Skip to content

Ezra Dickinson to Perform a Series of Short Solos

A local dancer creates a moving gift for his troubled mother.

By Seattle Mag May 3, 2013

0513ezradickinson

This article originally appeared in the May 2013 issue of Seattle magazine.

Seattle dancer Ezra Dickinson has been working on his Mother’s Day gift for the last seven years—a public performance of several short solos called Mother For You I Made This—but it’s unlikely that his mother will see it. A diagnosed schizophrenic, she lives at Western State Hospital. Formerly a ballet teacher, Dickinson’s mother enrolled him in dance classes at age 4 and encouraged his schooling at Pacific Northwest Ballet, where he studied from ages 8 through 20. Meanwhile, her mental health deteriorated to the point that she was homeless and living on the streets. Which is why Dickinson is staging this performance outdoors in downtown Seattle, starting outside the Greyhound bus station. Although public, the performance is also intimate: Each evening of the 14-day run, the official audience will consist of only 20 ticket holders, each given a wireless headset through which a soundtrack of music, industrial noise and conversation is broadcast—voices projected inside each audience member’s head. The unofficial audience of passers-by will be left to interpret (or ignore) the performance on their own. A phenomenally skilled dancer, Dickinson has danced with local contemporary companies such as Maureen Whiting Company, Seattle Dance Project and Zoe/Juniper. But in addition to showcasing beautiful movement, in this case he also hopes to raise awareness about the lack of options for people struggling with mental illness—as well as the people who love them. 5/6–5/19. 7 p.m. $12–$18. Locations vary. velocitydancecenter.org

 

Follow Us

Studio Sessions: Jo Cosme

Studio Sessions: Jo Cosme

The Seattle-based multimedia artist and 2026 Neddy Award winner challenges the postcard version of Puerto Rico and centers the persistence of its people.

Jo Cosme knows how seductive a postcard can be. The Seattle-based Boricua (Puerto Rican) multimedia artist works across photography, installation, video, sound, and interactive elements to examine and pull apart how Puerto Rico is seen, sold, and misunderstood from the outside. Trained in photojournalism, with a BFA in photography from Puerto Rico School of Fine…

Seattle's Drag Brunch Has History

Seattle’s Drag Brunch Has History

The city’s Sunday shows started long before the mimosas got bottomless.

There was a time not too long ago, when drag performances—now a mainstay of Seattle’s queer scene—were kept under wraps. And when brunches, complete with singing and dancing queens dressed in dazzling drag as you sipped mimosas, weren’t a Sunday staple.  During the 1940s and ‘50s, an era largely shaped by restrictive laws and bias…

Studio Sessions: Sangram Majumdar

Studio Sessions: Sangram Majumdar

Working at the confluence of history, culture, and various painting traditions, UW associate professor Sangram Majumdar is one of this year’s Neddy Artist Award winners.

Discover the art of UW professor Sangram Majumdar, a 2026 Neddy Artist Award winner. Learn about his inspiration and upcoming Seattle exhibition at Cornish.

Rearview Mirror: A Georgian Dinner, Sidewalk Sips, and One-of-a-Kind Clothing

Rearview Mirror: A Georgian Dinner, Sidewalk Sips, and One-of-a-Kind Clothing

Things I did, saw, ate, learned, or read in the past week (or so).

A new life for old clothes To celebrate one year in its current studio, the FXRY—a clothing repair service available via in-person appointments, home pickup, or mail-in drop off—is dropping its first collection. A small batch of reworked pieces, Second Mark will feature 13 vintage barn jackets, cropped, chain-stitched, and renewed into a completely unique, one-of-one…