Still Moving: Celebrating Jan Van Dyke
Still Moving: Celebrating Jan Van Dyke
September 28th - 2pm-4:pm - UNCG School of Dance
Event Details
During our Fall 2025 activities, we will also mark the 10th anniversary of Jan Van Dyke’s passing. Jan, the founder of Dance Project and the NC Dance Festival, passed away in July 2015 after a battle with cancer.
On Sunday, September 28, Dance Project and the UNC-Greensboro School of Dance will co-host an afternoon of light refreshments, storytelling, and a screening of Jan Van Dyke’s choreography as we celebrate her lasting impact on dance and our community.

Jan Van Dyke (1941-2015) choreographer, teacher, scholar, and community leader, spent four decades creating and showing her choreography widely throughout the United States and in Europe over the course of her career. Additionally, she founded and directed Dance Project, which runs the NC Dance Festival, Van Dyke Dance Group, and School at City Arts, from 1973-2015. She was Professor Emerita in the Dance Department at UNC Greensboro, where she served as Head from 2006-2011. Van Dyke was the recipient of a NC Choreography Fellowship, and a 1993 Fulbright Scholar. In 2001, she was honored with the North Carolina Dance Alliance Annual Award for contributions to the development of dance in the state. An acclaimed teacher, DANCE TEACHER MAGAZINE gave her the 2008 Dance Teacher Award for Higher Education. In 2010, UNCG honored her with the Gladys Strawn Bullard Award for leadership and service. The United Arts Council of Greensboro presented her with the Betty Cone Medal of Arts Award in 2011. The Van Dyke Dance Group continues as a repertory company, under the umbrella of Dance Project.
Jan Van Dyke



Thank you to everyone who joined us for this performance!
North Carolina Dance Festival is only possible with your support!
The Van Dyke Performance Space is located at 200 N Davie St, Greensboro, NC 27401
Accessibility Details:
Audio Description provided for this performance by Arts Access NC.
Printed performance details are available in large-print or digitally.
Accessible parking is available in the Church St. parking deck, close to the paved sidewalk from the parking deck into the building.
Ground floor entrance to the building has a push button that opens an automated door.
Theater doors are close to the Church St./Ground floor entrance. Elevators are available to access other floors of the Cultural Center.
Restrooms including accessible stalls are available on the ground floor, although restroom doors are not automated.
Some seating in the theater is movable and can accommodate wheelchairs or other mobility devices. Please contact Anne at 336-370-6776 in advance so that we may plan appropriate seating.
Please contact Anne at 336-370-6776 for information about any additional accessibility questions or accommodations.
First time seeing Dance? Not sure what to expect?
New to attending dance concerts? Here’s what to expect
Anything that makes you feel comfortable is fine. Most people will be wearing slightly dressy casual clothes, but you’ll see everything from khakis to cocktail dresses. Some people enjoy dressing up and making a special night of it. If you do decide to dress up, though, go easy on the perfume and cologne. It can distract others near you and even prompt them to sneeze (which may distract you).
Plan to arrive at least 15-20 minutes before the scheduled start time (7:30pm for this concert), so you can find a seat, take a look at your surroundings, and have time to glance through the playbill, too.
If the door to the theater is closed when you arrive, the ushers will ask you to wait until after the first dance has finished. In between dances, you may enter the theater quietly and find an available seat.
This concert has 5 different dances created by 5 different choreographers. At the end of each dance, the audience will clap for the dancers, although they may not bow until the very end of the performance. Sometimes, there will be a brief pause in between dances, and the lights in the audience may come up slightly during that time. Talking is discouraged during the dances themselves, but quiet conversation in between is just fine.
Many dance performances are between an hour and 2 hours long. This concert is about 90 minutes long including the intermission.
It is respectful to the rest of the performers and the audience to remain seated throughout the performance, and to stay until the very end of the show, even if the performers you came to see have already danced. If you do need to leave, to use the restroom or for other reasons, please try to wait until the pause between dances or intermission so you don’t disturb other audience members or the performers.
Please don’t take photos or video during the performance. In a formal theater performance like this one, it is typical for professional photographers and videographers to attend to make the official record of the concert. Choreographers like to be able to know who is taking and sharing photos or videos of their work, so audience members are not encouraged – in this setting – to film it themselves. Plus, the light from your device will be distracting in the dark to people around you! However, selfies or pictures of you and your friends before or after the show are most welcome!
It depends on the performance and on the age of your kids. Many standard-length dance concerts are not a great choice for small children because they require an attention span that is difficult for youngsters to maintain. This NCDF concert is likely to be most interesting, in length and content, for ages 10 or 11 and older.
Turn it off, or to silent mode. It’s a good idea to double-check in the few minutes before the concert begins, and again as intermission draws to a close. If you must check your phone during the concert, please do so in the pause between dances. The light from your device is very distracting to other audience members, and to the performers!
Anything unfamiliar can seem a little intimidating at first, but you already know all you need to watch dance! Some dances tell a story, others create striking images and designs, or seem to be “about” a specific idea or issue. No need to fully “get” the dance or exactly what it means. For most choreographers, they expect that each audience member will make their own meaning from what they see. Here are some tips:
- Pay attention to how the dance makes you feel. Does it bring up any emotions, physical sensations, or memories?
- Notice how the performers are interacting with the music, and with the other dancers.
- Look at how the dancers move through space. Are they filling the space or limiting it? What kinds of energy are the dancers using?
If the dance makes you laugh, you can laugh! If it prompts other kinds of feelings or responses, those are welcome too. If you don’t like a dance, that’s ok! Modern dance is so varied that it’s likely the next dance, or the one after that, will be more your speed.
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