Over the next several months each member of the cohort will continue to develop a new dance work, while also participating in monthly career-focused intensives under the guidance of the Lab’s Director Linsey Bostwick, Program Associate Ntshadi Mofokeng, and a team of industry experts.
The NYU Artist Development Program for Dance is an inaugural program produced and run by the NYU Production Lab with support from the NYU Office of the Provost and the NYU Cross-Cutting Initiative on Inequality. The program is presented in partnership with the Center for Ballet and the Arts at NYU, the Tisch Initiative for Creative Research, NYU Skirball Center, Tisch Department of Dance, The Gallatin Interdisciplinary Arts Program, and the Steinhardt Department of Music and Performing Arts Professions (MPAP) Dance Education Program.
Industry support provided by the Harkness Center for Dance Injuries at NYU Langone, New York Live Arts, Lotus Arts Management and The Joyce.
Program staff, speakers, and mentors:
Deborah Damast (Guest Speaker) is Program Director and Clinical Associate Professor of Dance Education at NYU Steinhardt where she teaches, mentors, and directs Concerts, Kaleidoscope Dancers and the Uganda study abroad program. She is Past-President of NYSDEA, serves on the Boards of Peridance and Misty Copeland’s BE BOLD program. Deborah is a recipient of the 2009 NYU GSU Star Faculty Award, the 2010 NDEO Outstanding Dance Educator Award, the 2017 Steinhardt Teaching Excellence Award, the 2020 Dance Teacher Magazine Award, the 2021 NDEO Executive Director Award, the 2022 NYSDEA Outstanding Leadership Award and the 2023 Martha Hill Mid-Career Award. Her choreography has been shown at over 40 venues in NYC including Ailey Citigroup, Peridance, World Financial Center, Riverside Church, Judson Church, Symphony Space, Cooper Union, 92Y, 14th St. Y, Skirball Theatre, Radio City Music Hall and internationally in Japan, Uganda, Korea, Italy, and Canada. Deborah has taught for the Education Departments of Oregon Ballet Theatre, Steffi Nossen, LREI and New York City Ballet, guest choreographed/taught for West Virginia University, Marymount Manhattan College, and Brigham Young University, and has written curriculum for Peridance, Paul Taylor, DEL, NYCB, and the NYC DOE. She has presented at numerous conferences including NDEO, NYSDEA, UDEO, Kyambogo, and CUNY. She participated in Motion Capture studies at NYU, collaborated with Music Performance and Music Technology, and at NYU was a co-recipient of Steinhardt grants Dance Literacy and Data Literacy, Internationalizing The Curriculum, and the 2020 Diversity Innovation grant.
Katherine Helen Fisher (Guest Speaker) Emmy-nominated director, choreographer, and performer Katherine Helen Fisher’s work uniquely intersects dance and emerging technology, creating immersive, interactive installations which center embodied ritual within non-linear narratives. With a distinguished performance history that includes Lucinda Childs Dance Company and the Philip Glass opera “Einstein On The Beach,” she has critically engaged with performativity and representation in her artistic research, blurring digital and physical boundaries. As co-founder of Safety Third, Fisher has directed significant works such as “One + One Make Three,” an access-centered dance documentary, and “Le Monstre,” a participatory performance garment that won a Jury Prize at the 21st International Symposium on Wearable Computers. Her work currently extends to choreographing for The Data Fluencies Theater Project, a Mellon-funded, interdisciplinary collaborative project which interrogates algorithmic and AI systems and embodied experience. Fisher holds an MFA in dance from Sarah Lawrence College and a BFA from NYU’s Tisch School of the Arts where she is currently serving as Visiting Assistant Professor in the Collaborative Arts Department.
Sandy Garcia (Mentor and Facilitator) has been Director of Booking at Pentacle since 2016. Prior to that she was a booking representative, international tour coordinator, and director of administration at Rena Shagan Associates, Inc. where she represented artists that included Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan, Black Grace, SITI Company and Martha Graham Dance Company among others. She has worked with major U.S. presenting organizations, artist management companies and internationally renowned artists in dance, theater, visual performance art and music including PERFORMA (NYC, NY), MASS MoCA (North Adams, MA), and Cal Performances (Berkeley, CA).
Sandy currently serves as the chair of Pentacle’s DEIA Committee and has been involved in ongoing efforts to advance more equitable practices in national dance touring. She was a member of the Dance/USA Equitable Contracting Joint Working Group, comprised of agents, managers and presenters who worked collectively to advocate for the implementation of equitable compensation and cancellation clauses in engagement contracts between touring dance companies and presenting organizations. She was also a member of Creating New Futures’ Contract Working Group and served as an advisor for the Association of Performing Arts Professionals’ ArtsForward Grants Program. Sandy was a mentor for Urban Bush Women’s Choreographic Center Initiative and most recently worked with Fannie Bellefeuille (Executive Director, RUBBERBAND) to launch The Green Fund, an eco-touring initiative that provides funding to U.S. presenters who support environmentally conscious touring practices.
