“Warning: You’re going to hear me say ‘I’m really excited about this’ a lot.” This is one of the first things Hector Garcia says during our interview about the Elevator Project’s 2024 season, and it’s not an understatement. Now in its ninth season, the innovative series provides performance space, technical equipment, marketing and ticketing services, and mentorship for small and emerging Dallas arts groups, all through the AT&T Performing Arts Center.
“I sometimes shiver at finding myself in this position, this wonderful situation of lifting up the Dallas arts scene in this incredible way,” Garcia says. “I’m the first to read everything, the proposals and the scripts, but by no means am I the only one deciding who gets to participate.”
“This year is unusual because we have so many repeat artists—five—when we usually only get one or two,” Garcia says. It’s a testament to how valuable the local performers find the program, and how participating in it can help draw an entirely new audience to their productions.
This season begins with a familiar name: Soul Rep Theatre has appeared in the Elevator Project three times, and used to be the resident company at the South Dallas Cultural Center. Now without a permanent home, it is presenting a world premiere by co-founder Anyika McMillan-Herod called Elm Thicket (Jan. 11-20, 2024, Wyly Studio Theatre), set in the oldest Black neighborhood in Dallas, where she grew up. “It deals with modern issues such as neighbors, gentrification, and the pandemic,” says Garcia. “It’s hyper-local, and probably not a story that would have made its way onto any other mainstage.”
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The Julius Quartet - Artists in Residence at EMERGE Coalition. Photo courtesy of the artists.
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Flamenco Fever. Photo courtesy of the artists.
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Jamal Mohamed. Photo courtesy of the artist.
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Tejas Dance. Photo by Lynn Lane.
Following its first presentation in Strauss Square during COVID, Flamenco Fever now brings a combination of flamenco dancing, the poetry of Federico Garcia Lorca, live music, and a live painting done in the moment by local artist Rolando Diaz in Pintura, Poesia, y Pasion. The one-night-only performance is May 11, 2024. EMERGE Coalition is also returning to the Wyly Studio Theatre, where last season it explored immigration and border issues. This year, May 23-25, 2024, it tackles sustainability and the environment in Evergreen [To Grow]. The Julius Quartet will play Pulitzer Prize-winning composer Carolyn Shaw’s “Evergreen,” where the feelings of the music’s four movements—moss, stem, water, and root—are embodied through visuals.
The season concludes with Mirage from Jamal Mohamed, a percussion instructor at SMU. With his daughter Alia Mohamed on theremin, Poovalur Sriji on Indian percussion, Jonathan Jones on clarinet and EWI (electronic wind instrument), and Derrick Horne on bass, guitars, and electronics, Mirage is described as a multi-media, multicultural, experimental band that combines Arab, African, Indian, jazz, and experimental music with Middle Eastern dance and visual art projections. It’s also at Hamon Hall, July 25-27, 2024.
—LINDSEY WILSON