EVERYONE’S GOT TO EAT, even the whippet-thin dancers of Oregon Ballet Theatre (OBT). But food costs money, and during OBTโ€™s recent fi nancial crisis, management told the corps to prepare for the worst. So principal Candace Bouchard conceived of a way to put a few bucks into the pockets of her dancer friendsโ€™ skinny jeans.

Calling it Uprising, the forward-thinking Bouchard bringsballet to a new audience using music thatโ€™s popular everywhere
but the classical world. Uprising premiered to packed houses at Mississippi Studios last summer.

โ€œItโ€™s important for ballet to get out of its bubble if itโ€™s to survive,โ€ Bouchard says, โ€œand I want it to survive.โ€ Besides
developing future fans, she is intent on collaborating with local artists. Last yearโ€™s shows featured indie-folk band Horse Feathersโ€”this year, Weinland and Laura Gibson provide the accompaniment.

โ€œI think of Weinland as the brief intense moments in life,โ€ says Bouchard, โ€œlike yelling matches or sex or a roller coasterโ€ฆ
Laura is the counter, the quiet contemplative one after the fight whoโ€™s thinking about what it all means and how it fi ts into life.โ€

Whether you understand that her seven dancers represent seven aspects of the same personality matters little to Bouchard. โ€œI want you to feel whatever you feel at the time, including the beer in your hand and the beautiful bodies on stage.โ€

Uprising

Oregon Ballet Theatre w/Weinland, Laura Gibson,
Aladdin Theater,
3017 SE Milwaukie,
Sat-Sun July 24-25, 7 pm, $18-20, aladdin-theater.com