A Video Journey Through 35 Years
An excerpt from "3 out of 5" - one of the dances featured in our very first concert entitled Beginnings. So much has changed since then. We are grateful for every part of the journey.
Choreographed by JoAnn Petroff and Charlene Curtiss, the creative forces behind the Seattle-based company LightMotion (1988 - 2023)
An intimate duet between our founder Douglas Scott and a founding member of E=Motion & Full Radius Dance, Margo Gathright-Dietrich.
Set to the beautiful vocals of Cass Elliot, this dance featured a surprise guest performance by Monica Van Pelt (1974 -2021). Monica was a long-time Atlanta Pride performer and a part of Atlanta's Drag Family. Full Radius Dance is grateful to have shared the stage with her.
Full Radius Dance's wacky take on the snow waltz from The Nutcracker complete with a Snow Queen and King on stilts! Traditional music by Tchaikovsky and original music and sound editing by Klimchak.
Full Radius Dance's first evening-length dance work consisting of 10 sections - each one focused on a different activity that takes place in the dark such as watching fireworks, catching lightening bugs, and sleepwalking.
A two part work performed by Nicola Ayoub, JoJo Butler, Laurel Lawson, and Douglas Scott. Crawl down through hell. Climb up to heaven.
Part one of a longer work that explored the concept of home. Home is where you feel a sense of belonging. Home is where you find solace. Home is where you create memories.
This dance began with a scientific explanation of touch, then explored how we touch in both love and anger, and finished with the memory of touch.
Inspiration was drawn from the novel The Shipping News, a short essay from an NPR series, and the Labrador Wolf to create "It is Four Years Ago"
Inspired by the work of Garry Winogrand, an American street photographer, who portrayed U.S. life and its social issues in the mid-20th century.
Based on one of Douglas' dreams, 'Do You Know' uncovers the uncertainty of the creative process.
How does one become a saint? Who decides what constitutes saintly behavior? What do we do with saints who are also sinners? - Robin Wharton, ArtsATL