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hen
I was at Duke, I never would have anticipated dedicating my life
to being an artist," says Jo Kreiter '86. "Actually, I
was shocked. It wasn't the pathway I thought I would take."
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| Hung up on dance:
Kreiter, right, in artistic suspension |
| photo:elizabeth
gorelik |
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After graduation, the political science major moved to San Francisco,
knowing that it was a city with a large activist tradition. There
she struggled to find a balance between her two passions: dancing
and social justice.
For several years, she danced with ZACCHO Dance Theatre, her training
ground as a choreographer. In 1996, after creating a popular "evolutionary"
dance piece, Kreiter founded her own dance company, Flyaway Productions.
"That one piece gave me a sense of the possibility to develop
and sustain a company," she says. "It's a company of women,
and in our art we use physical strength as a metaphor for female
empowerment."
Flyaway performs in a variety of venues. "We dance off the
ground," says Kreiter. "We fly, swing, and balance in
unlikely places," such as rooftops, industrial cranes, and
suspended steel beams.
"It's been a difficult undertaking. To run an organization
devoted to the arts, you need a very strong business sense, entrepreneurial
skills, leadership, and good art." The organization, consisting
of about ten artists and a few administrative assistants, is still
in the building process. It became a nonprofit this year, receiving
funding from the local and state governments, private foundations,
individual donations, and commissions.
This year, Flyaway began the Ten Women Campaign, where ten high-profile
national and international women leaders will lend their visibility
to the organization for a year, with an attempt to gain individual
donors. The campaign has been successful in finding women who are
willing to be involved, such as California Representative Barbara
Lee, The Body Shop founder Anita Roddick, Sophie Maxwell of the
San Francisco Board of Supervisors, and Patty Chang of the Women's
Foundation.
"This is our way of linking arts and civic life. There is
too much separation between art and the rest of the world. We'd
like to make more connections between feminist intentions in the
arts and in the world."
Kreiter's involvement in gymnastics, dance, and political activism
at Duke seems to have paved the way to her career. She says she
came to Duke because of its combination of academics and good gymnastics.
She was on the team for her first two years before heading off to
London for a year abroad. At that point, she stopped competing for
the first time since she was seven years old.
During her senior year, she was involved in the anti-apartheid
movement on campus. Working with students, faculty, and community
members, she fought to persuade Duke to divest its holdings from
companies in South Africa.
She says, "We built shantytowns on campus, got arrested,
and were brought to trial--but were never charged on the grounds
that if people could camp out for basketball tickets, they should
be able to camp out for political reasons as well." Two days
before Kreiter's graduation, the board of trustees announced that
they would divest.
"It was interesting," says Kreiter, "because my
involvement in
politics and my world views put me in the minority at Duke. But
I found some really amazing professors
like [history's] Peter Wood and [religion's] Thomas McCullough,
who taught me some of the most important things I learned at Duke:
to think critically and to ask questions."
Kreiter is setting goals to handle the growth of her organization.
"We'd like to stabilize the company by creating a financial
base that matches what we've achieved artistically."
Future productions include Maybe Grief is a Good Bird Flying Low,
a performance scheduled for the end of May that "investigates
a definition of strength that includes the power to transform grief
into something useful."
--Julia Connors '04
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