Ellen Robbins "Dances By Very Young Choreographers" Program

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Ellen Robbins

Dances by Very Young Choreographers

JAN 28 AT 2PM

JAN 29 AT 1PM AND 4PM, 2023

New York City, Am I Right?

choreographed and performed by Colette Lévy with Yuna Clark and Zia Sharma music by Leroy Anderson

Fragrance

choreographed and performed by Alexandra Scully music by Alexandre Desplat

Into the Forest

Choreographed and performed by Georgia Krasner music by Edvard Grieg

Bad Witch Gone Good…or Not?

choreographed and performed by Agnes Khoury music by Modest Mussorgsky

Prevail

choreographed and performed by Evan Werner music by Labrinth

Rise

choreographed and performed by Zia Sharma music by Nick Drake

Excerpt: Carnival of the Animals

choreographed by Ellen Robbins, performed by Edith Barber, Maisy Rosen, Anna Wheeler music by Saint-Saëns, text by Ogden Nash

Wake Up Little Dolly!

choreographed and performed by Edie Lyu music by Claude Debussy Lesson taught by Ellen Robbins; performed by members of the audience music by Henry Cowell

What Are Lessons For?

choreographed and performed by Edith Barber with Morgan Cragnotti, guest artist music by Franz Liszt

Whoops, Oops, Ack!!!

choreographed and performed by Anna Wheeler music by Scott Joplin

Casual Aire

choreographed and performed by Autumn Domingo music by Gregory Alan Isakov

Disembody choreographed and performed by Felix Gaddie music by Air

Short Solo

choreographed and performed by Maisy Rosen, with Anna Wheeler originally conceived in drawing by Remy Charlip music by François-Joseph Gossec, Virgil Thomson

It’s About Time

choreographed and performed by Clementine Kline music by Caroline Shaw

A Message

choreographed and performed by Yuna Clark music by Jóhann Jóhannsson Review

choreographed and performed by the cast music by Philip Glass

Assistants to Ellen Robbins: Krista Jansen, Morgan Cragnotti Lobby installation: Lou Sydel

Title reader: Jessica Poletti Love (Sat), Marina Chan (Sun) The posters for “Lesson” (“School of Thought”) and “Review” are by George Deem. All other posters are by the choreographers.

GLOSSARY

Choreographer (khor-ee-ah-gra-fer) n. a person who composes dance

Choreography (khor-ee-ah-gra-fee) n. the arrangement of movement to form a composition, usually a dance Aire (air) n. a song (Shakespeariean English)

Disembody (dis im bod ee) v. to free, divest, or disengage from the body

Photo: Lou Sydel

Dances by Very Young Choreographers Alumni Concert

JAN 28 AT 7:30PM, 2023

Curtain Up!

choreographed and performed by Marina Rebecca Chan music: Cole Porter

On the Other Hand (Excerpts)

choreographed and performed by Lou Sydel music: The Books, Tsegué-Maryam Guèbrou, The Kinks, Ana Roxanne voices: Bowdoin College Theater Senior Studio ‘22 video by Niles Singer

Switchbacks

choreographed and performed by Saskia Globig and Michael Ipsen music: Antonín Dvořák

A Prayer

choreographed and performed by Alison L. Moy music: Kwabs

Ophiocordyceps–-Zombie Ant Fungus

choreographed and performed by Chanda Cragnotti music: Gustavo Santaolalla and Mac Quayle text and voice by Chanda Cragnotti

Spacewalk

choreographed and performed by Morgan Cragnotti and Deychen Volino-Gyetsa music: David Bowie

INTERMISSION

Light Meditation 04

choreographed and performed by Lina Dahbour music: Ryoji Ikeda

Alone Some and Twosome choreographed and performed by Morgan Cragnotti and Krista Jansen music: Erik Satie, Nine Inch Nails

Remedy For the Paradox (Administer as Needed) choreographed and performed by Silvie Schlein music: Laurie Anderson, text by Silvie Schlein

A COVID MOOD choreographed and performed by Jessica Poletti Love music: AJR Whitehall Terminal, 3:56 pm choreographed and performed by Amelia Dawe Sanders with Marina Rebecca Chan, Chanda Cragnotti, Morgan Cragnotti, Deychen Volino-Gyetsa, Krista Jansen, Rakhel Shapiro, Lou Sydel music: traditional

Director: Ellen Robbins Lighting Designer: Serena Wong Production Coordinator: Tricia Navigato Light Board Operator: Ryan Clark Sound Board Operator: James Bennett Deck Hand: Sarah Shea Stage Manager: Jacob Wexler Stagehands: Morgan
Assistants to Ellen Robbins: Krista
Morgan
Lobby installation: Lou Sydel
Cragnotti, Felix Gaddie, Krista Jansen
Jansen,
Cragnotti

FUNDING

Thanks to the W Trust, Joan T. Racho-Jansen, Remy Charlip, and the New York Live Arts staff.

