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Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company to Perform “Red Firecrackers” at Hostos Community College
Dance
PRICE: Under $20

$15-20

Located in Bronx
Hostos Center for the Arts & Culture
450 Grand Concourse, Bronx, New York 10451
DATES:
Sun, Feb 8th 3:00pm
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The Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company, the renowned international touring dance company founded by Chinese American choreographer Nai-Ni Chen, and now led by Artistic Director Greta Campo and Executive Director Andy Chiang, announced today that they will perform at Hostos Community College on February 8, 2026 at 3PM, 450 Grand Concourse, Bronx, NY, 10451. Tickets start at $15 and can be purchased at https://mpv.tickets.com/?agency=HCAV_PL_MPV&orgid=56451&pid=9675783#/event/9675783/ticketlist/?view=sections&minPrice=15&maxPrice=20&quantity=1&sort=price_desc&ada=false&seatSelection=false&onlyCoupon=true&onlyVoucher=false.

Nai-Ni Chen will perform “Red Firecrackers,” a special program is dedicated to celebrating the Chinese immigrant culture and promises a captivating display of cultural richness, artistic excellence, and a profound narrative that explores the origins of one of the most important holidays in the world: The Chinese Lunar New Year.

“Red Firecrackers,” a creation by the late choreographer Nai-Ni Chen, delves into the rich tapestry of Chinese New Year traditions. The performance narrates the ancient tale of villagers uniting to combat the Nian, an eternal monster that descends upon the earth annually. Through a dazzling array of props, vibrant costumes, mesmerizing music, acrobatics, and lively dance, the top-notch performers of the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company bring to life the story of courage, ingenuity, and the intrinsic value of community.

The production is not only a feast for the senses but also serves as an insightful exploration of the historical roots of Chinese Lunar New Year customs. “Red Firecrackers” underscores the significance of coming together to face challenges and celebrates the spirit of the Lunar New Year. It prepares the community for a celebration of the Lunar New Year of their own.

Hostos Center “Red Firecrackers” Program

1. Lion in the City

Choreography: Peiju Chien-Pott, Hip Hop Legends Kwikstep and Rokafella

Music: DJ KS360/Kwikstep

Costume: Peiju Chien-Pott, Rokafella, Javier Valencia of SoHarlem

Dancers: Sarah Botero, Lorenzo Guerrini, Caleb Baker

This exhilarating work brings a modern edge to the traditional Chinese New Year celebration. Commissioned by the New Jersey Performing Arts Center (NJPAC), this unique version develops a dialogue between contemporary/Chinese movement and Hip-Hop, celebrating the pioneering spirit of collaboration. The Lion Dance itself is a prayer for peace and harmony on earth, symbolized by a child playing freely with a ferocious beast.

2. Dai Duet (Peacocks Under the Moonlight)

Choreography: Nai-Ni Chen

Music: Dai Minority Folk Music

Dancers: Yuchin “Kiki” Tseng, Madeleine Lee

Inspired by the grace and beauty of the Hua Yao Dai ethnic tradition, this duet portrays two young women like blooming flowers by a quiet riverside. Set to the gentle melody of “Flowing River,” the dancers embody softness, elegance, and youthful purity. Their movements ripple like water, revealing a serene world where the river flows lightly and the girls blossom with delicate charm and tenderness.

3. Student Performance

Performers: Students from the Nai-Ni Chen Youth Program / FA Dance Academy

The Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company is committed to passing down the art of Chinese dance to the next generation. This special performance features students from the Company’s youth program, showcasing their dedication, discipline, and the vibrant future of this cultural art form.

