Performances
Upcoming Performances
Arts In the Community Day
Date: Thursday, March 9 at 12 Noon
Place: The Rex Theater, Manchester, New Hampshire
A networking and leadership group under Manchester’s Chamber of Commerce, Leadership Greater Manchester is organizing an Arts In the Community Day on March 9th. Zackary Betty, NSquared Artistic Director and NHDC Accelerator Fellow, has been invited to bring his dance ,The Shire, as one feature of the day long event. It is a closed event but young professionals can join the group at any time. NHDC is compensating the dancers for their talents and time.
New Hampshire Business Committee for the Arts Annual Gala
Date: Monday, May 8 at 5PM
Place: The Doubletree, Manchester, New Hampshire
NHBCA has become known for creative and exciting galas where arts awards are given in various categories to New Hampshire Businesses who have shown unparalleled commitment to the arts. Artists acting in impactful entrepreneurial ways are also awarded.
Dance has played an outsized role in the gala by illustrating through dance, particular themes and philosophies supported by the NHBCA. Under the artistic direction of Amy Fortier, Ballet Misha, one of New Hampshire’s most beloved ballet companies, will provide beauty and engaging moments of unexpected to the evening’s festivities. NHDC is compensating the dancers for their talents and time.
Past Performances
Are You Okay
Location: The Rex Theater, Manchester, New Hampshire
Date: 12/7/2022
This performance asked the pertinent question of our tumultuous time: Are you okay?In a noisy, hyper connected world in which a pandemic, political tensions at home, and geopolitical tensions abroad have created existential angst, our mental health has been strained to the breaking point. Bounphakhom’s performance portrayed this angst through the lives of several recognizable, archetypical characters. Threaded throughout the narrative, the central theme is accepting the dark side of one’s inner weather in order to find healing.
The nature of Are You Okay was an unapologetically emotional portrayal of the anxiety and trauma that seem ubiquitous in our time, which is made worse by holding those emotions tight. Bounphakhom was able to draw out raw and honest performances from his cast, who embodied and presented a clarity of the human body that spoke truths beyond words.
Audience members reported that the expressive physicality of dance helped to create a visceral connection to the deeply felt emotions passionately portrayed by the dancers. Without language, which can confuse the authenticity of the felt sense(s) that dance provides, the audience could feel more and think less.
Excerpts and Investigation: Are You Okay
Excerpts and Investigation of Are You Okay – a dance/ theater piece in Hip Hop/street style dance created by Anthony Bounphakhom
Location: The Factory on Willow in Manchester, NH
Date: 11/17/2022
This event was created in order to preview the performance of Are You Okay in an intimate environment where the audience was situated on the same level and just feet away from the dancers. The dance portion was kept to 20-30 minutes so as to whet the appetite for more. It was moderated by Najee Brown, Artistic Director of Theater for the People, who asked creator Anthony Bounphakhom compelling questions which provided context and an explanation to the audience.
Because dance can baffle the general audience, Excerpts and Investigation was designed to provide a learning experience for the viewer and also to provide them an opportunity to ask their own questions. Dance creates waves of energy. The audience was able to hear footfalls and breathing and witness the hard, physical work involved in this craft. The goal of New Hampshire Dance Collaborative was to better prepare the audience for the full performance on the proscenium stage a week later.
The Shire



The Shire — a celebration of New Hampshire’s seven distinct regions through dance. It was created by Zackary Betty, Artistic Director of NSquared Dance
Location: The Rex Theater, Manchester, New Hampshire
Date: 10/13/2022
While many contemporary dances often delve into somewhat esoteric and philosophical themes, The Shire is a sharp departure from that model. Choreographer Zackery Betty traveled through the state of New Hampshire and took his physical cues uniquely from a sense of place. New Hampshire is diverse in almost all ways, and our regional differences reveal cultural, geographical and environmental elements that set each region apart. The Shire pulls all of this information together into a one powerful, mysterious and joyful dance while also capturing the essence of region.