And thank you (!) to all who contributed to the fund that supports our work.*

*Donations: Ellen Robbins is a sponsored artist of The Field. You can help to support Dances by Very Young Choreographers by making a tax deductible contribution online at www.thefield.org. Select Ellen Robbins’ name from the list of artists.

The Field is a not-for-profit, tax-exempt, 501 (c) (3) organization serving the New York City performing arts community. Contributions to artists through The Field are tax-deductible to the extent allowed by law. For more information about The Field contact: The Field, 75 Maiden Lane, Suite 906, NYC, NY 10038, (212) 691-6969, fax: (212) 255-2053. A copy of The Field’s latest annual report may be obtained, upon request, from The Field or from the Office of the Attorney General, Charities Bureau, 120 Broadway, New York, NY 10271

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BIOGRAPHIES

Ellen Robbins teaches dance for children, teenagers and, alumni in SoHo. She was the resident dance educator at Dance Theater Workshop for 34 years. She is a recipient of the 1993 Arts in Education Round Table Award and a 1986 Bessie (New York Dance and Performance Award) for her work with children. In May of 2015, she was the honoree of La MaMa Moves Gala. Ms. Robbins is a consultant to choreographers working with children, and presents an intensive teachers’ course, Growing a Dancer, for the 92nd Street Y’s Dance Education Laboratory (DEL) program. She has also taught dance education at Sarah Lawrence College and as a guest lecturer around the country and abroad. She has been on the faculties of the 92nd Street Y, the Bennington College July Program, and ArtsConnection, a performance arts project for public school children, and has directed the Young Dancers School at the American Dance Festival in Durham, North Carolina. In the summer of 2001, Dances By Very Young Choreographers (Ellen Robbins’ students ages 8-18) was produced at the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival in the

Doris Duke Theater. Ms. Robbins is known for her repertory of group dances, choreographed in collaboration with children. For more information, see: ellenrobbinsdance.com

Serena Wong (Lighting Designer) is a Brooklyn-based freelance lighting designer for theater and dance. Her designs have been seen at American Ballet Theater, Fall For Dance at City Center, Danspace, and Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival. Most recently she has designed for choreographers Gemma Bond, Caleb Teicher, Leonardo Sandoval, and Jaamil Olawale Kosoko. She enjoys biking, beekeeping, and bread baking.

ALUMNI

Marina Rebecca Chan is a Brooklyn-based performer and playwright (Dramatists Guild member), with a softspot for musical theater and a commitment to advancing Asian representation. Marina grew up studying music, theater and dance, including modern dance and choreography with Ellen Robbins, which had a tremendous influence on Marina’s development and creative growth.

Ellen taught Marina the power of art and expression at an early age, which has stayed with Marina ever since and made her feel she could pursue a career in the arts. A Columbia graduate, with a Drama & Theatre Arts degree, Marina went on to conceive and produce the Asian Americans in Theatre: Art and Activism panel series at Asia Society and Barnard College. During Covid, she’s performed in numerous Zoom productions, including three of her own plays: Elizabeth’s Wonderland (self-produced), Tomorrow, And Tomorrow, And Tomorrow (Little & Fierce Theatre Company), and Two Lovers (Rachel Love’s AirPlay); and recently had her play Asian American Girl developed at Pan Asian Repertory Theatre. Recent NYC acting credits: A Black and White Cookie (The Tank); A Tomato Can’t Grow in the Bronx (Chain Theatre). NYC dance credits: Il Re Pastore (Lincoln Center’s Mostly Mozart Festival); and self-choreographed dances “War Danse Macabre” (Studios at New York City Center), “Finding My Voice” (tsunami relief at Brooklyn Friends School), and “Which Witch is Which?” and “Quest” in Ellen Robbins’ Dances by Very Young Choreographers (Dance Theater Workshop). Marina is incredibly excited to be

studying with Ellen again after 16 years! marinachan.com

Chanda Cragnotti has studied dance since she was 6 years old, and she started dancing with Ellen a year later. She freelanced in NYC for many years and danced with Dances Patrelle, Catherine Gallant-Dances by Isadora, and the Isadora Duncan Dance Company. She now studies environmental science and journalism at The New School. Accolades include best choreography for her pieces Lament, and A Journey through Blue at the Vienna International Ballet Competition in Missoula, Montana.

