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You can download the podcast file by clicking here (use right click and “save as”).
Adi Sha’al and Noa Wertheim of Vertigo Dance Company. Photo by Eyal Landesman.
(This podcast was initially produced for Israel Seen in 2008. You can subscribe to this podcast using the iTunes software by clicking this link to the podcast feed.)
As I have traveled through Israel’s dance circles, I have run into Noa Wertheim and Adi Sha’al many times: at Vertigo Dance Company’s concerts at the Suzanne Dellal Center, at contact jams, and at a performance of Noa’s work on students from the Jerusalem Academy of Music and Dance. With their company, their school in Jerusalem, and their growing artist village on Kibbutz Netiv HaLamed-Hey, this dynamic couple is a powerful force in the Israeli contemporary dance scene. They’re also revolutionary in their community-centered and environmentally-conscious approach to dance.
Video: Vertigo Dance Company’s Birth of the Phoenix
In this interview, held in the spring of 2008, Noa talks about raising a family while directing a company, building the Eco-Art Village, choreographing the site-specific environmental dance Birth of the Phoenix, and engaging in “tikkun olam” – healing the world – through her work.
Noa Wertheim’s White Noise. Photo by Gadi Dagon.
When we spoke two years ago, Noa was mounting her White Noise, and in the fall of 2009, she premiered her Mana at the Curtain Up Festival. Along with her iconic Birth of the Phoenix, these two works are now being performed by Vertigo at the Israel Festival in Jerusalem.
Related Articles on Dance In Israel
- Vertigo Dance Company: Art, Environment, Community
- Curtain Up 2: Vertigo Dance Company and Noa Wertheim Host Elad Shechter
- Vertigo Dance Company in Noa Wertheim’s Mana
Other Podcasts on Dance In Israel
- Inbal Pinto and Avshalom Pollak: An Interview on Imagination
- Niv Sheinfeld and Oren Laor: An Interview with Dramatic Dancemakers
- Interview with Yair Vardi: A View from the Top
- Renana Raz: Choreographing Israeli Culture and Beyond
- Sahar Azimi Speaks about Choreography and Contemporary Dance
- Shlomit Fundaminsky: An Interview on Improvisation and Israeli Life
- Noa Dar Discusses Her Dance Career
- Andrea Miller: From Gaga to Gallim Dance
- Interview with Barak Marshall: Dancing between Israel and America (Part 1)