Dancing Around The World
My life and my art are about embodying the "fleeting moment" that is inherent to dance: the moment that makes people feel alive in the act of creativity. Two years ago I embarked on a journey of a lifetime with Dancing Around the World when I visited 19 countries to take dance to the people, but also to discover why people dance. In each location we created site-specific performances with local dancers and we documented the experience through short videos, interviews, and group workshops. Now that we are back in Chicago from that year-long journey, we created this short documentary film to share what we have learned. In our travels to cities in Peru, Finland, Kenya, Japan, and many others, we witnessed the power of dance to unite people in very creative and human ways. This experience reaffirmed to me how important it is for humans to express themselves physically, emotionally, and mentally through dance. By creating this film, we want to share how dance affects everyday lives of people as well as how movement impacts and, in some cases, even saves our lives in profound ways.
-
Nejla YatkinDirector
-
Enki AndrewsDirector
-
Nejla YatkinWriter
-
Enki AndrewsWriter
-
Robert NovakWriter
-
Nejla YatkinProducer
-
Enki AndrewsProducer
-
N/AKey Cast
-
Project Type:Documentary, Short
-
Runtime:20 minutes
-
Completion Date:January 12, 2018
-
Production Budget:40,000 USD
-
Country of Origin:United States
-
Country of Filming:Australia, Chile, Colombia, El Salvador, Finland, France, Germany, Honduras, Italy, Japan
-
Language:English
-
Shooting Format:Digital 1920x1080
-
Aspect Ratio:16:9
-
Film Color:Color
-
First-time Filmmaker:Yes
-
Student Project:No
-
No screenings yetMexico City
Mexico
May 15, 2018
International Film Festival Mexico Premier
Silver Palm Award for Best Short Docymentary -
RED International Film FestivalEINA
Norway
August 8, 2018
Norway Premiere
Official selection
Nejla Yatkin Bio
Award –winning and internationally acclaimed choreographer and dancer, Nejla Y. Yatkin has been dancing, choreographing and teaching internationally for over 30 years. A native of Berlin, Germany, she graduated with a Professional Concert Dance and Choreography degree from "Die Etage" a Performing Arts College in Berlin, Germany. Nejla is currently based in Chicago dancing, choreographing and giving workshops at international and national festivals.
She brings a luminous and transcultural perspective to her work. While her choreography is never literal it nevertheless remains evocative of searing themes that resonate in universal human experience. Her focus is regularly drawn to the role of memory and history in constructing identity, causing conflict, and the possibility of transforming cultural tension into deep, authentic moments of human connection.
Her recent dances have been inspired by stories of events of significant places in the world. Such was the case with: “The Berlin Wall Project or “Oasis: Everything You Ever Wanted To Know About The Middle East but Where Afraid To Dance”, and “Dancing with Cities”, a moving site-specific work that investigates urban sites. The success and power of “Cities” inspired “Dancing Around The World”- a site specific dance project which began in April 2015 and traveled to 20 cities around the world until May 2016.
Since 2000, Ms Yatkin has been choreographing solo works inspired by great female choreographers. To date, she has choreographed five evening-length solo works that have toured nationally and internationally to critical claim in 54 cities around the world. In addition she choreographs evening length dance works for her own project-based company NY2Dance and commissioned dances on other companies such as the Washington
Ballet, River North Dance Chicago, Dallas Black Dance Theater and the Modern American Dance Company among many others.
Since 2001, She has been the recipient of four Artist Fellowship Awards for her Excellence Choreography from the D.C. Commission on the Arts and Humanities and a three-time recipient of the Creative Performing Arts grant from the University of Maryland. Other awards include the “Local Dance Commissioning Project” by the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, two Creation Funds and two performing Arts Residency tours from the National Performance Network.
For her past creations Ms. Yatkin has received five Metro D.C. Dance Awards, including two times the “Outstanding Individual Performance”, “Best Scenic Design”, “Best Multi- Media Performance” and “Best Overall Production.” In 2005, she was named as one of “Top 25 To Watch” by Dance Magazine and was given the award for “Outstanding Emerging Artist” by the D.C. Mayor’s Arts Award Committee. Since her Choreography Fellowship Award from the Princess Grace Foundation in 2008, she was also awarded a 2009 Special Project grant as well a Princess Grace Works in Process Award to be in residence at the Baryshnikov Art Center in 2015. After moving to Chicago in 2010 she was awarded the 2012 3Arts Award and the Illinois Individual Project grant as well as the Individual Art Project Grant from the City of Chicago. For her latest choreographic commission for a new Musical entitled The Boy Who Dance On Air she was awarded best Choreography in a new Musical from Stage Scene LA and nominated for Outstanding Choreography from the San Diego Theater Critics Circle for the 2016 Craig Noel Award.
In addition to her commitment to choreography, she is also passionate about sharing her knowledge and experience with the next generation. From 2008 to 2012 she was an Associate Professor of the Practice at the University of Notre Dame and from 2001 to 2008 she was a tenured Professor in the Department of Dance at the University of Maryland. In the last couple of years
she also has been commissioned by Webster University and Purchase Conservatory of Dance to create new choreography. Ms.Yatkin is also the producer and subject of the upcoming Documentary “Where Women Don’t Dance” released in 2016 and “Dancing Around The World to be released in the fall of 2017.
In addition in 2007 she started experimenting with Dance on film. Her short Dance on Camera film “The Wall” was screened in Dance On Camera Festivals in New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Diego, Berlin, Bogota, Istanbul and Kyoto. For more information please visit www.ny2dance.com
Dance is such an elusive and intangible art form. The minute the dance is performed it dies. As the late Merce Cunningham said: “You have to love dancing to stick to it. It gives you nothing back, no manuscripts to store away, no paintings to show on walls and maybe hang in museums, no poems to be printed and sold, nothing but that single fleeting moment when you feel alive.” And that "fleeting moment" that makes people feel alive is what interests me, that "fleeting moment" is what I want to capture and bring alive in this documentary through the stories and moving bodies of people around the world.