Morgan Cragnotti: In the spring I graduated with an MFA in Collaborative Theatre Making from Rose Bruford Collage in the UK. The trip through a practicebased degree during covid was heartbreaking, but forced me to work on a variety of mixed media virtual theatre projects. These included and combined motion capture, live streaming, video, and avatars in a 3D environment. I found I had some innovative ideas on how to direct actors in these new mediums, bridging the gap between people working on the tech side and the

performance side. Some of the people and companies I worked with are; Coppercandle A Creative Technology Company, Target3D

The Home of Motion Capture, Riley Makes Stuff and Things, J. L. Pichelski Playwright and Filmmaker, Niamh Dowling, Irina Brown, Victoria Schultz, Diane Alison-Mitchell, Sebastian Senior, Jeffrey Louis Salkilld, Babak Mehrabi Parsiyan, Angela Clerkin, Quinn Birkholz, and others.

Lina Dahbour is a Hudson Valley based multimedia artist whose work centers around dance and outdoor spaces. She practices improvisation as a means to reconnect with self, curation as a means to connect with others, and multimedia performance as a means to connect with larger forces. She is the founder of BADDANCE, an experimental dance event series that prioritizes community engagement. She is a co-founder of MOMENTA, a New York City based event series in residence at Trans-Pecos that showcases artists at the intersection of dance and performance art. She has performed and presented her work at New York Live Arts, Rosekill Art Farm, the Joyce Theater, the Portland Terrain Biennial, and DIY venues across

New York State. Raised in New York City, Lina was trained in ballet and modern dance before attending the Dance Conservatory at SUNY Purchase. She graduated cum laude in 2018. You can keep up with her on Instagram @lina__azalea and MOMENTA on Instagram @momentanyc.

Saskia Globig and Michael Ipsen perform together for live audiences and for film. They have collaborated on installations, publication design, and curation for projects at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, the Icebox, AUTOMAT Gallery, and HOT BED Micro Gallery in Philadelphia, as well as at Artspace New Haven. Globig danced with Ellen in 2014 and 2015. She also learned with Peggy Peloquin, Leslie PartridgeSachs, Kathy Wildberger, and other New York teachers. In Philadelphia, she was in residency at Headlong Performance Institute in 2019 and has taught and performed contemporary dance at MAAS, Fidget Space, Fringe, the Bok Building, and the Washington Avenue Pier. She continues to explore a multidisciplinary practice of site-specific movement, video, and print design as an MFA candidate at the Yale School

of Art. Ipsen’s background is in theater and documentary filmmaking. He has performed at the Glove in Brooklyn and the University of Pennsylvania’s Institute for Contemporary Art. He has also worked as a film and photography tech advisor at the Bard MFA and UPenn School of Art. In 2018, he started Lino Kino, an experimental video collective expanding accessible possibilities for screening and production. Globig joined in 2020. Together, their work plays at the crossroads of poetry, sensory experience, and broadcast media.

Krista Jansen is a dancer and choreographer born, raised and based in New York City. She is one half of the duet company Jansen & Holm, where she performs and choreographs alongside CJ Holm. Her own choreography has been performed at Dixon Place, STUFFED! at Movement Research, Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival, the 92nd Street Y, Triskelion Arts, the Flea, and for an award-winning film with director Bat-Sheva Guez. Krista is currently performing with the Sokolow Theatre/Dance Ensemble, and was an original cast member and Assistant Rehearsal Director for the critically acclaimed Doug Elkins &

Friends’ Fraulein Maria

.

She also choreographs for the theater department at Beacon High School. Krista started dancing with Ellen at the age of five, and has never left — she continues as a teaching assistant in Ellen’s classes. kristajansen.wordpress.com is a great place to sign her mailing list, look at dance-y pictures, and stay updated on her performances.

