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Dancers of New York

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  • November 2018
    • Nov 15, 2018 Madelyn Ho, East Broadway, F Nov 15, 2018
  • March 2018
    • Mar 5, 2018 Jessica Castro, 116 Street Station, 6 Mar 5, 2018
  • March 2017
    • Mar 20, 2017 Cece Xie, Astor Place, 6 Mar 20, 2017
    • Mar 11, 2017 Jackie Aitken, 1 Avenue Station, L Mar 11, 2017
    • Mar 9, 2017 Billy Griffin, Canal Street, A-C-E Mar 9, 2017
    • Mar 7, 2017 Andrew Winans, 18 Street Station, 1 Mar 7, 2017
    • Mar 2, 2017 Darius Wright, Spring Street, A-C-E Mar 2, 2017
  • February 2017
    • Feb 28, 2017 Ashley Talluto, 96 Street Station, Q Feb 28, 2017
    • Feb 25, 2017 Amanda LaMotte, Grand Central Station, S-4-5-6-7 Feb 25, 2017
    • Feb 24, 2017 Clay Thomson, Rector Street, R-W Feb 24, 2017
    • Feb 23, 2017 Nikki Croker, 14 Street Station, A-C-E Feb 23, 2017
    • Feb 22, 2017 Colin Shea Denniston, Rector Street, 1 Feb 22, 2017
    • Feb 20, 2017 Lainee Hunter, Lexington Avenue / 63 Street Station, F-Q Feb 20, 2017
    • Feb 17, 2017 Jordana Lerner, 69 Street / Fisk Avenue Station, 7 Feb 17, 2017
    • Feb 16, 2017 Alden LaPaglia, Church Avenue Station, B-Q Feb 16, 2017
    • Feb 13, 2017 Lindsay Janisse, 125 Street Station, 2-3 Feb 13, 2017
    • Feb 8, 2017 Mary Page Nance, 207 Street Station, 1 Feb 8, 2017
    • Feb 7, 2017 Emily Blake Anderson, 68 Street / Hunter College Station, 6 Feb 7, 2017
    • Feb 6, 2017 Kellene Rottenberger, 51 Street Station, 6 Feb 6, 2017
    • Feb 5, 2017 Karli Dinardo, 57 Street Station, F Feb 5, 2017
    • Feb 1, 2017 Madison Eastman, Main Street / Flushing Station, 7. Feb 1, 2017
  • January 2017
    • Jan 27, 2017 Jessica Ice, Queens Plaza, E-M-R Jan 27, 2017
    • Jan 25, 2017 Ali Koinoglou, Franklin Street, 1. Jan 25, 2017
    • Jan 21, 2017 Vanessa Mitchell (Women's March Special Feature) Jan 21, 2017
    • Jan 19, 2017 Penny Wildman, Bowling Green Station, 4-5 Jan 19, 2017
    • Jan 16, 2017 Carlos Morales, Dyckman Street Station, 1 Jan 16, 2017
  • December 2016
    • Dec 17, 2016 Evan Ruggiero, 34 Street / Herald Square Station Dec 17, 2016
    • Dec 15, 2016 Lucia Daisog, Myrtle Avenue, J-M-Z Dec 15, 2016
  • November 2016
    • Nov 10, 2016 Kory Geller, 61 Street / Woodside Station, 7. Nov 10, 2016
  • October 2016
    • Oct 4, 2016 Liz Beres, Queensboro Plaza Station, N-Q-7 Oct 4, 2016
  • September 2016
    • Sep 22, 2016 Chaz Wolcott, Third Avenue, L Sep 22, 2016
  • August 2016
    • Aug 26, 2016 Hannah Fonder, 33 Street Station, 6 Aug 26, 2016
    • Aug 22, 2016 Nicholas Palmquist, 53 Street / 5 Avenue Station, E-M Aug 22, 2016
    • Aug 5, 2016 Taylor Daniels, 157 Street Station, 1 Aug 5, 2016
  • July 2016
    • Jul 29, 2016 Jess LeProtto, W 4 Street / Washington Square Station, A-B-C-D-E-F-M Jul 29, 2016
    • Jul 26, 2016 Khori Michelle Petinaud, 47-50 Streets Rockefeller Center Station, B-D-F-M Jul 26, 2016
    • Jul 25, 2016 Alexa Kobylarz, Houston Street, 1 Jul 25, 2016
  • June 2016
    • Jun 19, 2016 Elizabeth and Lara Teeter, Christopher Street / Sheridan Square, 1 Jun 19, 2016
