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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Christopher Dean Bottoms, a University of Alabama
senior double majoring in dance and pre-dental biology, will showcase
a dance he choreographed at the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C.,
on May 15, 2002.
Bottoms choreographed a combination jazz and pointe piece called
Captive Swan. The piece first was presented in the fall
Dance Alabama! concert before heading to Austin, Texas, for the
American College Dance Festival Association competition. There,
Bottoms and his dancers competed against faculty and student choreographers
from 35 universities across the United States, and won.
Students like this are shining examples of what can happen
if you want something badly enough, said Edith Barnes, professor
of theatre and dance and director of dance at UA. Anyone who
can double major in pre-dental biology and be able to take a performance
to the Kennedy Center has to be a remarkable individual.
Bottoms said he thought the best he could hope for was making it
to the regional performance. He never thought he would get to compete
in Austin, much less win and be showcased at the Kennedy Center.
Were completely shocked. Its just a huge honor,
Bottoms said. While I was in New York last summer I went to
different shows and decided to write a rock ballet. Captive
Swan is a combination of hard-core jazz dancing and ballet.
All of the girls wear classical tutus and pointe shoes and
dance both styles.
He says the piece is a play on Swan Lake and portrays
how people can lose their minds when faced with repetitive daily
acts.
After his May graduation, Bottoms will take on the role of head
counselor for the Rockettes Summer Intensive Program in Tuscaloosa
June 2-7. The program is the first of its kind for the Rockettes
and speaks volumes about the professionalism of the Tuscaloosa dance
community, according to Barnes. She said the program will help open
professional doors for UA dance students.
Bottoms received the UA National Alumni Associations 2002
Alumni Student Award in April. The award is given to outstanding
seniors who have excelled in academics and extracurricular activities,
shown strength of character and maturity and displayed exceptional
hospitality toward guests and friends of the University.
He is the president of Dance Alabama! for 2002. Bottoms was a co-creator
of a program called Time to Dance, which takes students
into the city to teach dance to Tuscaloosa children. Time
to Dance was awarded most original community service program
in 2001. Bottoms received summer scholarships twice to the American
Ballet summer program in New York. In 2002 he won the Alabama Repertory
Dance Theatre award, and in 1999 he won the Dance Alabama! award.
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