When a place is experienced physically, the sensory stimuli provides bareboned, transparent inspiration. Betty choreographed in fields, on the seashore, in the mountains and in the mills that characterize New Hampshire. While he did “learn” about the regions through reading, he reflected the regions through the “felt sense” and sent videos of himself back to his dancers for them to interpret. Through the universal language of dance, the audience tours the state via their own sympathetic ability to feel the movement as much as watch exquisite dance.
The Shire will have its place in the cultural and educational offerings of New Hampshire. If someone wants to understand the complexity and beauty of the state, witnessing The Shire in-person or even through video will be transformative.
Excerpts and Investigation: The Shire


Excerpts and Investigation of The Shire – a dance/ theater piece in Hip Hop/street style dance created by Anthony Bounphakhom
Location: The Factory on Willow in Manchester, NH
Date: 9/14/2022
This event was created in order to preview the performance of The Shire in an intimate environment where the audience was situated on the same level and just feet away from the dancers. The dance portion was kept to 20-30 minutes so as to whet the appetite for more. It was moderated by Matt Cahoon, Artistic Director of theater KAPOW who asked dance maker Zackary Beatty and the NSquared dancers compelling questions which provided context and an explanation to the audience.
Because dance can baffle the general audience, Excerpts and Investigation was designed to provide a learning experience for the viewer and also to provide them an opportunity to ask their own questions. Dance creates waves of energy. The audience was able to hear footfalls and breathing and witness the hard, physical work involved in this craft. The goal of New Hampshire Dance Collaborative was to better prepare the audience for the full performance on the proscenium stage a week later.
Birdie
Birdie – a theater/dance piece by Lorraine Chapman
Dancers: Anthony Bounphakhom, Jenna Gross, Maya Infascelli, Jill MacLaughlin, Janelle Abbott Staley, Lisa Travis
Location: Canterbury Shaker Village’s Merry, Merry Canterbury celebration
Date: December 2021
Conceived of and choreographed by Lorraine Chapman, Birdie honors the story of Alberta Kirkpatrick, the last orphan accepted by the Canterbury Shakers. In collaboration with Canterbury Shaker Village’s archivist, Renee Fox, Lorraine not only researched Kirkpatrick’s personal story while at The Village but also, the Canterbury Shaker’s unique tradition of creating theater productions that they “the Entertainments”. Birdie combines dance, song and acting, using first person letters that Kirkpatrick wrote to her father during her stay. He struggled to find employment in a changing landscape of growing industrialization and placed her permanently with The Shakers.
The Shakers got their name from their use of dance in worship. Dance was a defining aspect of the Shaker’s deep expression of their faith. Dance is an authentic and powerful story telling tool that expresses a range of human emotions for which words can only hint at.
The Dysfunction of Social Practice
Curated by partners Karina Kelley and Bill Stelling, “The Dysfunction of Social Practice” features the art of Zackary DeWitt, Emmett Donlon, Rosemary Mack, Heather Morgan and Meghan Samson. As artists in particular and people in people general come back to gathering as we once did, what scars remain and how do we rebound? Dancers Kelly Diamond, Alyssa Desruisseaux, Anthony Bounphakhom and Sallie Werst will embody the humor, awkwardness and tenderness of those experiences.
As we take cautious steps back into a world changed fundamentally by the pandemic, we find that the social part of our brain has lost its muscle. Our interactions with others sometimes take on a feral, elemental aspect. Isolation has forced us to live and react in uncharted ways. The artists in this show have each responded differently to the challenge.
The Spark
Musicians: Elissa Margolin, Nate Therrien
Dancers: Emily Jerant Hendrickson, Jen Passios, Jacob Regan
Location: Canterbury Shaker Village’s Merry, Merry Canterbury celebration
Date: June 19, 2021
What triggers that divine spark between artists that gives birth to the creative process? That’s what Artistic Director Lorraine Chapman and musician Elissa Margolin set out to discover as they were inspired while sharing bits of original music and short videos of improvisational dance. Joined by bassist Nate Therrien and dancers Emily Jerant Hendrickson, Jen Passios and Jacob Regan, the group responded to each other’s musical and dance offerings to illustrate through song and dance, The Spark.
Watch our After Concert Discussion Video.