News Releases

Choreographer and Dancer Jodie Gates Named Director of New USC Glorya Kaufman School of Dance

April 11, 2013

 

CONTACT: Allison Engel allison.engel@usc.edu (213) 740-1927

APRIL 11, 2013 — Jodie Gates, an internationally renowned dancer, choreographer and educator, has been named vice dean and director of the new USC Glorya Kaufman School of Dance.

The school, which is the university’s sixth school dedicated to the arts, was established in November 2012 by a transformational gift from Glorya Kaufman, a visionary Los Angeles philanthropist and patron of dance. Her gift provides an initial endowment for the school and will fund construction of a dance building that will bear her name.

The first school to be established through such an endowment at USC in nearly 40 years, the USC Kaufman School joins preeminent schools in architecture, cinematic arts, dramatic arts, fine arts and music, collectively comprising one of the strongest arts offerings in the United States. The university has nearly 6,000 graduate and undergraduate students pursuing degrees in the fine and performing arts.

Elizabeth Garrett, USC provost and senior vice president for academic affairs, said: “Glorya Kaufman’s transformational gift has added the beauty of dance to USC’s expressive range.  With the addition of celebrated artist Jodie Gates to the Kaufman School’s leadership team, the pieces are in place to complete USC’s arts mosaic.”  

Currently a professor of dance at the University of California, Irvine, Gates was recently honored by the American Association of University Women for her dedication and contributions to the field. She is recognized as a leader for her choreographic work for professional companies, as the founder and artistic director of the innovative Laguna Dance Festival, and for directing educational programs at the university level.

Robert Cutietta, who is dean of the USC Kaufman School and the USC Thornton School of Music, said he was thrilled with the appointment. “Jodie has a stellar artistic and educational background, but what impresses me the most is her vision for how and why dance education needs to adapt to the future,” Cutietta said.

The school’s namesake, Glorya Kaufman, agreed. “Jodie Gates is the perfect person for the job. She is keenly aware of the unique needs of a dancer and the importance of a first-rate curriculum. As a respected choreographer, she is widely celebrated for her work, and her skills as an administrator and teacher mean she will be an invaluable asset to the Kaufman School.”

Said Jodie Gates: “This truly unique opportunity to imagine the artist of tomorrow and invent a new school of dance on the West Coast is monumental and a mission I have been preparing for my entire life.”  She adds, “I am dedicated to leading this pioneering school of dance with integrity, excellence and a bold sense of innovation.”

Gates is a former principal ballerina with the Joffrey Ballet, Frankfurt Ballet, The Pennsylvania Ballet and other leading companies, and has toured throughout North and South America, Mexico, Russia, Asia, Australia, and Europe.  More recently, she has been an invited speaker nationally and abroad on choreographic process and influential choreographers of the 20th and 21st centuries.

Gates has created more than 40 works over the past decade. American Ballet Theatre (ABT) recognized her for her choreographic excellence after she was named the Altria/ABT Fellow in 2009. She is the 2012 recipient of the Jerome Robbins New Essential Works Program for her ballet Embellish, created for Colorado Ballet.

Gates also has been responsible for teaching, staging and producing choreographer William Forsythe’s ballets worldwide, including productions at Paris Opera Ballet, Scottish Ballet, San Francisco Ballet, Prague National Theater, Zurich Opera Ballet and Teatro La Scala.

She frequently serves as a guest master teacher for professional dance companies internationally and in her current position at UC Irvine teaches ballet technique, classical and contemporary repertory, pointe technique, and choreographic composition.

The Laguna Dance Festival, which Gates founded in 2005, brings dance companies from across the United States to various venues throughout Laguna Beach. The nonprofit organization has received national attention from Dance Magazine, Smithsonian and Pointe magazines, as well as rave reviews from the Los Angeles Times and Orange County Register.

Gates, who will hold the academic title of professor at USC, will begin her position in August. 

About the USC Kaufman School of Dance:

• The USC Kaufman School of Dance will admit its first students in fall 2015. Students will pursue a newly developed Bachelor of Fine Arts curriculum. The school will be housed in the new Glorya Kaufman International Dance Center, which is currently in the design process and will be completed in time to welcome the first students.

About the other USC arts schools:

• A faculty of internationally recognized artists at the USC Roski School of Fine Arts offers a progressive approach for experimentation in all forms of visual arts. The school, founded in 1883, is the region’s oldest art school.

• The USC Thornton School of Music is the collegiate partner of choice for the Los Angeles Philharmonic, Los Angeles Opera, Los Angeles Chamber Orchestra, the GRAMMY Foundation and The Recording Academy, among others.

• The USC School of Cinematic Arts is the premier educational environment for study in film, television and interactive media. Founded in 1929, it has nearly 11,000 alumni who include many of the industry’s key figures.

• The first accredited school of architecture in Southern California, the USC School of Architecture has a strong relationship to practicing architects in sustainable building, planning, historic preservation and landscape architecture.

• In a close-knit, supportive environment, the top-ranked USC School of Dramatic Arts blends artistic training in a conservatory environment with the full academic experience found at a major research university.

IMAGE AT TOP: Jodie Gates