Jane Comfort

Jane Comfort of Oak Ridge, Tennessee is an American choreographer, director, and dancer. She is the founder and artistic director of Jane Comfort and Company based in New York, NY.

Biography

Jane Comfort earned a B.A. in Painting from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill before finding her way to dance. After two years in the Peace Corps in Venezuela, she moved to New York and began studying with Merce Cunningham. She performed with a number of downtown choreographers, including David Gordon, Dana Reitz, Kenneth King, and Jamie Cunningham, before founding her own company in 1978. She has collaborated with visual artists, composers, spoken word artists, DJ's, puppeteers, and dancers to create dance theater works that integrate text, movement, politics, and explicitly "un-dance-like" theatrical scenarios. Her work has been produced in Europe, South America, and throughout the United States. Comfort has never shied from relevant social issues and her work gives voice to those afflicted by these issues: women, gays and lesbians, the homeless, the disabled, and the abused.[1]

Choreography

Jane Comfort has choreographed many works for modern dance stage as well as off-Broadway, Broadway, and opera stages.

Jane Comfort and Company

  • Steady Shift (1978)
  • Sign Story (1979)
  • Eatless Textures (1981)
  • Incorrect Translations (1982)
  • Artificial Horizon (1983)
  • Four Screaming Women (1984)
  • TV Love (1985)
  • Cliffs Notes: Macbeth (1986)
  • Portrait (1989)
  • Deportment: South (1990)
  • Deportment: North (1991)
  • Faith Healing (1993)
  • S/He (1995)
  • Three Bagatelles for the Righteous (1996)
  • Underground River (1998) Bessie Award
  • Asphalt (2001)
  • Persephone' (2004)'
  • Fleeting Thoughts: Mr. Henderson's 3AM (2006)
  • An American Rendition (2008)
  • Beauty (2012)
  • Altiplano (2015)
  • You Are Here (2016)
  • 40th Anniversary Retrospective (2018) Bessie Award for Best Revival Performance

Choreography Credits

Awards

Collaborators

Comfort has worked with several artists to produce multidisciplinary dance theater works throughout her career. Her past collaborators include Tigger Benford, Arthur Elgort, Carl Hancock Rux, Joan La Barbara, Steve Miller, Toshi Reagon, Keith Sonnier, DJ Spooky, and puppeteer Basil Twist.

References

  • Berg, Peggy International Dictionary of Modern Dance. St. James Press, 1998. ISBN 978-1-55862-359-0
  • Smith, Amanda (July 1999). "Sassy, Intelligent, Provocative, and Funny" Dance Magazine.

Citations

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