4. Mountain Rain in the Tea Garden

Choreography: Nai-Ni Chen

Music: Taiwanese Folk Tune: Peach Flower Crossing the River

Dancers: Yuchin “Kiki” Tseng, Madeleine Lee, Madelyn Sarver, Sarah Botero, Kathryn Taylor

Taiwan is well-known for its tea culture and the beauty of the tea plantations. Tea gardens in the high mountains grow the best tea in this region. In this dance, girls working in the tea plantation catch the moment of spring rain to pick up their umbrellas and play cheerfully in the rain. This dance was originally created at the request of the Taiwan Tourism Bureau for the Taiwan Pavilion to be showcased during the New York Times Travel Show.

5. Music

Performers: Guest Artists / Chinese Music Ensemble of New York

A musical interlude featuring traditional Chinese instruments. The Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company frequently collaborates with the Chinese Music Ensemble of New York to introduce the authentic sound of Chinese music to diverse audiences. Instruments such as the Pipa (lute), Erhu (two-string fiddle), or Dizi (bamboo flute) are often featured to evoke the atmosphere of the season.

6. Mongolian Harvest

Choreography: Lawrence Jin

Music: Chinese Traditional

Dancers: Lorenzo Guerrini, Caleb Baker, Sarah Botero, Yuchin “Kiki” Tseng, Kathryn Taylor, Madeleine Lee, Madelyn Sarver, Esteban Santamaria

Commissioned by NJPAC, this dynamic work captures the essence of the nomadic Mongolian way of life. Known for its powerful footwork and expressive upper-body movements, the dance celebrates the generous spirit of the Mongolian people and their respect for the great prairie. Inspired by the joyful Naadam Festival, the piece portrays aspects of herders’ daily activities including cooking, hunting, and traditions.

7. Carousel

Choreography: Nai-Ni Chen

Dancers: Esteban Santamaria, Caleb Baker, Candace Jarvis, Yuchin “Kiki” Tseng, Kathryn Taylor, Madeleine Lee, Madelyn Sarver

Inspired by the dual imagery of playful, dreamlike carousels and the majestic elegance of real horses, this buoyant piece is one of Nai-Ni Chen’s most celebrated abstract works. It explores the flow of energy and the dynamics reminiscent of the brush strokes used in Chinese ink painting, melding childlike wonder with the nobility and pride of equestrian movement—a perfect tribute for the Year of the Horse.

8. Music: Chinese Traditional

9. Student Performance

Performers: Students from the Nai-Ni Chen Youth Program / FA Dance Academy

10. Festival (Dragon Dance)

Choreography: Nai-Ni Chen

Dancers: Yuchin “Kiki” Tseng, Madeleine Lee, Madelyn Sarver, Lorenzo Guerrini, Sarah Botero, Caleb Baker, Kathryn Taylor, Esteban Santamaria, Yao Zhing Zhang

The most spectacular folk dance performed in the Chinese New Year Celebration, the Dragon carries auspicious powers and nature’s grace. The Chinese Dragon is a spiritual and cultural symbol that represents prosperity and good luck, as well as a water deity that nurtures harmony. In this dance, the Dragon descends from heaven and blesses the earth, while colorful ribbons symbolize a prayer for the prosperity of the community.

About the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company

The Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company is a rare Asian American woman led professional touring company with programs for educational settings, community organizations and mainstage venues. The Company’s mission is to be a premier provider of innovative cultural experiences that reflect the inspiring hope and energy of the immigrant’s journey. It was founded with the vision that the journey of crossing cultures and adapting to a new home provides endless inspirations and opportunities for creative expressions that can enrich the human experience. Each one of the company’s work is aimed to increase the visibility of the struggle, triumph, despair and joy of this experience. The Company’s productions provide authentic experiences and bring forth issues of identity, authenticity, and equality. The Company’s worldwide touring is represented by Red Shell Management led by Edward Schoelwer.

​Choreography is developed with dancers from diverse backgrounds, and each rehearsal is an immersive, boundary-crossing journey that contributes to the creative process under the direction of the choreographers. Our repertory of Nai-Ni Chen’s original works bridge the grace and power of Asian arts and American dynamism which incorporated her broad influences. The company also preserves a variety of festive dances from different regions of China choreographed by guest immigrant artists bearing their tradition.