Jessica Poletti Love danced with Ellen from the ages of 4-17. After studying dance in undergrad she decided to switch paths and became a veterinarian, moving from New Jersey to Colorado, back to New York then to Utah. Jessica returned to dance, taking classes locally in Utah for the last 4-5 years. When not working or dancing she enjoys hiking with her dog, doing yoga, cycling, and camping in the desert with her husband and daughter. Jessica would like to thank Nick Cendese and Repertory Dance Theater of Utah for their help in organizing rehearsal space.

Alison L. Moy began dancing at the age of 6 with a local Brooklyn dance teacher. From age 8 to 15, she danced with Ellen Robbins and had the unique opportunity to choreograph every year. Alison

expanded her dance experience at Wesleyan University where she explored ballet, West African dance, jazz, and hip hop. She performed with Wesleyan’s dance department, as well as becoming a leader and choreographer of Isis, Wesleyan’s women of color dance troupe. After moving to San Francisco in 2007, she danced with an urban contemporary group called Loose Change from 2009-2011. Alison moved back to NYC in 2014 and has been teaching and working with middle school students since. She reconnected with Ellen in 2019 and this is her second time performing in the alumni concert.

Amelia Dawe Sanders (pronouns: zie/zir) has studied with Ellen Robbins since 2011 and has been a teaching assistant for Ellen. Zie has presented zir choreography at New York Live Arts, 92Y, Mary Anthony’s Studio, Snug Harbor Cultural Center & Botanical Garden, Norte Maar’s Dance at Socrates, and Montclair State University. Amelia graduated summa cum laude with a DanceBFA from Montclair State University, where zie performed work by Emmanuèle Phuon, Maxine Steinman, Kathleen Kelley, Jody Sperling, Abby Zbikowski, and Jessica DiMauro. Currently,

zie is working with Emmanuèle Phuon on the new work, We, which will be performed at Kaatsbaan and Fairfield University this year. Zie has performed works by Isadora Duncan with Loretta Thomas, Catherine Gallant, and Lori Belilove at venues including Jacob’s Pillow and St. Mark’s Church. Amelia was a founding member of the Paul Taylor Teen Ensemble under the direction of Raegan Wood, performing at venues including The Joyce Theater and Symphony Space.

Silvie Schlien trained in ballet and modern dance from a young age and started dancing with Ellen Robbins when she was ten. She is currently an English major at Mount Holyoke College where an exploration of dramaturgy and sculpture has added new dimension to her love of dance. She is thrilled to be back with the alumni group.

Rakhel Shapiro danced with Ellen Robbins from ages 5 to 18, and is so happy to be back with Ellen now, in her 30s! Thanks to Ellen, dance has been a steady companion throughout Rakhel’s life, from living room dance parties, to Ecstatic Dance, to studying modern, ballet, and dance improvisation at Vassar

College. Rakhel is currently a PhD candidate in clinical psychology at Long Island University - Brooklyn, and a creator and meditation facilitator at Madrona Meditation. Rakhel incorporates somatic work extensively in both her work as a soon-to-be psychologist and as a meditation facilitator, and thanks Ellen for planting the seeds of this nourishing lifelong relationship with the body.

Lou Sydel has been dancing with Ellen Robbins since the age of six. He is a graduate of Bowdoin College with a degree in interdisciplinary performance and anthropology, and has studied drama / physical theater at LaGuardia Arts HS and Accademia Dell’Arte (Arezzo, Italy). This year Lou created an evening-length performance work entitled On The Other Hand. The piece is a series of musings about gesture and gender, guided by the architecture of the body: if we had eight hands, we might instead say, ‘on the eighth hand!’ His work also draws from experiences of transness, imagining dance as a living journal for a body moving towards new directions. Lou has performed in Dances by Very Young Choreographers with Ellen Robbins, as well as the Celebration Barn, the Teatro

Virginian, Norte Maar Dance at Socrates, Sokolow Theater / Dance Ensemble, Rascal Arts at Theater Row, and at the International Society for Gesture Studies. You can follow Lou and learn more about upcoming projects at @gesturestudies. Dancing with Ellen Robbins has taught him everything — from developing a choreographic voice to learning how to tell a story without any words at all. Thank you Ellen!

