World Dance Day – 29 April 2006
April 3, 2006 -- On the 29th of April, as every
year since 1982, World Dance Day will be celebrated all over the
world by the international community of dancers and dance enthusiasts.
The International Dance Council CID has prepared the following guidelines
as a useful checklist for persons institutionally involved in the
wider field of dance: teachers, choreographers, group leaders, journalists,
researchers, associations, suppliers, organizations etc.
Object
The main purpose of World Dance Day events is to attract the attention
of the wider public to the art of dance. Special emphasis should
be given to addressing a “new” public, people who do not follow
dance events during the course of the year.
Events
Dance Day events may be special performances, open-door courses,
public rehearsals, lectures, exhibitions, articles in newspapers
and magazines, dance evenings, radio and TV programs, visits, street
shows etc.
Organizers
Events are primarily organized by dance companies, amateur groups,
schools, associations and other institutions active in dance.
Content
Organizers have full freedom to define the content of the event.
Make sure that you include general information on the art of dance,
its history, its importance to society, its universal character.
This can be done in a short speech, a note in the program, a text
distributed to those present. By adding this dimension you make
the event different from dance activities taking place any other
day. Read a message from a prominent personality, a poem, a passage
from a text by a famous author.
Coordination
In order to achieve maximum success, it is important that preparations
start early enough.
It is imperative to inform the press and generally the media about
your event. Notify an organization holding a central position at
regional or national level, which should publish a list of events
planned for Dance Day. Entrance to events should preferably be free,
or by invitation. Invite persons who do not normally attend dance
events.
Location
At best, events should take place in “new” places, such as streets,
parks, squares, shops, factories, villages, discotheques, schools,
stadiums etc. By setting the event in original surroundings you
stress the fact that this is an event dedicated to the universal
family of dancers.
Prof. Alkis Raftis
President of the CID
(Conseil International de la Danse - CID)
The International Dance Council (Conseil International
de la Danse - CID) is the official umbrella organization for all
forms of dance in all countries of the world. It is a non-governmental
non-profit organization (NGO) founded in 1973 within the UNESCO
headquarters in Paris, where it is based. Its purpose is to act
as a worldwide forum bringing together international, national and
local organizations as well as individuals active in dance. It represents
the interests of the dance world at large and consults accordingly
governments and international agencies.
www.cid-unesco.org
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