Cover image of show The Dance Lens Podcast

The Dance Lens Podcast

Podcast by WHERE DANCE MEETS ART, HISTORY, POLITICS & SOCIAL (RE)EVOLUTIONS

English

Personal stories & conversations

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About The Dance Lens Podcast

Dance exists at the intersection of fashion, history, art, politics, fashion, ritual and social evolutions. Through interviews, reviews, story times and behind the scenes we'll take a deeper look at the art form's history, industry and artists. thedancelens.substack.com

All episodes

26 episodes

episode INTERVIEW: Christine Cox—The BalletX Model artwork

INTERVIEW: Christine Cox—The BalletX Model

INTERVIEW: Christine Cox, co-founder and Artistic and Executive Director of BalletX, Philadelphia’s premier contemporary ballet company, which she founded alongside choreographer Matthew Neenan in 2005. In two decades of leadership, Cox has built BalletX into one of the most distinctive forces in contemporary ballet, producing over 150 world premiere works by more than 80 choreographers and performing at venues like Jacob’s Pillow, New York City Center and The Joyce Theater. She’s here ahead of the Festival at Highmark Mann in Philadelphia, June 4th and 5th, featuring the world premiere of The Four Seasons Reimagined — an epic love letter to Mother Nature, with composer and electronic music innovator Dan Deacon and four world-renowned choreographers take on each season: Morgann Runacre-Temple Summer, Penny Saunders Fall, Jamar Roberts Winter, and Trey McIntyre Spring. Before founding BalletX, Cox was a member of Pennsylvania Ballet — now Philadelphia Ballet — for over a decade. Today we’re talking about her work at BalletX, what it takes to build a contemporary ballet company from the ground up, and what’s coming next. Want more great dance content? Join us on Dance Lens Substack for reviews, interviews, deep dives and LIVES! https://thedancelens.substack.com/ [https://thedancelens.substack.com/] Get full access to The Dance Lens with Cynthia Dragoni at thedancelens.substack.com/subscribe [https://thedancelens.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

20 May 2026 - 29 min
episode INTERVIEW: What It Really Takes to Become a Dance Maker artwork

INTERVIEW: What It Really Takes to Become a Dance Maker

INTERVIEW: Jessica Lang on career-making, creativity and the hidden realities of becoming a choreographer. In anticipation of the All Lang program at Pacific Northwest Ballet. [https://www.pnb.org/?gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=6615379111&gbraid=0AAAAADr9tuucaFiNwOIun76YuE_e-wauZ&gclid=CjwKCAjwn4vQBhBsEiwAq3hhN2q-dBWEGou4vhecDSr_DOXwJODgBlr5H5a4gbyuqjUMmVom0Yc1nhoCRlwQAvD_BwE]May 29-June 7 featuring ‘Her Door to the Sky’, ‘Ghost Variations’, and ‘Zigzag’ Lang discusses the creative life and what it really takes to become a choreographer. Lang is one of the world’s most versatile and prolific choreographers. A graduate of the Juilliard School and former member of Twyla Tharp’s company, she has created over 100 works for some of the world’s most celebrated institutions — among them American Ballet Theatre, the Royal Ballet, Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater, and The Joffrey Ballet. Her work moves fluidly between ballet, contemporary dance, and opera, and has taken her from the stages of Lincoln Center to the Guggenheim to San Francisco Opera. She is currently Resident Choreographer at Pacific Northwest Ballet and Artist in Residence at Sarasota Ballet. For more great dance content: interviews, reviews and lives join us on The Dance Lens Substack: https://thedancelens.substack.com/ [https://thedancelens.substack.com/] If you’re in Seattle, Pacific Northwest Ballet presents an all-Lang program [https://www.pnb.org/?gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=6615379111&gbraid=0AAAAADr9tuucaFiNwOIun76YuE_e-wauZ&gclid=CjwKCAjwn4vQBhBsEiwAq3hhN2q-dBWEGou4vhecDSr_DOXwJODgBlr5H5a4gbyuqjUMmVom0Yc1nhoCRlwQAvD_BwE] from May 29th through June 7th, featuring Her Door to the Sky, Ghost Variations, and Zigzag. Get full access to The Dance Lens with Cynthia Dragoni at thedancelens.substack.com/subscribe [https://thedancelens.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