Deychen Volino-Gyetsa (she/ her) I’m an actor, musician, and choreographer and I’ve been studying with Ellen Robbins since I was 5 years old. One of my first creations was a dance about the day in the life of a baby Cheetah. For the past several years I’ve been performing with a variety of theater companies including Williamstown Theatre Festival, Chautauqua Theater Company, Utah Shakespeare Festival, Texas Shakespeare Festival, and I was part of The 24 Hour Plays: Nationals’ cohort 2022. I graduated with a BFA in acting from The University of North Carolina School of the Arts in 2020. Without Ellen, I doubt I would be the performer I am today. Endless gratitude for all that she continues to teach me.

LIVE ARTS CONTRIBUTORS

New York Live Arts is deeply grateful to all the individuals listed below for their vital gifts to New York Live Arts over the last year:

$1MM and higher

Slobodan Randjelović & Jon Stryker

$500,000-$999,999

Anonymous

$100,000-$499,999

Anonymous

Eleanor Friedman

Ruth & Stephen Hendel

Alex Katz Foundation

Ellen M. Poss

Jane Bovingdon Semel & Terry Semel | Semel Charitable Foundation

$50,000 - $99,999

Jody & John Arnhold | Arnhold Foundation

Lorraine Gallard & Richard Levy

Helen & Peter Haje

Suzanne Karpas Barbara & Alan D. Marks Matthew Putman

$25,000 - $49,999

Ylva Cavalli-Björkman & Willard Ahdritz

David Dechman & Michel Mercure

Zoe Eskin

Adam Flatto

Agnes Gund

Michael P.N.A. Hormel in memory of Linda Grass Shapiro Charla Jones

Colleen Keegan Darnell L. Moore

Amy Newman & Bud Shulman

Alanna Rutherford

Jennifer & Jonathan Soros

Starry Night Fund at The Chicago Community Foundation Diana Wege | Wege Foundation

$10,000 - $24,999

Caroline & Paul Cronson

Claire Danes & Hugh Dancy

Alexes Hazen

Julie Orlando

Andrea Rosen

Nina & Gabriel Stricker

Pat Stryker

$5,000 - $9,999

Patricia Blanchet | Ed Bradley Family Foundation

Paula Cooper & Jack Macrae

Joan Davidson

Anne Delaney

Laura & Richard Hunt

Glenn Ligon

Jeffrey B. & Wendy Liszt

Robert Longo

Margaret Morton Jeffrey Schneider

Melissa Schiff Soros

Cindy Sherman Catharine R. Stimpson

Kristalina & Jack Taylor Billie Tsien & Tod Williams Steve Wilson

$1,000 - $4,999

Derrick Adams Rosio Alvarez & Jennifer Brody

Anonymous

Alberta Arthurs

The Brant Foundation, Inc.

