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Central Asian Dance Camp: Instructors
Laurel Victoria Gray
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Laurel finds a new friend in Tobol.
Photo ŠJoanne Young |
Laurel Victoria Gray is an internationally acclaimed dancer, scholar,
instructor, and choreographer who has taught and performed throughout Europe,
Central Asia, Australia, the United States and Canada. She in the recipient
of the 1999 International Academy of Middle Eastern Dance Award for Ethnic
Dancer. Ms. Gray's articles have appeared in many publications including the
Oxford University Press International Encyclopedia of Dance, the World
Encyclopedia of Contemporary Theater and Dance magazine as well as magazines
in Germany and Australia. She has lectured for the Middle East Institute and
the Assembly of Turkish American Associations. Washington DC performances
include the National Press Club, the Smithsonian Institution, the Washington
Monument, and the Uzbek Embassy (for President Islam Karimov.)
Although her early dance training included ballet, tap, folk and modern
dance, Ms. Gray discovered Arabic dance as an undergraduate at Occidental
College. While enrolled in the Ph.D. program at the University of
Washington, she assisted in hosting a delegation of dancers from Uzbekistan
and first became exposed to this rare, intricate form. She has traveled to
Uzbekistan ten times, living there for two years and appearing on television
dance programs over a dozen times. She was a member of the jury for the 1997
International Music Festival "Sharq Taronalari" (Melodies of the East) which
was held in Samarkand and for the 1993 Uzbekistan Puppet Theater Festival.
Ms. Gray has been a guest instructor at all the major Middle Eastern
dance camps and retreats held annually in the United States, including the
Mendocino Middle Eastern Music and Dance Camp, the Oasis Dance Camp,
Delilah's Visionary Retreat in Maui, Morocco's week-long seminar in NYC, and
the Central Asian Dance Camp. In 1999, she studied Egyptian folklore in
Cairo. Ms. Gray is also the founder and president of the Uzbek Dance and
Culture Society, and has photographs on display in the Museum of Peace and
Solidarity in Samarkand, Uzbekistan.
Ms. Gray has taught Russian and Soviet History at North Seattle
Community College. She was an education outreach instructor for New York's
City Center Theater in 1990, introducing thousands of Middle School students
to Georgian dance. In the fall of 1999, Ms. Gray taught at the Institute of
Theater Arts at George Mason University. For several years she gave
instruction in traditional Persian dance at the Iranian Community School in
Vienna, Virginia; she currently teaches eight weekly classes at the Joy of
Motion Dance Center in Washington, DC (www.joyofmotion.org).
On November 11, 2001, the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts
will present "Remembering the Legends: Women of the Silk Road" on the
Millennium Stage. Ms. Gray created the concept, choreography, and costume
design for this project which will be performed by the Silk Road Dance Company.
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