
Ready to shine
These are the elements that make up The Remix, an innovative new hip hop-meets-musical theatre dance showcase taking place at Prairie Theatre Exchange's Cherry Karpyshin Theatre at the end of the month, presented by Rise Musical Theatre Company.
Since 2021, Rise has been PTE's education company-in-residence, offering free, two-week musical theatre intensives for BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, people of colour) youth annually at PTE's downtown campus. The company has expanded that mandate to include anyone struggling to access opportunities in musical theatre.
Ruth Bonneville / Free Press
From left: Choreographer Sharlyne Chua leads dancers Ephifany Tiongco and Gwyneth De Guzman through their steps during rehearsal for The Remix, a hip hop dance show featuring 70 dancers and multiple choreographers.
A couple of years ago, Rise added hip hop dance classes to its suite of intensive offerings. And according to Joseph Sevillo, Rise's founder and company director, those classes quickly became the most popular.
Hip hop, he realized, could be an on-ramp to further exploration in the world of musical theatre. Maybe people would want to learn to sing, to dance, to direct. And there's not such a wide gulf between those two spheres, thanks in large part to Lin-Manuel Miranda's 2015 groundbreaking, genre-blending musical Hamilton.
Part of Sevillo's vision for Rise is to create live performance opportunities for choreographers and dancers that put them in front of a wider audience beyond the dance competition circuit.
That's how The Remix was born, co-created by Sevillo and Rise artistic associate Dutchess Cayetano.
It's a new idea, and a starting point, he says.
'If it flies, if it sells out, if producers or other leaders witness the show and they say there's potential here for this to be annual, then we start creating our own industry in Winnipeg,' says Sevillo, who was also the brains behind the all-Filipino musical Ma-Buhay!, which had its première at Rainbow Stage last year.
'We need opportunities such as this, for artists to keep on going, to keep training, to be inspired, otherwise they'll end up quitting and going into another profession.'
The Remix is something new for PTE, too. When Sevillo met with PTE's new artistic director, Ann Hodges, 'we both got excited about the idea of creating a show to feature the excellence of a community that's not necessarily featured on this platform.'
Each choreographer has been paired with a vocalist and a crew of seven dancers to create a work. The music is a true mixtape, featuring everything from hip hop to pop to musical numbers from Broadway stalwarts such as Chicago and, yes, Hamilton.
'I wanted them to just pick any song that resonates with them, that tells a new audience who they are as artists and as choreographers,' Sevillo says.
Lee Banaga is a hip hop instructor for Rise and one of the 10 choreographers who have been working on a piece for The Remix. His is focused on burnout and creative perfectionism, set to John Legend's Ordinary People.
Ruth Bonneville / Free Press ENT - PTE / The Remix
Playwright/choreographer Joseph Sevillo is founder and company director of Rise.
'I wanted to really portray that, because I feel like burning out and being overworked is such a thing nowadays — especially in this economy, it's crazy,' he says.
As a choreographer, Banaga is thrilled to have the chance to put his work on stage.
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'My full respect to PTE and everyone that's behind the scenes, because this (opportunity) is something that's not given to us every day,' Banaga says.
When Sevillo founded Rise four years ago, it was during a time when arts organizations all over North America were reflecting on whose talents, stories, perspectives were missing in studios and on stages, following the 2020 murder of George Floyd, an unarmed Black man, by a police officer in Minneapolis.
Sevillo wanted to create opportunities for underrepresented communities, but he also wanted to carve out those spaces in institutions. Rise is continuing that work through its ongoing education residency and shows such as The Remix, and he's noticed a shift.
'I think over the four years, I've noticed the change in the safety of these kinds of theatre spaces, where they start getting recognized by underserved communities as a hub where they can go and train and be seen,' Sevillo says.
jen.zoratti@freepress.mb.ca
Jen ZorattiColumnist
Jen Zoratti is a columnist and feature writer working in the Arts & Life department, as well as the author of the weekly newsletter NEXT. A National Newspaper Award finalist for arts and entertainment writing, Jen is a graduate of the Creative Communications program at RRC Polytech and was a music writer before joining the Free Press in 2013. Read more about Jen.
