Susan Marshall & Company
Susan Marshall & Company
   
   
1982 - 1984

During this time Marshall creates work at The Yard where Marshall meets and works with Arthur Armijo and David Dorfman, and at home in New York with the repertory dance company CoDanceCo, connecting with Jackie Goodrich and David Landis. She forms Susan Marshall & Company and presents the first evening of entirely her own work at Emanu-El Midtown YM-YWHA to a small and encouraging audience. Other dancers who began collaborating with Susan Marshall at this time include Kathy Casey, Guillermo Resto, Lauren Dong and Donald Mouton. Arms premieres at a performance at PS 122 in New York.


Ward
1985 - 1987

Susan Marshall & Company has its first one-week season at Dance Theater Workshop. The success of this season leads to a Bessie and a two-week season at DTW in 1986, followed by a three week season in 1987. The company begins touring, often with only three to seven dancers, including a trip to Spoleto/USA. Company dancers include Arthur Armijo, Beatrice Bogorad, Andrew Boynton, Kathy Casey, David Dorfman, Jackie Goodrich, David Landis, Jeff Lepore, Susan Marshall, Guillermo Resto and Eileen Thomas. In 1986 the company receives its first support from the National Endowment for the Arts. In 1987, Kiss premieres at Dance Theater Workshop.


Kiss

1988 - 1990

Marshall is commissioned by Brooklyn Academy of Music for its Next Wave Festival, premiering Interior With Seven Figures and marking the beginning of an ongoing relationship. The company hires its first company manager, Ryan Gilliam of Downtown Art Company, and tours extensively, including engagements in California, Oregon, Kentucky, Vermont, Montreal and Japan. The company appears at the Vienna Tanz '88 festival, and Marshall receives the American Choreographer Award and the Brandeis University Creative Arts Citation. In 1989, Arms is adapted for television for "Alive From Off Center", and In Medias Res is commissioned by the Frankfurt Ballet. Contenders, with music by Pauline Oliveros, premieres at Brooklyn Academy of Music in 1990.
Contenders
1991 - 1994
The company performs twice at the Festival Internationalle de Nouvelle Danse in Montreal, and participates in a five-week tour to Eastern Europe, Cyprus and Turkey, sponsored by U.S.I.A/Arts America. "Alive From Off Center" commissions the creation of the film Contenders in 1991, bringing in Mark Obenhaus to direct and collaborate with Marshall on the translation for film, and Marshall collaborates with Francesca Zambello on two operas, Les Troyens (Los Angeles Opera) and Midsummer Marriage (New York City Opera). Standing Duet and Untitled (detail) premiere at The Kitchen in 1992. In 1994, Brooklyn Academy of Music premieres Fields of View (music by Philip Glass) and Spectators at an Event (video by Christopher Kondek and photos by WeeGee), and Lyon Opera Ballet commissions Central Figure. During this time, dancers include Arthur Armijo, Andrew Boynton, Mark DeChiazza, Allison Easter, Heidi Michele Fokine, Krista Langberg, Jeff Lepore, Susan Marshall, Andre Shoals, Eileen Thomas and Scot Willingham.

Untitled (detail)
1995 - 1997
Marshall works with Philip Glass on Les Enfants Terribles, The Children of the Game, a dance/opera composed by Glass, directed and choreographed by Marshall and produced by IPA. Les Enfants has its European Premiere in Zug, Switzerland and its U.S. Premiere at Brooklyn Academy of Music in 1996, and tours internationally to 39 cities. In 1997, company members include Susan Blankensop, Mark DeChiazza, John Heginbotham, Kristen Hollinsworth, Krista Langberg, Omar Rahim, Marlon Barrios Solana and Eileen Thomas. Marshall receives a New York Dance and Performance Award/Bessie for Les Enfants.
Les Enfants Terribles, The Children of the Game
1998 - 2000
Marshall premieres The Most Dangerous Room in The House in 1998 at Dartmouth, with actress Norma Fire joining the company. In 1999 Marshall premieres The Descent Beckons at Hancher Auditorium, University of Iowa – included in the cast are comedian Lisa Kron and 75 inflatable dolls. Company Manager Ryan Gilliam passes the baton to current manager Tia Tibbitts Levinson. Long-time company member Eileen Thomas retires as co-artistic director and from full-time performing, after 15 years with the company. Marshall receives the prestigious John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Fellowship (2000).
The Most Dangerous Room in The House
2001 to Now
The company premieres One and Only You in Pittsburgh in 2001, and performs newly reconstructed repertory as part of the reopening season of the World Financial Center’s Wintergarden (following the destruction of September 11) in 2002. The company premieres Sleeping Beauty and Other Stories in Chicago in 2003. Dancers during this time include Rachel Shao-Lan Blum, Mark DeChiazza, Steven Fetherhuff, Kristen Hollinsworth, Krista Langberg, Jill Locke, Luke Miller, Petra van Noort and Darrin Wright.

Susan Marshall & Company celebrates its 20th anniversary in 2006 with a return to DTW. The company premieres Cloudless with dancers, Kristen Hollinsworth, Luke Miller, Petra Van Noort, Darrin Wright and Joseph Poulson. Cloudless is awarded the company’s 10th BESSIE.




One and Only You
   
   
 
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