing Outdoors Take 3 event, for example, the company will perform “Vortex,” an award-winning duet by Mexican choreograp­her Zuleima Burrell and an excerpt from a dance titled “Haven” by Israeli choreograp­her Ido Gidron.

Those performanc­es are the result of Weinberg inviting emerging and renowned choreograp­hers from near and faraway places to set work on the company.

Recently, Weinberg was invited to judge the 4x4 TJ Nights 2023 choreograp­hy competitio­n in Mexico, co-produced by the Tijuana Cultural Center and the Lux Boreal Dance Company.

A bit of history.

The “4x4” concept originated in 2005 at the Bluefoot Bar & Lounge in San Diego.

It was produced by Sushi Performing and Visual Art and it presented works on a 4-by-4-foot stage. The monthly event charmed the members of Lux Boreal, so in 2006, they continued the program as a choreograp­hy competitio­n in Mexico.

Weinberg said her south-ofthe-border trip changed the way she thinks about creating and teaching dance.

“It was a cool experience in many ways,” she said.

“I felt honored to be a part of it. It was amazing to see the styles from all across Mexico. The themes, intentiona­lity and emotional quality are different. Here, we tend to talk about the mechanics of dance, we don’t get into what the dance is about.”

Weinberg was so impressed with the winning dance, “Vortex,” that company dancers Hannah Wyer and Nick Mcghee traveled to Mexico to learn the duet.

“It’s a piece that, by the end, you are completely sucked into the vortex of the work,” Weinberg said. “It continuall­y spirals and there are these lifts that come in and out from the ground. They did that on a 4-foot-by-4-foot stage, and the tension was amazing.”

Mcghee, who has been with LITVAKDANC­E for five years, said he also found the experience of traveling to Mexico enriching.

“The process there is really different from the way we work in the United States,” he said. “It comes from an emotional place.”

Dancing Outdoors Take 3, described as “an evening of art, music, dance and libations,” takes place on the lush, tree-studded grounds of the Institute of Contempora­ry Art North in Encinitas.

The show includes live music from the Montalban Quintet and dance presentati­ons from guest companies Khambatta Dance, based in Seattle, and PUSH/FOLD, located in Oregon.

Last year’s show was so wellattend­ed that latecomers stood behind the seating that surrounds the stage.

Besides dancing, Mcghee will present the premiere of his first choreograp­hed work, a duet performed by company dancers Ashley Akhavan and Jacqueleen Schweighar­dt.

Titled “Unconditio­nal,” Mcghee’s movement style veers away from the way he was trained.

“As a student, I wanted to make work that wasn’t about anything,” he explained.

“This time, I really wanted to create something I was connected to. I thought about my mother. She instilled in me that we have a relationsh­ip of unconditio­nal love. No matter what it is that I do or say, she will always be there for me. That has gotten me through some pretty rough patches in my life. I wanted to create a relationsh­ip between two dancers that signifies that, so they come together in these motifs, then part, but staying in close proximity.” Mcghee is only a little nervous. “I’m trying not to put too much pressure on myself,” he admitted.

“I’m working in the moment. Jacqueleen and Ashley are so wonderful, they can make anything look beautiful, so I have full trust in them. And I’m really excited about performing in that space. It’s a different atmosphere. It feels informal, but we deliver a quality performanc­e.”

 ?? JINGZI ZHAO ?? Samuel Hobbs of Oregon’s Push/ FOLD dance company, which will take part in Litvakdanc­e’s July 20 concert.
JINGZI ZHAO Samuel Hobbs of Oregon’s Push/ FOLD dance company, which will take part in Litvakdanc­e’s July 20 concert.
 ?? DOUG MCMINIMY ?? Jordan Daley and Hannah Pritchett, dancers with the Encinitas-based LITVAKDANC­E company, perform “Haven.”
DOUG MCMINIMY Jordan Daley and Hannah Pritchett, dancers with the Encinitas-based LITVAKDANC­E company, perform “Haven.”

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