    • Jun 14, 2016 J'royce Jata, 116 Street Station, 2-3 Jun 14, 2016
  • May 2016
    • May 25, 2016 Richard Riaz Yoder, 42 Street Station / 5 Avenue-Bryant Park, B-D-F-M-7 May 25, 2016
    • May 20, 2016 Chloe Campbell, 110 Street Station, 2-3 May 20, 2016
    • May 3, 2016 Richard J. Hinds, 34 Street Station, 1, 2, 3 May 3, 2016
    • May 2, 2016 Gwynedd Vetter-Drusch, 207 Street Station / Inwood, A May 2, 2016
  • April 2016
    • Apr 28, 2016 Phil Colgan, South Ferry Station, 1 Apr 28, 2016
    • Apr 27, 2016 Kimberlee D. Murray, 28 Street Station, 6 Apr 27, 2016
    • Apr 26, 2016 Katie Hagen, 23 Street Station, 6 Apr 26, 2016
    • Apr 24, 2016 Lizz Picini, 28 Street Station, N-R Apr 24, 2016
    • Apr 16, 2016 Abby Jaros, 23 Street Station, N-R Apr 16, 2016
    • Apr 13, 2016 Alison Sullivan, Fulton Street Station, A-C-J-Z-2-3-4-5 Apr 13, 2016
  • March 2016
    • Mar 25, 2016 Lori Ann Ferreri, Clinton-Washington Avenues Station, G Mar 25, 2016
    • Mar 23, 2016 DJ Petrosino, 39 Avenue Station, N-Q Mar 23, 2016
    • Mar 18, 2016 Brittany Cavaco, 34 Street Station / Hudson Yard, 7 Mar 18, 2016
    • Mar 17, 2016 Derek Mitchell, 23 Street Station, 1 Mar 17, 2016
    • Mar 10, 2016 Rileigh McDonald, 7 Avenue Station, B-D-E Mar 10, 2016
    • Mar 4, 2016 Brandon Leffler, 42 Street Station / Port Authority, A-C-E Mar 4, 2016
  • February 2016
    • Feb 29, 2016 Brinda Guha, Utica Avenue, A Feb 29, 2016
    • Feb 28, 2016 Scott Shendenheim, 36 Street Station, M-R Feb 28, 2016
    • Feb 18, 2016 Renee Gagner, 14 Street Station, 1-2-3 Feb 18, 2016
  • January 2016
    • Jan 22, 2016 Francesca Granell, 116 Street Station, 1 Jan 22, 2016
    • Jan 21, 2016 Paloma Garcia-Lee, 28 Street Station, 1 Jan 21, 2016
    • Jan 19, 2016 Sharrod Williams, Canal Street, 1 Jan 19, 2016
    • Jan 17, 2016 Cory Lingner, 79 Street Station, 1 Jan 17, 2016
    • Jan 15, 2016 Lorin Latarro, Bedford Avenue, L Jan 15, 2016
    • Jan 14, 2016 Brandon Hudson, 191 Street Station, 1. Jan 14, 2016
    • Jan 13, 2016 Adam Soniak, Dyckman Street Station, A Jan 13, 2016
    • Jan 10, 2016 Caitlin Evans, 135 Street Station, B-C Jan 10, 2016
  • December 2015
    • Dec 18, 2015 Ryan VanDenBoom, Prospect Park Station, B-Q-S Dec 18, 2015
    • Dec 16, 2015 Whitney Cooper, Court Square Station, E-G-M-7 Dec 16, 2015
  • November 2015
    • Nov 29, 2015 Chris Rice, 50 Street Station, C-E Nov 29, 2015
    • Nov 12, 2015 Jennifer Jancuska, Atlantic Avenue Station / Barclays Center, B-D-N-Q-R-2-3-4-5 Nov 12, 2015
    • Nov 11, 2015 Mallory Davis, 50 Street Station, 1 Nov 11, 2015
    • Nov 6, 2015 Jon Rua, 36 Avenue Station, N-Q Nov 6, 2015
    • Nov 5, 2015 Kahlia Davis, 86 Street Station, B-C Nov 5, 2015
    • Nov 3, 2015 Sarah Juliet Shaw, Steinway Street Station, M-R Nov 3, 2015
  • October 2015
    • Oct 28, 2015 Marc Kimelman, 2 Avenue Station, F Oct 28, 2015
    • Oct 27, 2015 Nora Moutrane, 34 Street Station / Penn Station, A-C-E Oct 27, 2015
    • Oct 12, 2015 Monica Azpeitia, 23 Street Station, C-E Oct 12, 2015
    • Oct 10, 2015 Brittany Weir, 96 Street Station, 6 Oct 10, 2015
    • Oct 5, 2015 Al Blackstone, 52 Street Station, 7 Oct 5, 2015
    • Oct 1, 2015 James Washington, 168 Street Station, A-C-1 Oct 1, 2015
