Friday, September 21, 2007
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History of the Guild Dancers
“And everything comes to One
As we dance on, and on, and on.”
~ Theodore Roethke ~
The Guild was born in January, 1981. “Modern Dance” was not exactly a household phrase. Martha Lane Browne, a native of
or two each week. Her husband, Dr. Fred Browne, renovated a former church space
in Lunenburg center. In hopeful anticipation of just a handful of dancers, “the stage was set”. Amazingly, thirty-nine students materialized. By spring, these co-eds of all ages were eager to share their newfound passion with family and friends.
This first “performance” was humble indeed: the space’s occupancy limit was 126;
the stage was a tiny platform of rough plywood; mice and mosquitoes far outnumbered the audience…
During the next four years, the Guild was a gypsy – moving from space to space, and collecting dancers, volunteers, and audiences from many surrounding schools and communities. Determined to keep a sense of “family”, the Guild decided to limit its company to about seventy-five students. By the mid eighties, the Guild was producing three annual performances at the Lunenburg High School Auditorium and, committed to community outreach, began offering free assemblies throughout the Lunenburg school system.
In the fall of 1988, the Guild realized two dreams: nonprofit status and a home.
Becoming nonprofit formally established the Guild’s dedication to its art. “Home” was a barn, complete with horse, goat, and chickens. Through the love, sweat, and tears of
Dr. Browne and a plethora of community volunteers, “The Barn” (as the students still call it) was transformed into a world of wood, light, and inspiration. In 1991, Dr. Browne died. With enormous support of the Guild family, his legacy continued.
In 1996,
Ahokas, a local artist. Together, they share the directing, teaching, and choreographing for the Guild Dancers.
With nonprofit status, the Guild needed a Board of Directors. The Guild’s Board supports Guild activities by handling finances, fundraisers, and general management guided by Guild traditions.
Since 1981, the Guild has dedicated itself to technical and creative growth of its dancers, to performances of professional excellence, and to art in community.
The vision of the Guild is that of spirit sharing – soul to soul – through the art of dance.
More broadly, we embrace the power of all art to enlighten, to impassion, and to connect us as One.
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