APAP strengthens and advances your career and the field through professional development, resource sharing, advocacy and civic engagement.
Why join APAP? When you become an APAP member, you gain access to exclusive benefits that connect you with peers and experts in the field, keep you informed, and help you succeed. APAP connects you to your peers through ongoing networking and affinity groups, monthly members-only check-ins, and online tools.
APAP keeps you informed about APAP programs and services through our bi-weekly membership newsletter and through timely advocacy alerts, urgent field updates, and more.
APAP gives you access to the greatest community of performing arts professionals through our annual conference and year-round opportunities. Copyright Thank you to the Conference Committee for their commitment and contributions. Michael Alexander, director, public programming, California Institute of Technology.
Sophie Blumberg, associate producer, Octopus Theatricals. Andre Bouchaard, principal and founder, Indigenous Performance Productions. Jonathan Campbell, head of outreach and strategic initiatives, Small World Music.
Laura Kratt, executive director, Appalachian Theatre. Beth Macmillan, executive director, Artown. Christopher Morgan, executive artistic director, Dance Place. Kyoung Park, artistic director, Kyoung's Pacific Beat. Jerry Ross, president, Harmony Artists, Inc. Todd Wetzel, executive director, Purdue Convocations. A partnership of independent multidisciplinary festivals, industry convenings and international marketplaces, JanArtsNYC is one of the largest and most influential gatherings of its kind.
Programming, conference registration and membership information can be found on our website. Anthony Fauci. Photo by Ben McKeown. PROTOTYPE: Opera Theatre Now goes global for its reimagined ninth season with three world premieres: one large-scale digital self-guided exploration featuring 13 composers and their collaborators, one sonic experience on the history, present, and imagined future of Times Square and one in-person installation exploring the dynamics of friendship in the midst of an uprising.
Additionally, there will be three extraordinary international works from around the globe that once again show what the human voice is capable of. Rudresh Mahanthappa. Courtesy of Chamber Music America.
CMA's virtual conference, Power and Privilege: Equity in the Arts will promote dialogue on how the critical issues of systemic racism and social injustice, made prominent through the events of this past year, connect to our work through repertoire, audience engagement, and approaches to community building.
Award-winning musician, singer-songwriter, social activist, MacArthur Fellow, and artistic director of Silkroad, Rhiannon Giddens, will deliver the Keynote Address. Skill-building sessions and workshops, world-class performances, digital networking opportunities, and virtual exhibits will also be available. It's the CMA Conference in your own home! The annual globalFEST festival promotes international and American regional music traditions, creates opportunities for artists and provides the public and the performing arts field the opportunity to experience twelve extraordinary artists from around the world in one night and under one roof.
Tap with Dorrance Dance. Kathleen Marshall. Ballet with Wendy Whelan. The Portuguese Kid. Dance Theatre of Harlem. In the Body of the World. Flamenco Festival. Martha Graham Dance Company. Family Workshop with Sam Pinkleton. The Choreographic Process.
Acosta Danza: Debut. Festival Studio Events. Dan Cody's Yacht. Bernstein at Sugar in Our Wounds. Gavin Creel. Songs for a New World. Gone Missing Created by The Civilians. India Pale Ale. The Niceties. Song of the Mermaid. Balanchine: The City Center Years. A Chorus Line. Young New York Night.
Nederlands Dans Theater 2. Call Me Madam. The Cake. Ballet Flamenco Sara Baras. Dorrance Dance. Lady in the Dark. High Button Shoes. Long Lost. Working: A Musical. The Composers of Working: A Musical.
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