  • September 2015
    • Sep 17, 2015 Ben Lanham, 5 Avenue / 59 Street, N-Q-R Sep 17, 2015
    • Sep 15, 2015 Andrew Nemr, 23 Street Station, F-M Sep 15, 2015
    • Sep 12, 2015 Kayley Stevens, 103 Street Station, 1 Sep 12, 2015
    • Sep 2, 2015 Elliott Mattox, 163 Street Station, C Sep 2, 2015
  • August 2015
    • Aug 28, 2015 Quinten Busey, 175 Street Station, A Aug 28, 2015
    • Aug 21, 2015 Sierra and Marlene Glasheen + Hazel Kandall, 59th Street / Lexington Avenue, N-Q-R-4-5-6 Aug 21, 2015
    • Aug 18, 2015 Payton Carvalho, 103 Street Station, B-C Aug 18, 2015
    • Aug 7, 2015 Julieta Severo, Prince Street, N-R Aug 7, 2015
  • July 2015
    • Jul 14, 2015 Oren Korenblum, 155 Street Station, C Jul 14, 2015
    • Jul 12, 2015 Maria Sinclaire, 96 Street Station, B-C Jul 12, 2015
    • Jul 5, 2015 Alex Alampi, 57 Street / 7 Avenue Station, N-Q-R Jul 5, 2015
    • Jul 4, 2015 Natalie Zisa, 59 Street / Columbus Circle Station Jul 4, 2015
    • Jul 3, 2015 Taylor Green, Parkside Avenue, Q Jul 3, 2015
    • Jul 2, 2015 Anna Davis, 66 Street / Lincoln Center Station, 1 Jul 2, 2015
  • June 2015
    • Jun 25, 2015 Megan Levinson, 81 Street Station, B-C Jun 25, 2015
    • Jun 24, 2015 Amy Miller, 86 Street Station, 1 Jun 24, 2015
    • Jun 23, 2015 Michelle West, 145 Street, 1 Jun 23, 2015
    • Jun 18, 2015 Savannah Butler, Lexington Avenue / 53 Street - E, M Jun 18, 2015
    • Jun 17, 2015 Anna Terese Stone, 181 Street, 1 Jun 17, 2015
    • Jun 11, 2015 Paul HeeSang Miller, 116 Street Station, B-C Jun 11, 2015
    • Jun 9, 2015 Sofie Eriksson, Chambers Street, A-C Jun 9, 2015
    • Jun 5, 2015 Kim Faure, 72 Street Station, 1-2-3 Jun 5, 2015
    • Jun 1, 2015 Mike Kirsch, 145 Street Station, A-B-C-D Jun 1, 2015
  • May 2015
    • May 28, 2015 Abigayle Horrell, 86 Street Station, 4-5-6 May 28, 2015
    • May 25, 2015 Justin Boccitto, 190 Street Station, A May 25, 2015
    • May 21, 2015 Kelsey Andres, 49 Street Station, N-Q-R May 21, 2015
    • May 18, 2015 Sarah Fagan, 137 Street Station / City College, 1 May 18, 2015
    • May 14, 2015 Katey Kephart, 215 Street Station, 1 May 14, 2015
    • May 11, 2015 Angela Palladini, 125 Street Station, 1 May 11, 2015
    • May 7, 2015 Jason Wise, 110 Street Station / Cathedral Parkway, B-C May 7, 2015
    • May 4, 2015 Ryan Kasprzak, 30 Avenue, N-Q May 4, 2015
  • April 2015
    • Apr 30, 2015 Sophie Lee Morris, Astoria Ditmars Blvd, N-Q Apr 30, 2015
    • Apr 27, 2015 Bekah Howard, 14 Street Station / Union Square, L-N-Q-R-4-5-6 Apr 27, 2015
    • Apr 23, 2015 Josephine Kelly, 110 Street / Cathedral Parkway, 1 Apr 23, 2015
    • Apr 20, 2015 Maureen Kelley, Vernon Blvd / Jackson Ave, 7 Apr 20, 2015
    • Apr 18, 2015 Courtney Rottenberger, 7 Avenue Station, B-Q Apr 18, 2015
    • Apr 17, 2015 Anne Marie Snyder, 46 Street Station, M-R Apr 17, 2015
    • Apr 14, 2015 Eloise Kropp, 96 Street Station, 1-2-3 Apr 14, 2015
    • Apr 13, 2015 Shauna Sorensen, 46 Street Station, 7 Apr 13, 2015
  • February 2015
    • Feb 21, 2015 Phoebe Tamble, 125 Street, A-B-C-D Feb 21, 2015
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Madelyn Ho, East Broadway, F

