Dance

Dance Sampler gives audiences the chance to experience 10 different companies

Written By Sean Erwin
October 2, 2023 at 6:42 PM

Dance NOW! Miami dancers perform Hannah Baumgarten and Diego Salterini’s “Gli altri/The Others.” Dance NOW! co-artistic directors founded the Daniel Lewis Dance Sampler, which has become the unofficial kick-off to Miami’s dance season. (Photo courtesy of Simon Soong)

Miami signals the start of its Fall dance season with a party. The Daniel Lewis Dance Sampler unites area dance lovers with a showcase of the best of Miami dance.

Hannah Baumgarten and Diego Salterini – co-artistic directors of the modern dance company Dance NOW! Miami – founded the Sampler in 2012, which they named in honor of  Daniel Lewis, the former assistant director of dance and faculty member at the Julliard School. Lewis is also former dean of dance at Miami’s New World School of the Arts.

Since then, the Sampler has become an informal kick-off to Miami’s dance season where audiences catch a preview of their favorite companies and the region’s dancers and choreographers, while dance administrators network and plan new projects.

Dance Company, Zest Collective, performs “Afro Blue.” (Photo courtesy of Kevin Alvarez Cordova)

As it turns out, Baumgarten and Salterini were inspired by the success of another “Sampler,”  which was known as “The Modern Dance Sampler,” an annual Miami event from 1988 to 1997.

Both Baumgarten and Salterini had danced in an earlier version of the event, which Lewis produced through Miami Dance Futures, a non-profit organization he founded to support dance in South Florida.

“(The Modern Dance Sampler) was usually presented at the Colony Theatre (on Miami Beach) and presented works of modern dance from Miami choreographers and companies,” says Baumgarten.  “As young performers in Miami, we found the experience had a profound community-building component.”

Both old and new Dance Samplers work in the same way – by “aggregating” and “cross-pollinating” audiences.

Dance enthusiasts flock to the Sampler with hopes that they will see strong performances in at least one of their favorite dance genres.

Gathered in one place, those who favor one kind of dance can see talented dancers performing another form they might otherwise never have attended.

Arts Ballet Theatre dancers, Louise Rigby and Daniel Panameño dance a pas de deux in “Double Clef.” (Photo courtesy of Patricia Laine Romero)

This year’s Sampler features performances from ten companies, including Arts Ballet Theatre of Florida, Ballet Flamenco La Rosa, Ballet Vero Beach, Dance NOW! Miami, Dimensions Dance Theatre of Miami, Omayra Amaya Flamenco Dance Company, Emily Ricca, Syncopate Collective, New World Dance Ensemble and the Zest Collective.

“Our goal is to give our audiences a taste of what each company has to offer and leave them eagerly anticipating their future performances,” says Salterini. “First and foremost, it’s important to us that all of the companies and choreographers we feature are professionals. This means they have a track record of paying their artists and have a somewhat formed season of events beyond the Sampler.”

The formula is working.  The Sampler continues to expand to theaters outside Miami-Dade.  Even last year’s Hurricane Ian couldn’t block the Sampler’s debut on Florida’s West Coast.

“Two years ago, doing our best to rebuild after COVID devastated the performing arts, we decided to expand the Sampler both in terms of participating artists and audience reach,” says Baumgarten.  “We sent out our call for submissions to every professional dance company in the state and as many professional choreographers as we could find.”

The venues that responded included Artis-Naples, a performing and visual arts center on Florida’s West Coast. “Our friends at the Limón Dance Company had just performed at Artis-Naples following their weekend of concerts in collaboration with Dance NOW! so we thought they may be interested in co-presenting and to our delight, they were,” she says.

Omayra Flamenco Dance Company, “A Solas,” with dancer Omayra Amaya, will perform at this year’s Dance Sampler. (Photo courtesy of Frank Pool)

Even the devastating pandemic has proven a source of the Sampler’s growth.  For the third time, the showcase includes a Video Dance Showcase featuring works online made to be viewed on a screen.

Baumgarten and Salterini create each year’s program by putting out a call to companies to submit videos of performances then the pair assess them with an eye to quality, style, rhythm and length.

Their aim is “to curate” a program that fully represents Miami’s dance community while respecting audience attention spans, according to the curators.

They admit that the process favors Miami’s more established companies and choreographers who often have the required submission materials readily available.

“The dance community here is constantly evolving and growing, with new artists and organizations emerging all the time,” says Salterini.  “That’s why we prioritize giving up-and-comers a chance to plant their roots and show their commitment to our community.”

And this is where the Sampler shows its value to area dance professionals as a networking opportunity for performers and companies.

“It means a lot to me to be accepted.  I’m a freelance ballerina,” says classical dancer and choreographer, Emily Ricca, who will perform at the Sampler for the first time with dance partner, Isaiah Gonzalez.

Classical dancer Emily Ricca dances a pas de deux with dance partner, Isaiah Gonzalez. (Photo courtesy of Kenyatta DeShazior)

“I’ve served in professional ballet companies throughout my career, but in Miami, I’ve created things on my own, and it means a lot to me to be part of a collective and to see other dancers and what they are doing,” says Ricca. “I want to be able to create with more dancers.  I’m usually on my own or with my dance partner so I am so excited to be with other dancers and to network,” she says.

At the upcoming Sampler, the couple will perform “Coleridge Classic,” a pas de deux set to “Fantasiestücke for String Quartet” (Op. 5) by African American composer, Samuel Coleridge-Taylor (1875-1912).

“You will see some performers you may remember from one troupe last year, dancing with another one this year, and, in fact, you may see even a few dancers performing with several different groups,” says Baumgarten. “This is a testimony to the overarching climate in our community – one that understands, we all need each other, we need to share audiences, marketing, and sometimes even dancers.”

WHAT: 13th Annual Florida Daniel Lewis Dance Sampler.

WHERE:  Artis–Naples Hayes Hall, 5833 Pelican Bay Blvd., Naples; New World School of the Arts, 25 NE 2nd St., 8th floor, Miami.

WHEN:  8 p.m., Friday, Oct. 6 at Artis–Naples, 8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 7 and 2:30 p.m., Sunday, Oct. 8, at New World School of the Arts.

COST: At Artis–Naples, $29 to $59.  At New World, $25 general admission, $15 students.

INFORMATION: 305-975-8489 or dancenowmiami.org 

ArtburstMiami.com is a nonprofit media source for the arts featuring fresh and original stories by writers dedicated to theater, dance, visual arts, film, music and more. Don’t miss a story at www.artburstmiami.com.

latest posts

Philadelphia-based BalletX Presents New, Cutting Edge W...

Written By Sean Erwin,

The arrival of Philadelphia-based BalletX has taken nearly a decade, says the Moss Center's managing director.

Forward Motion Festival more than spotlighting dancers ...

Written By Guillermo Perez,

Karen Peterson Dance's Forward Motion Festival was a pioneer in physically integrated dance and it is still a groundbreaker.

Review: Miami City Ballet, in all its splendor as a con...

Written By Orlando Taquechel,

MCB harmonized tastes and merits like an authentic miracle worker with this unforgettable Spring Mix.