ESTEVAN - Dancers from across Saskatchewan will be united on Oct. 27 by performing a province-wide dance piece through #SKdancestogether.
Members of the Drewitz School of Dance in Estevan are among those who will be part of the performance.
#SKdancestogether came out of discussion with dance educators within the province as an opportunity to celebrate dance and connect across the province. Organizers wanted to find a way to bring dance top of mind to people throughout the province as recognition for continuing to provide a stable, safe environment to students, and highlighting what an amazing dance community Saskatchewan has.
Everyone from studio owners, to dance instructors, dancers, and dance families have continued to dance and support each other throughout this difficult time. Being part of dance is being part of a strong and unique community who uplifts and supports one another.
Through dance, students benefit from the lessons learned in the studio, which include physical health, mental health, stress relief, teamwork, time management, goal setting, confidence-building and freedom of expression through movement.
Dance studios become like second homes to students, where teachers nurture the unique individual strengths of every child and adult who walks through the studio doors. Dance offers a supportive environment that focuses on building holistic dancers through recognizing their potential as both artists and people. Dance training develops strong, independent individuals who confidently use the skills learned in the dance studio to succeed in whichever future path they choose.
On Oct. 27, dancers from across the province will come together to perform a piece of choreography highlighting the joy of dance. Videos will be shared on social media from approximately 120 different professional dance studios across the province to celebrate as a united dance community.
Dancers are wearing provincial colours and celebrate all the different genres to show their love of dance and love of Saskatchewan.
“Dancers are excited to come together on October 27th to share the joy of dance with our province,” stated a news release.
One goal of #SKdancestogether is to bring students of all ages, cultures, and dance styles together to show a unified passion within the community of dance. This is helping build excitement about dancers’ return to the stage for the 2022 spring performance season. The dance community is looking forward to performing on stage again this season.
“Dance was strong before the pandemic, and over the past 19 months the dance community continued to show its resilience. Dance educators worked tirelessly through many challenges to ensure our students could continue to dance safely since the start of the pandemic.”