** * **** * ******* TAR DELI IS ONE OF THE BEST CARRY OUT ONLY RESTAURANTS IN AMERICA! (248) 352-7377 [going] into battle, and that provided the material for the last section of the dance," explains Fogel. The choreographer, who has been at U-M since 1985, looks back on a 10-year, New York performance career that placed her with the Phoebe Neville Dance Company, Hannah Kahn Dance Company, Dalienne Majors and Dancers and Andrew DeGroat and Dancers. Fogel, who asked her troupe to develop some of the movement she shaped into the complete perform- ance, used her Jewish heritage to develop a 1993 program, Dance to the World Beat. One of four choreogra- phers looking to their roots, she chore- ographed a three-part piece that refer- enced both pre-World War II Europe and the Holocaust. "Our dancers do numerous per- formances throughout the year," says Fogel, who is preparing for her adult bat mitzvah. Post-Postmodernist David Dorfman was in Ann Arbor workina on "Ancient Steps, Forward b on Sept. 11 and brought the Glances" lasting emotions of that day to his choreography, according to Gay Delanghe, a member of the U-M dance faculty. Delanghe worked closely with the guest artist and went forward with rehearsals of his dance while he toured with his professional troupe, David Dorfman Dance, founded in 1985. "Dorfman calls himself a post-post- modernist," says Delanghe, who describes his work as intertwining movement and text. "He has fused modern dance with hip-hop and uses the music of Chris Peck, a U-M stu- dent who worked with Dorfman at last summer's American Dance Festival in North Carolina." Dorfman, 46, who was raised as a cultural Jew in Chicago, started dancing in his junior year in college after trans- ferring from Washington University in St. Louis to the University of Illinois as a business major. When he returned to Washington University for his senior year, he signed up for modern dance classes, and went on to get a master's degree in dance at Connecticut College. For the piece that soon will be per- formed in Ann Arbor, Dorfman audi- tioned and selected the dancers and spent two weeks working with them. He asked each performer to write sen- tences about their memorable experi- TRY OUR DELICIOUS HOMEMADE POTATO SALAD & COLE SLAW! Choreographer David Dorfman used the destruction of the World Trade Center as a guide when he established the mood for 'Depth Charge." Numpe imaiiim NEW AH WOK Chinese American Cuisine WITH THIS COUPON • Expires I2-31-02 • One Per Customer • Not Good Holidays Person Minimum DELIVERY AVAILABLE LET US CATER YOUR NEXT AFFAIR • 10 24555 W. 12 MU, Just West of Telegraph, Southfield (248) 352-7377 **** *** ******* * , Lell i s Cordially invites you to celebrate with us We have been serving the Finest Italian Cuisine in Michigan for 62 years Call To Make Your Special Occasion Reservations Now • • • • Bar Mitzvah Bat Mitzvah Anniversary Rehearsal Dinner • • • • Sweet 16 Retirement Shower Birthday • • • • Corporate Event Sales Meeting Bowling Banquets Etc. 1939 Monday - Thursday 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. • Friday 11 a.m. to 11 p.m. Saturday 3 p.m. to 11 p.m. • Sunday 12 noon to 9 p.m. • Double Butterfly Shrimp Dine in only ON OUR BEAUTIFUL ALREADY LOW-PRICED MEAT OR DAIRY TRAYS 885 Opdyke Road (Across from the Silverciome • Seafood Casserole 0 % OFF Your total food bill Mon. - Thurs. after 3 p.m. I coupon per table. Not good on holidays. SUN. 7 AM TO 10 PM Serving memorable Italian lunches and dinners since • Peking Duck I OPEN 7 DAYS M-SAT. 7 AM TO 10 PM (248) 373-4440 Specializing in • Whitefish & Whole Fish • OUR HOMEMADE FAT-FREE TUNA ALSO CAN'T BE BEAT! WE CUT OUR LOX BY HAND! $5" OFF ences and incorporated that exercise into the movement. "The program explores the fear of intimacy," explains Delanghe, who _videotaped rehearsals for Dorfman's comments. "It incorporates pop cul- ture into a formally organized struc- ture. It's youthful and playful and ends on a somber note. "The dancers will speak, but it's more poetic than narrative. Integrating voices with choreography is a signature of Dorfman's work." Dorfman, a new father who has begun to examine his Jewishness in some of his latest dance pieces, was invited to Ann Arbor by U-M faculty member Robin Wilson, who has worked with him. "I've always had the chutzpah to think that what I'm feeling is impor- tant enough to try to share with peo- ple," Dorfman told the New York Times. "It's hard to take that leap but I think it is really necessary, so that's why I think I've been out there as a Jew, a guy [and] an artist." ❑ BETTER TI-IAN EVER! EVERYBODY KNOWS WE HAVE THE BEST HOMEMADE TUNA IN TOWN! • exp. 02/28/02 INN MI MU MI I= =II •• Full Bar Open 7 Days A Week 41563 W. Ten Mile Road (corner of Methlowbrook) 1/25 Nov i 2002 248.349.9260 53