FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
2/15/07
CONTACT: Willie Ney, (608) 890-1055, (608) 516-8609 (cell), wney@facstaff.wisc.edu
SPECIAL 'DANE DANCES!' TO BENEFIT STUDENT SCHOLARSHIPS
MADISON - Dane Dances!, the city's popular summer rooftop dance party, moves
inside at 8 p.m. on Saturday, March 3, for a special benefit event in Great
Hall in the Memorial Union at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Milwaukee's
In Black N' White will heat it up with soul, rock and reggae, and SambaDa, from
California, will keep it lively with infectious Afro-Brazilian samba funk dance
grooves.
The event, DanceFest, is a benefit for scholarships for First Wave students, an
urban arts and spoken word residential learning community opening this fall at
UW-Madison. Tickets are $10 for students with ID, $20 for adults; both are
available at the Union Theater Box Office, (608) 262-2201.
DanceFest is organized by the university's Office of Multicultural Arts
Initiatives (OMAI). Dane Dances! is partnering with OMAI to present DanceFest
because of the shared goals of both organizations: creating an environment
where diversity and understanding are nurtured and celebrated. More information
on DanceFest is available at http://www.danedances.org/DanceFest.
Now in its eighth season, Dane Dances! are held Friday nights in August on the
Monona Terrace rooftop, bringing together people from many racial, ethnic and
social backgrounds to create appreciation and respect for the diverse Dane
County community. Each year, thousands attend the family friendly events for
dancing and shared community.
DanceFest is just one highlight of Line Breaks, a free lecture and performance
series of spoken word and hip-hop that runs through Monday, April 16. The
series features spoken-word artist Marc Bamuthi Joseph and friends.
Bamuthi, an internationally acclaimed spoken-word artist, will be at UW-Madison
this spring through the Arts Institute Interdisciplinary Arts Residency
Program. He was invited to participate in the residency through OMAI, with
co-sponsorship from the Department of Afro-American Studies and numerous other
campus units. In addition to performing, he will teach a course on writing and
performing spoken word and hip-hop theater.
He will be joined for Line Breaks by some of the hottest artists working in
spoken literary arts in a showcase of the country's freshest voices on Monday
nights. Performance dates and artists include:
- Feb. 26: Rennie Harris, an award-winning choreographer, and Jeff Chang, an
American Book Award winner and author of "Can't Stop Won't Stop: A History
of the Hip-Hop Generation"
- March 5: Alix Olson, an artist-activist specializing in the queer spoken word
genre
- March 12: Kamilah Forbes, executive producer of Russell Simmons' HBO
"Def Poetry"
- March 19: Danny Hoch, who received an Obie Award and is co-founder of the
Hip-Hop Theater Festival
- March 26: Dennis Kim, lead MC of Chicago's Typical Cats, and Mayda del Valle,
star of the Tony Award-winning "Russell Simmons' Def Poetry on
Broadway"
- April 9: Lauren Whitehead, an acclaimed spoken-word artist
- April 16: Rafael Casal and Dahlak Brathwaite, Youth Speaks spoken-word stars.
All these Monday lectures and performances take place at 7 p.m. at the
Wisconsin Historical Society, 816 State St., and all are free.
A second benefit for First Wave scholarships will close out the Line Breaks
series with a performance by Omar Sosa and his Afreecanos Quartet in Music Hall
at 8 p.m. on Thursday, April 26. Sosa is a composer, arranger, producer,
pianist, percussionist and bandleader. He fuses jazz, world and electronic
music with his native Afro-Cuban roots to create a fresh and original urban
sound - all with a Latin jazz heart. General admission tickets are $25, $10 for
students, available at the Union Theater Box Office.
UW-Madison is becoming known as a leader in the national youth spoken word
movement because OMAI, which resides in the School of Education and is the only
office of its kind at any institution of higher education, established Youth
Speaks Wisconsin, a local unit of the national Youth Speaks organization. Youth
Speaks uses the literary arts to enhance education and encourage civic
engagement and challenges youth to become critical thinkers. OMAI's success in
recruiting and nurturing teens with academic and spoken-word artistic talent
through Youth Speaks Wisconsin has produced this fall's inaugural class of the
First Wave learning community.
For more information on Youth Speaks Wisconsin and list of the co-sponsors of
the Line Breaks series, visit http://www.youthspeakswisconsin.org.
More information on the Arts Institute Interdisciplinary Arts Residency Program
is available at http://www.arts.wisc.edu/artsinstitute.
###
- Gwen Evans, (608) 262-0065, gevans@wisc.edu