Dancers show modern moves ■ Students are hard at work preparing for concerts staged tonight through this weekend By Diane Huber Oregon Daily Emerald Nine different student choreogra phers have been creating nine origi nal modern dances since October for the annual Resonance Embodied Winter Student Dance Concert. The concert will be performed at 8 p.m. tonight through Feb. 16 in Gerlinger Annex’s M. Frances Dougherty Dance Theater. Choreographer Rebecca Rank said all the dances are categorized as mod em, which means “anything goes. ” Choreographer Tracy Webster said modern dance is defined by “personal interpretation,” meaning that no one dance is like another. Each has different moves, different music and incorporates different kinds of styles, such as ballet, jazz, hip-hop and even breakdancing. Webster’s dancers begin in uni son, but as Radiohead’s “Climbing up the Walls” continues, the dancers twitch and spasm across the floor. Her dancers wear near nude costumes that consist of skin colored leotards with patches of black mesh sewn on randomly. When Webster put together the costumes, she said she was “think ing about something odd that peo ple would find scary, but also cool. ” She said the costumes are part of the overall theme of her dance — insanity. “Everyone mentions insanity when they interpret this song,” she said. “Some interpret it as relationships driving them mad. I’ve heard the writer worked atamental institution.” She said the dance starts as an or ganized group but eventually falls apart. The dancers “start out symmetri Photos by Adam Jones Emerald Brianne Groh(left), Martinique Hughes (center), and Tiare Duncan balance themselves for a moment during a rehearsal Tuesday to prepare for the opening Thursday. cal, cool and calm,” she said. “Then the lights turn red, and everything spirals out of control. ” Rank’s five dancers, on the other hand, wear red satin dresses. Their faces are painted solid white, their cheekbones highlighted with per fectly pink circles, and their lips are a deep red. After watching them re hearse, Rank still wasn’t satisfied with the makeup. “Your lipstick needs to be darker, and your white needs to be so much darker,” she told the dancers. She said the costumes and dance were inspired by the five months she spent studying in Austria, where she became drawn to the or namentation expressed in Baroque art. She tried to represent the peri od in the makeup and costumes. “Obviously the dancers couldn’t wear a corset, though,” she said. There isn’t a strict story fine to her dance, she said. She incorporated stories and pieces that stuck out in her mind when she was in Austria. “I took those interesting tidbits — the stuff we weren’t tested on — and turned them into movement,” she said. For both choreographers, this is one of the first times they’ve been on the “other side of the stage” for a big performance. They are dancers as well as choreographers, and ex periencing a performance as a cho reographer is much different than as a dancer, according to the pair. Associate Professor Sherrie Barr said the annual concert is a “strong part of the curriculum” because not only do students gain experience in choreography, they also learn how to produce an entire dance perform ance, which includes arranging lighting, designing costumes, and finding dancers. “In a sense, it gets them to put what they’ve learned into practice,” she said. “They learn to generate and in vent movement and put it into a co hesive whole to create dance. ” Tickets are available at the door and are $5 for students and seniors, and $10 for the general public. Tonight’s performance is $2 off per couple for Valentine’s Day. E-mail reporter Diane Huber at dianehuber@dailyemerald.com. One ring rules Oscar nods That time of year has come again when the most popular name on everyone’s lips is “Os car.” The Academy Of Motion Pic ture Arts and Sciences released the nominees Tuesday for the 74th Annual Academy Awards. The awards will be presented March 24. View the full list of Oscar nominees on our Web page at www.dailyemerald.com. Then vote for your favorite pick on the online poll. Best Picture: “A Beautiful Mind,” “Gosford Park,” “In the Bedroom,” “The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring,” “Moulin Rouge” Best Director: Ron Howard (“A Beautiful Mind”), Ridley Scott (“Black Hawk Down”), Robert Alt man (“Gosford Park”), Peter Jack son (“The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring”), David Lynch (“Mulholland Drive”) Best Actress: Halle Berry (“Monster’s Ball”), Judi Dench (“Iris”), Nicole Kidman (“Moulin Rouge”), Sissy Spacek (“In the Bedroom”), Renee Zellweger (“Bridget Jones’ Diary”) Best Actor: Russell Crowe (“A Beautiful Mind”), Sean Penn (“I Am Sam”), Will Smith (“Ali”), Den zel Washington (“Training Day”), Tom Wilkinson (“In the Bedroom”) Best Supporting Actress: Jennifer Connelly (“A Beautiful Mind”), He len Mirren (“Gosford Park”), Mag gie Smith (“Gosford Park”), Marisa Tomei (“In the Bedroom”), Kate Winslet (“Iris”) Best Supporting Actor: Jim . Broadbent (“Iris”), Ethan Hawke (“Training Day”), Ben Kingsley (“Sexy Beast”), Ian McKellen (“The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring”), Jon Voight (“Ali”) Best Original Screenplay: Guil laume Laurant and Jean-Pierre Je unet; dialogue by Guillaume Lau rant (“Amelie”), Julian Fellowes (“Gosford Park”), Christopher Nolan (“Memento”), Milo Addica and Will Rokos (“Monster’s Ball”), Wes Anderson and Owen Wilson (“The Royal Tenenbaums”) Best Sound: “Amelie,” “Black Hawk Down,” “The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring,” “Moulin Rouge,” “Pearl Harbor” Best Editing: “A Beautiful Mind,” “Black Hawk Down,” “The Lord of the Rings: The Fel lowship of the Ring,” “Memento,” “Moulin Rouge” Best Visual Effects: “A.I.,” “The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring,” “Pearl Harbor” Best Cinematography: “Amelie,” “Black Hawk Down,” “The Lord of The Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring,” “The Man Who Wasn’t There,” “Moulin Rouge” —fen West 0134791 -/rts&etot! Larry Robbing.. Beg. 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