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Welcome Letter

2013 Samuel H. Scripps American Festival Award Lin Hwai-min The ADF wishes to thank the late Samuel H. Scripps, whose generosity made possible the annual $50,000 Samuel H. Scripps Award. The Award was established in 1981 as the first of its kind and honors chorographers who have dedicated their lives and talent to the creation of . The continuation of the award is made possible through the SHS Foundation and its President, Richard E. Feldman. Celebrated choreographer, director, and educator Lin Hwai-min will be presented with the 2013 Award by Joseph V. Melillo in a special ceremony on Saturday, July 27th at 8:00 pm, prior to the Forces of Dance performance at the Durham Performing Arts Center. The program will also include a performance of the solo from Lin Hwai-min’s 1998 work Moon Water, performed by Cloud Gate Dance Theatre dancer Chou Chang-ning.

Mr. Lin’s fearless zeal for the art form has established him as one of the most dynamic and innovative choreographers today. His illustrious career as a choreographer has spanned over four decades and has earned him international praise for his impact on Chinese modern dance. He is the founder, choreographer, and artistic director of both Cloud Gate Dance Theatre of Taiwan (founded in 1973) and Cloud Gate 2 (founded in 1992), and his choreography continues to be presented throughout the United States, Europe, and Asia. While his works often draw inspiration from traditional elements of Asian culture and aesthetics, his choreographic brilliance continues to push boundaries and redefine the art form.

Among Lin Hwai-min's 86 choreographic works, 20 have been made into dance films, and most recently, Mr. Lin was the subject of three full-length television documentaries including the Discovery Channel’s Portraits Taiwan: Lin Hwai-min. In 1983, Mr. Lin founded the Department of Dance at Taipei National University of the Arts and served as its Chairman for five years. He was also the Founding Dean of the university's graduate dance program from 1993 to1994. Since 2000 he has served as the Artistic Director of the Novel Dance Series at the Novel Hall Theater, introducing Taipei audiences to renowned artists including Eiko & Koma, Elizabeth Streb, Sidi Larbi Cherkaoui, and Susanne Linke, among many others. He is also currently serving as the Mentor of Dance for the Rolex Mentor and Protégé Arts Initiative where he helps guide the career of a beginning choreographer.

In 2005, Mr. Lin was celebrated by Time magazine as one of “Asia’s Heroes,” and in 2009 was recognized with the Lifetime Achievement Award from the International Movimentos Dance Prize in . Other honors include honorary doctorates from six universities in both Taiwan and Hong Kong, the Taiwan National Award for Arts, the Ramon Magsaysay Award, the John D. Rockefeller 3rd Award, and the award for Best Choreographer at the Lyon Dance Biennial Festival. Additionally, he was given the Chevalier de l' Ordre des Arts et des Lettres from the French Ministry of Culture.

Past recipients of the Samuel H. Scripps/American Dance Festival Award include , , Paul Taylor, , , , , Erick Hawkins, Twyla Tharp, Anna Sokolow, Donald McKayle, , Trisha Brown, Meredith Monk, Anna Halprin, Fayard and Harold Nicholas, Pina Bausch, Pilobolus Dance Theatre, , Maguy Marin, Eiko and Koma, Bill T. Jones, , Mark Morris, Laura Dean, Ohad Naharin, Martha Clarke, Anne Teresa De Keersmaeker, William Forsythe, and posthumously in honor of , , José Limón, , and .

Endowed Chair for Distinguished Teaching Phyllis Lamhut Established at the ADF in 1991, the Balasaraswati/Joy Ann Dewey Beinecke Endowed Chair for Distinguished Teaching honors teachers who have made extraordinary contributions to the field of dance. This Award, endowed through a generous contribution from Luise Elcaness Scripps and with additional support by Walter Beinecke, the daughters of Joy Ann Dewey Beinecke, and the ADF, recognizes the dual role of teachers in passing on dance history and tradition and cultivating the future creativity of dance as an art form. The chair was named for Balasaraswati, one of India’s legendary dancers and teachers, and Joy Ann Dewey Beinecke, a former dancer and distinguished member of the dance faculty at Williams College. The 2013 Chair will be awarded to internationally celebrated educator and mentor, Phyllis Lamhut in a special ceremony will be held on on Friday, June 14, 2013 at 7:00pm in White Lecture Hall on ’s East Campus.

For over four decades Phyllis Lamhut has remained dedicated to teaching the exploration of motion and kinetic expression to students throughout the world. Her zeal for the art form and continued commitment to teaching the principles of choreography have earned her critical acclaim, and she is a widely sought after teacher and mentor for both students and emerging choreographers.

Ms. Lamhut received her professional training in dance technique, improvisation, choreography, percussion, notation, and stagecraft from Alwin Nikolais and later went on to perform as a principal dancer with the Nikolais Dance Theatre for twenty years. Her training led her to create her own company where her choreography was set on numerous companies including the Limon Dance Company, Ririe-Woodbury Dance Company, and the Theatre of Canada, among many others. As a leading mentor for young professional choreographers, she has worked as a Choreography Advisor/Editor for the Joyce Soho Residency Program, and has directed the National Canadian Composer/Choreographer Seminar, the National Association of Regional Ballet Craft of Choreography Conference, and the Carlyle Project “New Impulses” choreography workshop. Ms. Lamhut presently teaches Principles of Dance Composition and Motional Research at New York University Tisch School of the Arts and continues mentoring professional choreographers.

Past recipients of the Chair include Pearl Primus, Daniel Nagrin, Betty Jones, Bella Lewitzky, Anna Halprin, Donald McKayle, Bessie Schönberg, Matt Mattox, Pauline Koner, Viola Farber, Mary Anthony, , , Sophie Maslow, Pearl Lang, Martha Myers, Carmen De Lavallade, Gus Solomons, Jr., Gerri Houlihan, Dr. Charles “Chuck” Davis, Linda Tarnay, Douglas Nielsen, Dianne McIntyre, Carolyn Adams, Sharon Kinney, Ruth Andrien, Yang Meiqi, Donna Faye Burchfield, and Ana Marie Forsythe.