Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre is coming to the Orange County Performing Arts Center March 2-7 to perform a program celebrating Artistic Director Judith Jamison’s 20th Anniversary. We spoke with company member Constance Stamatiou about her background and the company.
Napoleon Gladney: When did you start dancing and how did you get into it?
Constance Stamatiou: I started dancing when I was 4. I had too much energy and my mom felt it would be best if she put me in dance. I went to a local studio, Dance Unlimited, which was really convenient because it was around the corner from my mom’s job. After a few years I started to train with the North Carolina Dance Theatre. I was also a gymnast.
NG: You were a gymnast. When did you decide to take your dancing to the next level?
CS: Well I started gymnastics when I was 9. I did floor, balance beam, bars, vault, all of that stuff. I didn’t start competing in all of the apparatuses until I was 11. It was really demanding. Especially physically, when I started competing I was at the gym full time with practices.
NG: You were a busy kid. How did you make it all work?
CS: I went to a magnet school, the Northwest School of the Arts, from 6th through 12th grade so I got most of my dance training there. After school I would go to the gym for gymnastics. I was a really busy kid. I also played the viola.
NG: Do you still go to the gym and tumble?
CS: I have not tumbled in a long time. I’m actually going to go to a gym at Chelsea Piers when I’m off tour. I’m going to enroll in a few classes. It has been a long time though.
NG: How has being a gymnast affected your dance training?
CS: It really helped with my flexibility because of the stretching and my jumps.
NG: What was your journey to get into AAADT?
CS: I actually started dancing because of Ailey. When I was a little girl I saw a documentary about Revelations and I told my mom I had to do that. When I was a senior in high school my dance teacher was asking me if I was going to go to college for dance or gymnastics and I couldn’t decide. She suggested I go for dance because I would have a longer career and I had a natural talent. She helped me choreograph a solo for auditions and I went to SUNY Purchase. I was at SUNY for my freshman year and one of my dance teachers, who also taught at Ailey, suggested I go with her and audition for the summer program. I went to the summer program as a fellowship student and I fell in love with everything. I knew I had to be there. I told my parents this is where I wanted to be. I was a fellowship student for two years and then I joined Ailey II for two years. I auditioned for the company and Ms. Jamison told me I’m in.
NG: What is it like being apart of such an iconic company?
CS: It is amazing. When I first joined the company Judith Jamison had to come to me and say calm down. I was a dear in the head lights. This is such an amazing company. There are so many amazing people. We tour all over the country and internationally and we do so much. All of the extra things make it even more amazing. We have photo shoots, TV, magazines, we got to perform on So You Think You Can Dance and Dancing With The Stars. We work with the public and non-dancers with our extension programs and arts education programming. Being able to see the kids eyes shine bright is amazing. Last year we did a book. Being apart of that is amazing. We even have a barbie doll, which came out last year. This company is just full of surprises. Also, working with amazing people like Judith Jamison, Masazumi Chaya, and Ronni Favors is so inspiring and also very educational. They give so much information and insight. They offer so much history and first hand information from Alvin Ailey himself. They also give us so much so that we can really know how to express ourselves.
NG: What is your favorite memory?
CS: Wow I have so many. I would have to say just being on tour. Touring around Europe, been able to go to the Eiffel Tower, the Acropolis, climb the Great wall. We get to do so many amazing things. I think my favorite thing was going to Greece. I have a lot of family there that I have not seen since I was a child. Being able to be there with them and perform for them was amazing. It’s really a second home for me.
NG: Do you get to be apart of the company’s outreach?
CS: The company does mini performances, demonstrations, excerpts of work, and workshops when we tour. We do the full version of Revelations. Kids learn about the dances and about the other things that go into a performance too like the costumes, lighting, and everything backstage. There are master classes taught by company members, too.
NG: Do you feel connected to founder Alvin Ailey’s work?
CS: It’s an amazing feeling. I do feel connected. His work is based on the South and I’m from the South so I can relate to the hymns and spirituals. There is something about his work. You get to move and take up space. It’s really amazing to do his work.
NG: How would you describe Judith Jamison?
CS: Judith Jamison is an icon. She has definitely made history. She is someone you can look up to. Not only physically because she was and still is an amazing dancer. She doesn’t move the same way she used to but when she teaches or shows movement you can just tell she was a force, it’s still there. She is definitely an amazing person. She is definitely a loving person. She does know how to goof of and have a good time, too. But she will let you know what she wants and is specific about it. She is also very understanding.
NG: What is your favorite repertory piece?
CS: There are just so many, Hymn by Judith Jamison, Best of 20 Years, which is excerpts of 13 ballets that have been performed over Judith Jamison’s time as Artistic Director, Episodes, I can say all of them. There are just way too many to count.
NG: Describe the Best of 20 Years? How would you describe it to someone that knows nothing about dance or the company?