JEREMY LYDIC (Guest speaker) As Production Manager and Technical Director, Jeremy aims to support and uplift the collaborative process of performance-making. As Director of Production at Pomegranate Arts, selected credits include Taylor Mac’s Bark of Millions, A 24 Decade History of Popular Music, and Holiday Sauce (also Co-Set Designer), Robin Frohardt’s The Plastic Bag Store, Lucinda Childs’ Available Light and Portrait, several North American tours of Batsheva Dance Company, and the final production of Robert Wilson and Philip Glass’ Einstein on the Beach in South Korea. Outside PM/TD credits include projects produced by The Park Avenue Armory, The Shed, Lincoln Center Festival, Spoleto USA, and BAM. With Lydic! Design And Production, Lydic made selected props and effects for the Broadway productions of Frozen, Cats, Something Rotten, Fish in the Dark, Gigi, The Last Ship, Book of Mormon, and scores of others. Lydic’s directing credits include the 2020 virtual production of Taylor Mac’s Holiday Sauce: Pandemic!
Ntshadi Mofokeng (Program Associate) is a cultural worker who writes and curates, organizes to support artists’ rights, and engages with cultural policy. She is contributing to the proliferation of narratives about and experiences of contemporary dance from Africa. Her experience as an interdisciplinary arts administrator includes working with the Institute for Creative Arts at the University of Cape Town and Gregory Maqoma Industries as well as serving on the inaugural national steering committee of the Theatre and Dance Association (TADA). She has been selected as an International Society for the Performing Arts (ISPA) Global Fellow and the inaugural class of the Sustaining Theatre and Dance (STAND) Foundation Leadership Initiative. Prior to that, she served in various organizing and management roles within Equal Education, a youth led social movement. She graduated cum laude from Bryn Mawr College with a BA in Political Science.
Sophie Myrtil-McCourty (Mentor and Facilitator) is the founder and president of Lotus Arts Management, one of the country’s premiere boutique dance agencies. For the past several years, Sophie has supported the professional development of award-winning dance companies such as A.I.M by Kyle Abraham, CONTRA-TIEMPO, Reggie Wilson/Fist & Heel Performance Group, and Seoul-based, Bereishit Dance Company through consistent domestic and international bookings. Most recently, she welcomed to her roster the critically acclaimed Ronald K. Brown / EVIDENCE and mesmerizing choreographer and performer, Shamel Pitts with his afrofuturistic arts collective, TRIBE.
Sophie has served on several panels both nationally and internationally. In the US, she was on the committee of the 2015 Wassaic Festival; sat on the board of Tennessee Presenters; and was an Advisory Council Member of the Field Leadership Fund, which is based on the premise that advancements in diversity among leadership will lead to a more equitable arts sector in New York City and beyond. Most recently, Sophie was invited to participate in the Performing Arts Market Seoul program of Korea Arts Management Service; the Project NEXT program of the Korean Foundation for International Exchange; and Ottawa’s National Arts Centre’s Producers Gathering, where she shared her expertise in the booking field. She currently serves on the Board of Trustees of Dance/USA.
Maleek Washington (Mentor and Facilitator) is a performer, choreographer, and teaching artist. A native New Yorker from the Bronx, he began his dance training at Harlem School of the Arts, Broadway Dance Center, and the Laguardia High School for the Performing Arts, and attended The Boston Conservatory on full scholarship. He began his professional career with CityDance Ensemble in Washington DC, before returning to NYC to collaborate with McArthur Genius Awardee Kyle Abraham as a part of Abraham.In.Motion (@aimbykyleabraham) for 4 seasons. He then became the first African-American male to perform in the critically acclaimed immersive show Sleep No More (Punch Drunk).
Maleek choreographed for rap legend Nas’ 2022 “Big Nas Masterclass” commercial and video, assisted choreography for Spike Lee’s Mont Blanc commercial, and has performed for Sia, Phish, Rihanna, and NBC’s Jesus Christ Superstar LIVE. He has been a member of Camille A. Brown and Dancers for 5 seasons and was an assistant choreographer for Porgy & Bess (Grammy Winner) and Fire Shut Up In My Bones at the Metropolitan Opera in NYC.
His performance talents have been recognized nationally at prestigious venues including The White House, The John F. Kennedy Center for Performing Arts, Jacob’s Pillow, The Joyce Theater, and the Apollo Theater. He has been commissioned to present works by renowned organizations both nationally and internationally, and is a highly sought after teaching artist. Maleek is honored to be a 2022 Princess Grace Award Winner in Choreography, a 2021 Bessie Nominee as an Emerging Choreographer, and is a Co-curator of the 2019 Bronx APAP Dance Festival at Hostos.
Dana Whitco (Guest Speaker) is a founding director of the Tisch Initiative for Creative Research (TCR) at NYU/Tisch School of the Arts. She designs and executes resource programs (grant-making, residency, mentorship, professional development) supporting research activities of faculty, students, staff and alumni. Previous senior arts management: Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, Leveraging Investments in Creativity, New England Foundation for the Arts, and Center Theater Group (Mark Taper Forum/Ahmanson Theater/Kirk Douglas Theater). Advisor/panelist for grant-making programs in NYC and US; presenter/guest speaker at professional conferences, US and abroad. Graduate studies in dance, UCLA. Taught dance and dance-related subjects: NYU, UCLA, Loyola Marymount University, Temple University among others. Current Board Chair, Bebe Miller Company. Mother, Surfer, Jersey Booster.