14 May 2026 - 35 min
episode REVIEW: Firebird at Dance Theatre of Harlem artwork

REVIEW: Firebird at Dance Theatre of Harlem

In this episode, we review the luminous interpretations of The Firebird at Dance Theatre of Harlem and its relationship to New York City Ballet’s. Both works are a deluge of beauty and an ocean of visual richness. Though distinct in style and staging, these productions are deeply connected through history, lineage, and artistic exchange. At the center of that connection is Arthur Mitchell, founding force of Dance Theatre of Harlem and former principal dancer at NYCB under George Balanchine. Mitchell’s career bridges these two worlds in profound ways: shaped by Balanchine’s choreography, including works created on him such as Agon and A Midsummer Night’s Dream, and later transformed by his mission to build something entirely new. In 1969, in the wake of the civil rights era and the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr., Mitchell co-founded Dance Theatre of Harlem with Karel Shook—establishing a school and company where Black dancers could train, perform, and thrive in classical ballet. In that context, DTH itself became both artistic achievement and cultural critique, a bold act of resistance and redefinition. Balanchine’s influence carried forward not only through aesthetics but through direct support: he served as one of DTH’s early board members and encouraged Mitchell to create a version of Firebird for the company. When it premiered in 1982, it was met with acclaim, praised for its inventive staging and audience-shifting energy. Where Balanchine and Fokine’s versions of Firebird evoke mythic, wintry Russia, Dance Theatre of Harlem’s interpretation transports us into a Caribbean dreamscape—lush, humid, and alive with color and sound. Giant tropical florals hang over the stage, and Stravinsky’s score anchors the work across all versions, while the Firebird herself arrives in strikingly theatrical ways, including a flash of red light that feels almost playful in its simplicity. The production thrives in its contrasts: methodical character work against playful theatricality, luminous principals against a shifting ensemble, and moments of imperfect stagecraft that remind us of ballet’s evolving relationship with illusion. At its center is the Firebird, whose presence is a metaphor and a force of nature. Though Firebird has not been performed by DTH since 2004, its legacy remains a significant part of the company’s identity, reflecting both its artistic ambition and its historical role in reshaping who gets to inhabit classical ballet’s most iconic roles. If you want more reviews, interviews, deep dives, and LIVES, make sure you join me on Dance Lens Substack—linked HERE: https://thedancelens.substack.com/ [https://thedancelens.substack.com/] Get full access to The Dance Lens with Cynthia Dragoni at thedancelens.substack.com/subscribe [https://thedancelens.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

26 Apr 2026 - 12 min
episode REVIEW: Kyle Abraham's Cassette Vol. 1 artwork

REVIEW: Kyle Abraham's Cassette Vol. 1

REVIEW: Kyle Abraham’s Cassette Vol. 1 at NYU Skirball transforms the 1980s into a neon-lit dreamscape of camp, nostalgia, and grief. Blending choreography, pop culture, and memory, the work moves through vignettes that blur the line between past and present, surface and undercurrent. In this episode, we explore how Abraham and his company A.I.M turn analog aesthetics into something more fragile and reflective—where memory is both a performance and a distortion, and the past is never fully retrievable, only reimagined. Join us on Substack for more reviews, podcasts, interviews articles and subscriber only lives! https://thedancelens.substack.com/ [https://thedancelens.substack.com/] Get full access to The Dance Lens with Cynthia Dragoni at thedancelens.substack.com/subscribe [https://thedancelens.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

23 Apr 2026 - 6 min
episode REVIEW: At American Ballet Theater, “Othello” Reasserts Its Power—and Its Limits artwork

REVIEW: At American Ballet Theater, “Othello” Reasserts Its Power—and Its Limits

IN THIS EDITION: REVIEW: American Ballet Theater Spring Season 2026 “Othello” in 2 casts. What does Othello reveal about ballet, then and now? This episode revisits American Ballet Theatre’s landmark production through a contemporary lens, tracing its ambition alongside the questions it leaves unresolved—around gender, agency, and whose stories are allowed to take center stage. Join me on Substack for a closer conversation—essays, interviews, and live salons at the intersection of dance, culture, and history. JOIN US ON SUBSTACK: https://thedancelens.substack.com/ [https://thedancelens.substack.com/] Get full access to The Dance Lens with Cynthia Dragoni at thedancelens.substack.com/subscribe [https://thedancelens.substack.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_4]

28 Mar 2026 - 14 min
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