November 15, 2018

How did you start dancing?

I started dancing when I was a little kid. I was one of those kids that would dance at home. My mom took me to a dress rehearsal of a dance recital where I fell in love with a solo done to Amazing Grace. She had videotaped the dress rehearsal and I’d just watch it over and over on repeat. I would have my own dance recitals until my parents were like, “How about we put you in class so you can have one dance recital a year as opposed to all the time in the living room?”

So I started out with ballet and tap. I was about four. I was in a class where I was the smallest kid. I loved it. I loved ballet. I was less interested in tap. By middle school, I was pretty much doing ballet only. I had moved to a studio called Fort Bend Academy of Dance with a pre-professional company, BalletForte. The director was amazing. He really believed in doing full-length ballets. All of the students would be dancing in the full-length ballets instead of hiring guest artists. We got a lot of opportunities and exposure through that. When I was younger, I wished I had gone to a ballet academy, but looking back it was amazing to be able to have those opportunities.

I did not think about modern. I was actually really scared about modern. I just didn’t know anything about modern dance. At that time, there weren’t that many classes available in Sugar Land, TX. I did not ever imagine I’d be dancing in a professional modern company growing up.

What was it like going through high school?

Dance was something that I really, really loved. It was something that was very much my identity. Academics were definitely a focus as well for me. My mom comes from a very artistic family where her father is a self-taught calligrapher and musician. My mom was a piano teacher and loved dance as an art form. So she was really happy to see that I loved dance as well.

Growing up, it was a lot of balancing between academics and dance. In some ways it made me more disciplined. In order to do both things, I just had to work harder. Because I was so into ballet, I kind of knew that at the end of high school that I wouldn’t ever make it in a ballet company just because of the way ballet companies are. A lot of people go into a professional company right after high school, and I knew that wouldn’t be possible for me. But I knew I wanted to continue dancing. I had applied to a bunch of schools knowing that I wanted to major in some science field and to continue dancing.

At the Harvard pre-orientation weekend, the Harvard Ballet Company had their performance during the time-period—knowing that all these new potential freshmen would come. I went to see one of the performances and was amazed—I could not have imagined dance at such a high level at a school where dance is not a major. For me, I was sold. This was a place where I could do both. I think I was driven by the fact that I didn’t want to close doors. I wanted to be able to keep doing both.

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It was in college—because of an injury where I couldn’t really dance on pointe anymore, and my friend who was choreographing a dance asked me if I’d be interested in being in his piece. That was my first exposure to modern dance. Then, a professor at Boston Conservatory, also alumni of José Limón Dance company, came to set a work by José Limón, and that was my first formalized exposure to modern dance. College was when I discovered a whole other field I had no idea about. In some ways, I was forced into it because I wanted to keep dancing but I couldn’t dance on pointe anymore.

