The annual Palm Desert Choreography Festival will end Sunday at the McCallum Theatre with final competitions, workshops and more than $50,000 in cash awards.
“Preparing for our 26th Festival, we [were] privileged to work with a dynamic team, including Festival founder Shea New, and enjoy the support of a large group of festival underwriters, the city of Palm Desert, volunteers, community members — all who think dance belongs right here at the heart of community life,” festival producer and McCallum Vice President of Education Kajsa Thuresson-Frary said in a statement in August.
After looking through more than 100 submissions, 21 finalists were selected by a panel of dance professionals, theater officials said.
Sunday’s competition begins at 4 p.m. and will include the Pre-professional Division, featuring 11 choreographers/companies from across the nation, theater officials said. Student dancers from Desert Mirage and Coachella Valley high schools will also perform an original piece of choreography learned in the East Valley Dance Project Outreach program, in which students are able to explore and create with professional choreographers.
Since the festival began in 1998, it has attracted more than 40,000 people, placed 727 choreographers in the limelight and granted $748,175 in cash awards, theater officials said.
“Palm Desert is playing an important role in upholding the value of dance,” last year’s grand prize winner Omar Roman De Jesus said in a statement. “Presenting work in a theater at full capacity is always a gift, particularly given how much live performance has been impacted over the past few years.”
This year’s competition began Saturday with the Professional Division, featuring 10 choreographers/companies from across the nation, Canada and Germany, according to theater officials. Additionally, artistic director/choreographer/dancer Helgi Tomasson was presented with this year’s Lifetime Achievement Award.
Tomasson was honored for “his strong belief in honoring choreographers and challenging dancers and audiences to embrace new directions in dance,” theater officials said in a statement. He is known for being an artistic director and principal choreographer for San Francisco Ballet from 1985 to 2022, transforming the company into one of the world’s greatest classical ballet companies.
More information is available at mccallumtheatre.org.