Jill Brienza

Catherine & Paul Buttenwieser

Reggie Browne Carmine Boccuzzi

Rose C. Cali in Memory of John J. Cali Jeannie Colbert

Joan Davidson

Lil & Jim DeMarse

Beth Rudin DeWoody

Dobkin Family Foundation

Margaret Doyle

Terence Dougherty & Pierre Duleyrie

Gina Duncan

Nancy & Stephen Gabriel Mimi Garrard

Michael & Deborah Goldberg

Thomas & Barbara Gottschalk

Deborah Hellman & Derek Brown

Tom Hennes

Jenny Holzer

Scott Hudziak

Joanie Johnson

Judy Johnson

The Joyce Theater Foundation Emil Kang Amir Karby

Hedy Klineman

Oscar Mack

Nancy Meyer & Marc Weiss

Susan Micari

Linda Murray

Wangechi Mutu

Samira Nasr

Richard Plepler

Randy Polumbo | Plant Construction

Margaret Selby

Jeffrey Seller

Céline Semaan & Colin Vernon

Caroline Shapiro & Peter Frey

Shinique Smith

Temple St. Clair & Paul Engler

The Susan Stein Shiva Foundation

Mickalene Thomas

Robyn Trani

JP Versace

James J. Williams, III

Jacqueline Woodson Timothy Wu & Eric Murphy

$500 - $999

Stewart Adelson

Mary Ann Ashley

Arthur Aviles

Carol Bryce-Buchanan

John Fitzgibbon

William Floyd

Jeremy Henderson

Karen B. Hopkins

Brinton T. & Francis C. Parson, Jr Robert Ross

John Sansone

Ellynne Skove

Deborah Swiderski Wade Turnbull Gilbert Williams

Gifts and commitments between 7/1/2021-6/30/2022

Support for New York Live Arts is provided by the Arnhold Foundation, Blanchette Hooker Rockefeller Fund, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Ed Bradley Family Foundation, The Brant Foundation, Inc., Joseph and Joan Cullman Foundation for the Arts, Dance/ NYC, Ford Foundation, Howard Gilman Foundation, Mertz Gilmore Foundation, Harkness Foundation for Dance, Marta Heflin Foundation, Alex Katz Foundation, Lambent Foundation, Alice Lawrence Foundation, Samuel M. Levy Family Foundation, The John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, National Performance Network, New England Foundation for the Arts, NYC COVID-19 Response & Impact Fund in the New York Community Trust, One World Fund, The Poss Family Foundation, Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Jerome Robbins Foundation, The Fan Fox & Leslie R. Samuels Foundation, San Francisco Foundation The Semel Charitable Foundation, Scherman Foundation, The Shubert Foundation, Stavros Niarchos Foundation, Tides Foundation

Corporate support for New York Live Arts includes Con Edison, Google, Tito’s Handmade Vodka.

Public support for New York Live Arts is from Humanities New York, National Endowment for the Arts, New York City Department of Correction, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council and the New York State Council on the Arts.

Front

Board of Directors

Stephen Hendel Co-Chair

Richard H. Levy Co-Chair

Helen Haje Vice Chair

Slobodan RandjeloviĆ Vice Chair

Alan Marks

Treasurer Bill T. Jones

Artistic Director Ex-Officio Kim Cullen

Chief Executive Officer Ex-Officio Bjorn Amelan

Willard Ahdritz

Sarah Arison

Aimee Meredith Cox

LaToya Ruby Frazier

Charla Jones

Colleen Keegan

Darnell L. Moore

Amy Newman

Randy Polumbo

Ellen M. Poss Matthew Putman

Jane Bovingdon Semel Ruby Shang Catharine R. Stimpson

Board Emeritus

Derek Brown

Terence Dougherty Eleanor Friedman Advisory Council

Margaret Doyle, Chair Alberta Arthurs

Beverly D’Anne Lisa Frigand

Jenette Kahn Susan Micari Alton Murray Lorraine Gallard Lois Greenfield Martha Sherman

STAFF & BOARD New York Live Arts @NewYorkLiveArts @nylivearts Artistic Leadership
T. Jones Artistic Director Janet Wong Associate Artistic Director Programming, Producing & Engagement
Maude Producing Director Hannah Emerson Producer Jessica Prince Producing Associate Production
Pinnock Production Manager
Dechaine Production Stage Manager Leo Janks Lighting Manager
Roberts Interim Technical Director
Navigato Interim Assistant Production Manager Creative Director Bjorn G. Amelan Community Engagement & Education Bianca Bailey Community Engagement & Education Manager Communications Tyler Ashley Director of Communications Augustus Cook Digital Marketing Manager Hannah Seiden Communications Manager Taylor Adams Front of House Assistant Liliana Dirks-Goodman Graphic Designer Pentagram Pro-Bono Branding Randjelović/Stryker Resident Commissioned Artist Faye Driscoll
Leadership Kim Cullen Executive Director & CEO
Burke Chief
Staff Development
Chief Development Officer
Giving Manager
West Development Manager
Development Assistant Finance
Dey Director
Finance Manathus Dey Finance Associate
Gregory English Operations Manager
Retegues Facilities Coordinator
Custodial Assistant Human Resources ADP TotalSource
Services
Sandler, PC Pro-Bono Counsel
T. Jones/Arnie Zane Company
Hinds, Jada Jenai, Shane Larson, s. Lumbert, Danielle Marshall, Nayaa Opong, Marie Paspe, Jacoby Pruitt, Huiwang
Bill
Kyle
Chanel
Megan
Alexander
Tricia
Executive
Ali
of
Dave Archuletta
John Jahnke Institutional
Rodney
Zykeya McLeod
Nupur
of
Operations
Marcus
Adalid Nunez-Mendoza
Legal
Lowenstein
Bill
Barrington
Zhang
of House Staff Julia Antinozzi, Paulina Meneses, Johnny Mathews, Hannah Nii, Cristina Moya-Palacios, Salma Kiuhan, Alondra Balbuena, Rafaela Oliviera, Makenna Finch, Anna Ticknor, Jingjing Han, Jessy Crist, Marlon Santana, Mieke Matteson, Demetris Charalambous

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