I was a chemical and physical biology major as an undergrad. I have always loved science, and knowing that dance has an endpoint and that performance careers are not everlasting—I feel like there are amazing people who continue dancing into their later years but that’s definitely the exception and not the norm. I don’t think I am that talented to be able to do that [laughs]. I knew I wanted to do something after dancing, and medicine was something that really captivated me. In some ways, I think it was very much informed by dance in terms of my interest in the human body and how everything is connected. Once I found out that there is a niche field called dance medicine, which is rapidly growing, I felt like there was this special place for me in medicine that is just perfect in terms of combining science, medicine, and dance. I knew medicine is a long commitment of schooling and training. I knew that there would be a time where I’d have to make that decision to transition from dance.

How did you get involved with Paul Taylor Dance Company?

One of the things that a lot of my friends in dance did while growing up was go to dance intensives. I was never allowed to go to them. I was so sad and jealous about not being able to go, and I wanted to go to one. I didn’t think it was possible because a lot of programs are geared towards students in middle school and high school. But there are also modern dance intensives and I wanted to make up for the fact that I didn’t get to go when I was younger. Now I could make my own decisions about what I wanted to do in the summer, I was going to do a dance intensive.

There was a new arts scholarship available for students, and you had to propose a project and apply, so I thought I should do more than just one intensive if I was going to put all the work into getting this grant. I did some research and looked into different companies. I was interested in David Parsons work because I had seen it before and liked how athletic it was. And I found out that he was an alumni of Paul Taylor Dance Company, so I started watching some works by Paul Taylor. I did the Paul Taylor intensive as well as the David Parsons intensive, and that was my first exposure to his style. It felt awesome. In some ways, as a smaller person, I always saw my size as a hindrance for ballet. Seeing that Paul Taylor Dance Company had other people who were smaller in stature and that the work was all about moving through space, I didn’t have to be my size—I could dance bigger than who I am. That captured me, and I loved my experience at the intensive. In my senior year, Taylor 2 came and did a performance at Harvard, and Ruth Andrien, who is an alumni of Paul Taylor, now the rehearsal director of Taylor 2, came to teach a semester of work. This was prior to a dance major, but there was movement towards trying to create a curriculum, so it was one of the early for credit classes in dance. I took the class and was in the Paul Taylor piece she set, Aureole. That just reaffirmed how much I loved the style.

Luck would have it, there was an audition for the company right before my senior graduation, and I was at the right place at the right time. It worked out and that’s when I got into Taylor 2.

I think when I made the decision to leave Taylor 2 and start med school, I thought I was done dancing, and it also felt like if I wanted to go down this 8-10 year training journey, I should get started at some point sooner than later. It was a hard decision to make because I remember even as I was interviewing—maybe ambivalence is not quite the right word, but I was definitely questioning if I was doing the right thing. Actually at one of my interviews, the interviewer asked how I felt about making this change and about how no one is going to be applauding me for a very long time if ever. I told him that I was ready for a change, but in reality, I wasn’t sure 100%.

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In med school, I danced my first year with the Harvard Dance Program and Urbanity Underground, but then by second and third year it was just not possible. During the third year of medical school, I was looking at the Lincoln Center season schedule for Paul Taylor because I wanted to bring my boyfriend to show him this whole other life that I had. That’s when I saw the audition for the main company. I hadn’t been looking for an audition, but when I saw that, immediately and instinctively, I was like, “I have to go.” It was not rational and not likely that I’d make the company, but I had to go. I feel like Paul had this keen sense of knowing that it was my last audition—this is not the first time I’ve heard someone say that about him. For me, that audition felt very different than previous ones because it was more freeing. As much as I wanted it, I wasn’t constrained by all the mind games that come into play.

I was in my third year of med school at that point. Once I started with the main company, I took a leave of absence from school. I had one year left. I was so close from finishing school. Fourth year of medical school is a little more flexible because they’re electives. Any time I had off, I’d go back to Boston and also do away rotations in New York City. I used any time that was available. There were definitely people who believed in what I was doing and really supported me in the process and allowed me to have this atypical schedule. I graduated last May and going to keep on dancing holding off my residency for the time being.