Every piece of reporting Jen produces is reviewed by an editing team before it is posted online or published in print – part of the Free Press's tradition, since 1872, of producing reliable independent journalism. Read more about Free Press's history and mandate, and learn how our newsroom operates.
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Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. SUBSCRIBE TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Subscribe now to read the latest news in your city and across Canada. Unlimited online access to articles from across Canada with one account. Get exclusive access to the Toronto Sun ePaper, an electronic replica of the print edition that you can share, download and comment on. Enjoy insights and behind-the-scenes analysis from our award-winning journalists. Support local journalists and the next generation of journalists. Daily puzzles including the New York Times Crossword. REGISTER / SIGN IN TO UNLOCK MORE ARTICLES Create an account or sign in to continue with your reading experience. Access articles from across Canada with one account. Share your thoughts and join the conversation in the comments. Enjoy additional articles per month. Get email updates from your favourite authors. THIS ARTICLE IS FREE TO READ REGISTER TO UNLOCK. 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Ottawa Citizen
3 hours ago
- Ottawa Citizen
Montreal's diverse Ensemble Obiora is changing the faces of classical music
Article content The classical music world is pretty white. But rather than simply accept the imbalance and hope things change eventually, Allison Migeon and her partner Brandyn Lewis decided to do something about it. Article content 'It started in 2021,' Migeon said. 'Brandyn and I were asking ourselves a lot of questions, like many people, about what we wanted to do and things we wanted to change professionally. Also, with everything that happened around (the death of) George Floyd, we took time to think — how could it be that in the milieu we had evolved in for so many years, there was so little representation of people of different origins? It was always the same types of people on stage, and the same types of repertoire being played.' Article content Article content And so Migeon and Lewis founded Ensemble Obiora, Canada's first orchestra comprised primarily of professional musicians from culturally diverse backgrounds. Migeon, who has experience in cultural administration, is the group's director. Lewis, a double bassist who is the first Black musician to perform regularly with the Orchestre symphonique de Montréal, is Ensemble Obiora's artistic director. Article content Article content They began reaching out to racialized musicians they knew, and as word spread, people began contacting them. Article content 'There was a lot of interest,' Migeon said. 'It's something new that had never been done in Canada. We're used to seeing this type of orchestra in the U.S., and there's Chineke! Orchestra in London, but in Canada, there's nothing like this in classical music.' Article content Ensemble Obiora is made up of approximately 50 musicians primarily from Quebec and Ontario, who come together in various combinations depending on the repertoire of a given concert. They are of African, South Asian, Middle Eastern and Indigenous heritage, with a few white players thrown in for good measure. Article content Article content 'Our goal is to reflect the society we live in,' Migeon said. 'We don't want to discriminate. It's important to have allies.' Article content Article content The orchestra is in its fourth year of participation in the OSM's Virée classique concert series, being held Aug. 13 to 17. As the ensemble in residence of the music department of Université du Québec à Montréal for the past three years, it engages in activities with students and performs regularly at UQAM's Salle Pierre-Mercure. Article content This weekend, Ensemble Obiora steps outside, performing for free Saturday at 7 p.m. in N.D.G. Park and Sunday at 2 p.m. in Ahuntsic Park as part of the Campbell Concerts series. For the occasion, the group will play music by composers of African descent. Article content The program features three works. Tzigane, for wind quintet, by Grammy-nominated American flautist and composer Valerie Coleman, 'a piece inspired by Eastern European music and the Roma,' Migeon said; Nonet In F Minor, by 19th-century British composer Samuel Coleridge-Taylor; and Danzas de Panama, by 20th-century American composer William Grant Still, whom Migeon describes as 'the don of African-American composers, and the first Black man to conduct an American orchestra.'