The Company began to tour in the early 1990s, originally on the East Coast, and later internationally. The dance company is multi-racial and multi-national and has collaborated with a wide range of artists from different disciplines and cultures. Musical collaborators range from New Music, jazz to classical, they include Joan La Barbara, The Chinese Music Ensemble of NY, Jason Kao Hwang, Huang Ruo, Kenji Bunch, Tan Dun, Glen Velez and most recently, the Ahn Trio. Award-winning designers and visual artists such as Myung Hee Cho, Jay Moorthy, AC Hickox and costume designer Karen Young. These collaborations provided us the opportunity to develop innovative productions that carry the timeless essence of the tradition.

In addition to domestic touring, the company has also performed at international festivals in Mexico, Canada, British Virgin Islands, Guatemala, Germany, Poland, Russia, Lithuania, South Korea and China with support from Fund for Mutual Understanding, The President’s Committee for the Arts, Arts International and the State Department of the United States. Ms. Chen has received multiple Choreographer’s Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts and from New Jersey State Council on the Arts. Her work has also been commissioned by the Joyce Theater Foundation, the Lincoln Center Institute, the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation, Dancing in the Streets, the Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation and New Jersey Performing Art Center.

Prominent Institutions, including the Lincoln Center Institute, the Joyce Theater, Dancing in the Streets, NJ Ballet, Ballet Met, Dancing Wheels, and Baraka Sele at NJPAC all have commissioned notable works. The most recent tour, “A Quest for Freedom”, developed with the Ahn Trio, premiered at the Philadelphia NextMove Festival. The Company is currently in residence at New Jersey City University’s A. Harry Moore for students with disabilities and in Elizabeth School #26, a school of mostly immigrant children.

For more information on Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company, please visit www.nainichen.org.

Acknowledgement

Programs of the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company have been made possible by the National Endowment for the Arts, the New Jersey State Council on the Arts/ Department of State, a Partner Agency of the National Endowment for the Arts, the New Jersey Cultural Trust, The New Jersey Division of Tourism, the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Kathy Hochul and the New York State Legislature, the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation, DanceNYC Dance Advancement Fund, the Hyde and Watson Foundation, E.J. Grassman Trust, The Horizon Foundation for New Jersey, New Music USA, the Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation, American Dance Abroad, the Association of Performing Arts Presenters’ Cultural Exchange Fund, supported by the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, PSEG, Proskauer, WAC Lighting and the Glow Foundation. WQXR is a media partner of the Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company.

About Nai-Ni Chen

Nai-Ni Chen (1959-2021) was a legendary choreographer who worked in NJ/NY area professionally for over thirty years since coming to the US in 1982. She has built a diverse repertoire of over 80 original works and toured to major venues in the US and international festivals in 12 countries around the world. A cross-cultural choreographer who aims to bring audience across the cultural boundaries, she has developed unique movement and choreographic styles that reflect the grace and splendor of the Chinese cultural traditions she studied in Taiwan since youth and the dynamic spirit of modern dance that she acquired in New York from luminaries such as Mary Anthony, Bertram Ross, Doris Rudko and Patricia Rowe.

Nai-Ni Chen has received multiple Choreographer Fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and the New Jersey State Council on the Arts. She has been a principal affiliate of the New Jersey Performing Arts Center and was a resident artist of the Harlem School of the Arts. Her contribution to the immigrant cultural experience has been honored by OCA and the International Institute. Commissions have come from the Joyce Theater Foundation, the Lincoln Center Institute, the New Jersey Performing Arts Center, Towson University, Dancing in the Streets, New Jersey Ballet, Ballet Met, and the Cleveland Dancing Wheels. Nai-Ni is currently in residence in New Jersey City University creating a new dance program for the university in collaboration with the Joffrey Ballet School as well as pioneering a program with the University’s Laboratory School for children with multiple disabilities.

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