What are your plans?

I very much believe that there’s a way to be able to combine medicine and dance. This intersection of arts and medicine is a place that things can happen. I am not sure if I have the right answers to that at the moment, but I know that dance medicine exists. I feel like what I am doing right now draws on both my dance experience and medicine background. That is something I want to continue doing. Figuring out something that makes it possible.

How long do you see yourself dancing?

It’s hard to say. I don’t feel like I have a timeline. In some ways, I feel like because my path has been less direct and have been given opportunities I could not have imagined, I should continue on this path for awhile. I want to be open to those opportunities and possibilities whatever they mean. I feel like at the moment I am very happy with where I am with dance.

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Who was Paul Taylor to you?

This period has been a very interesting time. With his passing, there is great sadness but with it a sense of profound gratefulness. This is someone who has changed the lives of so many people. He profoundly changed the course of my life. I think many people can say that for their own lives. Not just for dancers but also other artists in the field. He is someone who has moved people in all different ways. Reading all these articles about him you see that as well. Even people who I didn’t realize were as connected to the arts have reached out in their condolences. It’s interesting because I know him as an individual. I see him as my boss, a creator of these beautiful works that we still are able to continue to do and he lives on in his works. In some ways, he isn’t gone. He’s also this icon. He is one of the last great choreographers of this era that really shaped, changed, and created modern dance. So it’s interesting to see him in all these different levels and how that ripple-effects to the world.

When we found out about his passing, we were off at the time. For us, it’s not that often, so it very much amplified the fact that he brought together this family. We tour together, work together, travel together, live together. We fight like a family [laughs]. He very much brought together this family that was special to him. One of the articles—I want to say Gia wrote—she commented on it saying he doesn’t have any immediate family, and this dance company is family. [The article was written by Gia Kourlas, and she put it more eloquently: “In the many obituaries for Mr. Taylor, there is a line that keeps leaping out at me: He left no immediate survivors. That’s not true. He had more survivors than you could count on 15 hands. His dancers, more than 150 and counting — the company just held auditions — are his survivors.”]

I do think that is very true. He has this keenness about people. As someone who loved observing people and was so aware, I think he brought people together that he thought would be a part of this family. In some ways our day to day hasn’t changed. He knew what he wanted. He said as long as people wanted to see his work, it should be able to be done. He has created this continuity with Paul Taylor American Modern Dance and named a successor, Michael Novak. We knew where he wanted us to go and to be a part of that journey is pretty amazing.

What would be your advice to dancers who want to pursue another path at the same time?

For me, it was this passion for both that really drove me to do these things. In some ways, I was not willing for no to be the answer. I was also really lucky too that I found people who advocated on my behalf to make this possible. As much as I wanted to be able to do this, I very much relied on the powers that be and people who were of greater significance than I to be able to help me make this possible. And that wasn’t my doing. These people believed in me and were willing to take a risk on me. So maybe finding those people in your life who are willing to believe in your cause. You just can’t do it alone. I feel like there are so many entrepreneurial individuals  who do their own things, seeing them create their own ways was very inspiring to me.

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If you could go back in time and tell little Madelyn anything, what would you like to tell her?

I would like to tell her that her habit of flaring your ribs while you’re dancing is going to come and bite you in the butt. There is definitely video evidence of me doing it and I was like, “Oh my gosh I still have those bad habits. This is where they came from.” I would also encourage her to keep finding those joyful moments. Keep creating them and finding them. It’s the joy and freedom—and sometimes as artists you’re working so hard to get better at stuff that joy is lost. For me, sometimes I catch myself doing that, where I’m trying so hard for perfection, which I feel has been so ingrained, sometimes at the expense of artistry—it’s interesting. One of my mottos that I’ve come to during our last China tour was “Care less.” Not to not care, but just to care less and find that joy.

Any last thing you want to share with the world?

I guess for me, I love hearing people’s stories. I love hearing people’s journeys. I think people should find ways to share their journeys because you never know who may hear it and what that may mean to someone else.

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