CS: It is excerpts of 13 ballets we have done throughout the decades. It would be perfect for anyone that has never seen the company. There is just so much versatility. There is something jazzy and something more African, there is lyrical. You really get a taste of it all. Grace, Winter in Lisbon, the list just goes on. There is partnering and great solo work. You definitely get a taste. It’s perfect for the non-dancer to watch.
NG: Why should people watch AAADT?
CS: You will get the experience of a lifetime. We are truly a spirited company. Each show is never the same. One night you will see one thing and the next you will see something entirely different. We are all different dancers and we all have something different to give. It’s all true and coming from our heart.

The ‘Cultural Ambassador to the World,’ Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre returns to the Orange County Performing Arts Center to celebrate artistic director Judith Jamison’s 20th year anniversary. In celebration of Jamison who has been involved with the company since 1965 as a dancer AAADT is presenting several west coast and OCPAC premiers. These premiers include new works “Dance Spirit,” Ronald K. Brown’s fourth piece for the company, Among Us by Judith Jamison herself, Uptown by long time company member Matthew Rushing, and Best of 20 Years, a mash up of 14 ballets commissioned or re-staged under Jamison’s directorship. In addition to these premiers, Jamison’s Hymn a tribute to company founder Alvin Ailey, Suite Otis by George W. Faison, Alvin Ailey staple Revelations, and the powerful Episodes by Ulysses Dove will be performed by the internationally renowned company.
For any choreographer to self-produce a concert is a huge undertaking. There are so many choices an individual has to make to present their work, which is so often a personal presentation. Jenna Gandenberger, a senior dance major of Orange’s Chapman University, presented an evening of dance at the campus’ Waltmar Theatre on February 13, 2010 to a large mixed audience of peers, family, and academic mentors.
Before the audience favorite “Folie du Cirque” there were two dances, “Rhapsody in Blues” and “Unfamiliar Intimacy.” Both seemed to be after thoughts. Using blues music and girls in generic white tops, the dance was reminiscent of an attempt by strict competitive dancers to do something different. All of the legs, body rolls, hair flicks, and aimless walking were there, but attempted to be hid by the concert dance setting. Also somewhat resembling a competition dance, the duet “Unfamiliar Intimacy” seemed like one of those duets you have seen before, not unfamiliar at all. However, the gobo on the back pyscolarama and costumes for the couple were very fresh looking.
Orange County’s own, The Wooden Floor, challenged audiences to open both their minds and hearts in a sold out weekend engagement at the REDCAT theatre (Roy and Edna Disney Cal Arts Theatre) in downtown Los Angeles. The three works presented by Mark Haim, Melanie Ríos Glaser, and Nami Yamamoto, in that order, showcased the seventy-three underprivileged youth’s strong dancing chops. In an emotional and probing program, viewers were shown various aspects of the dancers personalities, experiences, technique, and most importantly youthful spirit.
With a handful of audience members sitting onstage adding to the ambience of the simple set, a small band which included a synth-keyboard (that was played to perfection), a cast of performers taking on two to four characters, 80s pop references that make your head spin, a lead with long flowing blonde locks that is not afraid to use them, a pair of tiny cut off denim shorts worn by the male lead, and way too many awkward battements, fan-kicks, arabesques, and “Toyota” jumps (all the official dance moves of the 80s) to count paired with a good sense of humor and an imagination really leaves me with no room to write anything ill about Xanadu The Musical now at OCPAC Dec. 15-27th.




Close your eyes and imagine a place where children dance their way into college with scholarships, while overcoming tremendous adversity with poise, grace, style, and a contemporary edge. You are probably imagining a cheesy Disney show or a movie from the 80s. Stretch that thought even further and imagine these same students presenting such great art that they are invited to perform at illustrious performance venues like the Roy and Edna Disney/CalArts Theater (REDCAT) in Los Angeles. No, it’s not a special on Oprah. These children are real and they are right here in Orange County. They all belong to the recently renamed The Wooden Floor in Santa Ana.
All three contemporary works will challenge the audience on the January 15-16th performances at REDCAT. Mark Haim’s restaging of Los Angelitos takes an in depth look at overcoming adversity, while Nami Yamamoto’s Flying With My Shooting Stars is an abstracted look at the group dynamic, and Melanie Ríos Glaser’s premier aims to show the more real nuances of the youth performing. The program will give the audience an overall sense of who the students of The Wooden Floor are and the abounding tenacity of their youthfulness and the strength in the challenges they have overcome.
So often dance in academia is self indulgent, which gives dance and art going audiences the liberty to dismiss it altogether. Chapman University’s Fall Dance Concert does just the opposite. The concert in two acts with three diversely original works choreographed by dance department faculty members Alicia Okouchi-Guy, Elizabeth Maxwell, and Sean Greene in the first act and the second act consisting of a collaboration between dance department chair Dale Merrill and faculty member Jennifer Backhaus will surprise and engage all audiences.
