Next spring, Mia Sanderson will graduate from University of South Carolinaโs Betsy Blackmon Dance Program with two degrees, completing four years of dance and advertising curriculums that now position her for several career options: Will it be professional company life or marketing for a dance organization? Maybe even musical theater, she says.
โIโve definitely become a better version of myself,โ Sanderson says as she considers the education that brought her to this point. โIโm just going to see where the world takes me.โ
Sandersonโs enviable flexibility is the result of professors like Jennifer Deckert, USCโs dance program director, who has never been interested in teaching a narrow path to success. โItโs about way more than their passion for dance,โ she says. โItโs their passions for life.โ
Prepping for the Stage, the Classroom, and Beyond
Deckert structures USCโs program with this in mind, and the school offers two BA tracks: Performance & Choreography, which supports double majors like Sandersonโs, and Dance Education, which allows students to graduate with a Kโ12 teaching certificate. The latter nearly guarantees employment in the state of South Carolina, and makes getting a dance education position in another state much simpler. In addition, the program recently added a low-residency MA in Dance Studies, the first graduate program in dance in the state of South Carolina designed for working professionals.
โThere are more avenues than a performance life,โ Deckert says. Alongside the BA in Dance with an emphasis in Performance & Choreography, โthere are degrees students can seek that will support them and continue to serve the dance communityโthat may or may not be them continuing to perform full-time, but [they] are still integrated into our dance world.โ Common second majors or minors include Business, Political Science, Journalism, Media Arts, Pre-Med, Pre-Physical Therapy, Marketing, Biology, History, and Psychology.
A Classical Foundation, With Room for Play
The variety of options should not, however, be misconstrued for a lack of quality or intensity. USCโs program is classically focused: Students take ballet four days a week and contemporary twice a week, supplemented with additional options like pointe, jazz, and West African dance.
โThey usually come to our dance building around 11 am every day, and then theyโre in rehearsals until about 5 pm,โ Deckert says. Evenings remain open to allow opportunities for enrichment beyond the studio or stageโdance students are encouraged to attend sporting events, join Greek life, and expand their social and academic circles throughout the city of Columbia.
โPart of the reason why I chose USC is because itโs in the South,โ says Sanderson, whoโs originally from Minnesota. โI felt like if I had gone to another school, I wouldnโt have gotten as much of an idea of the types of people that we live in the world with. Itโs really important to know that as an artist.โ
Coming This Spring: The Joffrey Ballet in Residency
This level of engagement has also attracted industry leaders for on-campus residencies. Spring 2025 will include a three-week visit by Chicagoโs Joffrey Ballet, during which choreographer and rehearsal director Nicolas Blanc will create an original work on the company. Meanwhile, Betsy Blackmon Dance Company members will immerse themselves into The Joffrey Balletโs creative ethos: Gerald Arpino stagers will set historic choreography on the students, and theyโll also learn a contemporary work created by a Joffrey company member.
โItโs the foundation for something really special,โ says Catherine Eby, company manager of The Joffrey Ballet. โItโs so exciting for students to have that opportunity to have insight into professional work.โ
The residency will be Joffreyโs most extensive collaboration of its kind, resulting in a well-rounded performance slate of dance on campus: The company will present Blancโs original work and several pieces from its repertoire, and the students will perform two Arpino works and the contemporary piece. Additionally, Joffreyโs music director, Scott Speck, will work with the USC Symphony Orchestra prior to performances directed by USC professor of music Scott Weiss. Throughout the residency, dancers will be able to take company class and observe The Joffrey Ballet in rehearsal. The companyโs community engagement director will also join the group in South Carolina and oversee a week of arts programming for community members across campus and throughout the state.
Eby says the enthusiasm and curiosity of USCโs students and faculty was what made agreeing to the residency a no-brainer. โItโs not about where the school is,โ she says. The question is โIs the faculty committed and excited to bring these kinds of opportunities, and are the students excited to have this opportunity? Both of those things are abundantly true at USC.โ
Honoring the Legacy of Betsy Blackmon
The high quality of resources and engagement that attract companies like Joffrey are thanks in part to Tom and Jane Suggs. Last year, the couple made a donation in memory of their daughter, Betsy Blackmon, a beloved class of 2007 graduate who died of cancer in 2018. The newly renamed Betsy Blackmon Dance Program means greater support for students and funding for full-time faculty, guest artists, and state-of-the-art facilities.
โItโs been such an honor to have Betsyโs name connected to our program,โ Deckert says. โWe expect that it will continue to grow and support our dancers as they get this full experience at USC.โ
Audition Now, Then Chart Your Own Course
Interested applicants can find details about auditionsโwhich are submitted via video onlyโhere. Deckert encourages students to apply no matter their background. โWeโre looking for dancers that have strong technique and a broad understanding of their bodies. Then we can help refine those skills and abilities in a variety of directions,โ she says.
Sanderson says itโs actually better if you donโt know which direction is yours yet. โA lot of high school students go into their four years of college and they expect to become an older version of this person that they are as a senior in high school,โ she says. โBut when youโre taking so many classes and interacting with so many different people from different places, it creates a new version of yourself.โ Sheโs excited and curious to find out what comes next.
This article was originally published by DanceMagazine.com. You can read that full article here.