Sara's ShowbitzTHEATRE

A Q&A with “A Chorus Line” Dancer and Former Alexandria Resident, Daniel Powers

By Sara Dudley Brown, Theatre Editor

 

Daniel Powers in full dance mode! Andrew Fassbender Photography.

I had the pleasure of interviewing Daniel Powers, Alexandria-raised and educated, and one of the incredibly talented dancers/actors/singers now appearing in “A Chorus Line” at Signature Theatre in Shirlington. The following is my recollection of the animated and easy conversation with this delightful young man.

Zebra    So Daniel, what’s your connection to Alexandria and this community?

Daniel Powers flying effortlessly through the air. Photo by James Gilmer.

Daniel   Well, I moved here from Guatemala with my parents, Janet and Jack Powers, right after I was born and lived in Alexandria until I graduated from TC Williams High School (with an Honors Diploma). I also attended John Adams Elementary and Hammond Middle Schools in Alexandria. My parents still live here. They just moved from Braddock Heights to the West End near Landmark Mall.

Zebra    How did you make the transition from Alexandria to New York, where you currently live and work?

Daniel   When I was five years old I attended a performance of Alexandria Ballet’s “Nutcracker Suite” at the Athenaeum in Alexandria. Following that amazing experience I told my parents, “That’s what I want to do! I want to be a ballet dancer!” And my wonderful parents said, “OK, let’s get you in lessons!” I guess I was the kind of kid who wanted to do everything, but during my last two years of school I got serious about my ballet and ended up training at the Washington School of Ballet.

Zebra    Just how does one become a professional ballet dancer, the most difficult and demanding career, I think, that you can pick for yourself?

Daniel Powers in rehearsal for “A Chorus Line”. Photo by Christopher Mueller.

Daniel   Well, after graduation from TC Williams, I got a job with the Orlando Ballet for a year, then went on to do the training program at Houston Ballet. Following that experience I joined the Cincinnati Ballet which performed at the Aronoff Center for the Arts. I danced with them professionally for four years and then joined the Dayton Ballet for two years. I also worked for Cincinnati Opera in the summer when they needed dancers for big productions like “Aida.” Following that I moved to New York to try my hand at theatre. Recently I did a production with the Virginia Repertory Theatre of “West Side Story” and was the male swing for “Billy Elliot” here with Signature Theatre.

Zebra    So did you have to audition for your role(s) in “A Chorus Line” or did they just know your work from “Billy Elliot” and say, “You’re in!”

Daniel   Oh, no. I auditioned, got called back, then got a contract.

Zebra    Where are you staying while you’re in town?

Daniel   It’s a reunion for my family when I can work here in Alexandria, so I’m staying with them. My mother often volunteers as an usher at Signature, so she knows it quite well and is “over the moon” about my being home and working there.

Zebra    What’s it like working with Matthew Gardiner, the unbelievably talented director, and Denis Jones, choreographer, and Tony-nominated for his choreography for “Tootsie” currently running on Broadway?

Daniel Powers’ Playbill bio photo.

Daniel   Matt Gardiner is an amazing director and terrific to work with, as is Denis Jones, our choreographer. “I’ve worked with many people who have created new things, but I really ‘geek out’ when I work with people like Denis who clearly understand their intention and who work in patterns and ways that are not overly complicated or dense. They just kind of make sense for your body and you go, ‘Oh, this just feels good.’”

In summary       We continued to talk about Daniel’s experiences as well as his plans for continuing doing musical theatre, which he enjoys because each performance feels different and is exciting. He shared his pre-show routine each night for the intense dancing that begins at the top of the show, confiding that the opening number is like “being shot out of a cannon!” He warms up his body and his mind for about an hour before each show just to get ready for that number. Then he laughed and said that each time he hears the opening bars of the iconic “I Hope I Get It,” he always gets a huge thrill!

Me, too!

Sara Dudley Brown

Sara Dudley Brown is the Theatre Editor of The Zebra Press. She graduated with a music degree in voice from Rollins College Conservatory of Music in Winter Park Florida. After several years of professional singing and acting (Disney World and The Kenley Theatres as well as voice-over and film here in the DMV area), trying and failing miserably at being Barbra Streisand (the post was already filled), Sara decided to take her lifelong love of music and the theatre to create a profession which would use everything she had learned theatrically and musically over the years—corporate event production and management. She began with department store events, working for the May Company putting on events in 18 stores, and went on to found her own corporate event management company. She recently retired after 30 years of mounting mega events internationally and domestically for some of the world’s top aviation manufacturers. Now Sara is once again using her years of theatrical work as well as her musical training to review Metro Area professional theatre productions for The Zebra Press. She thinks this is a much more sane way to live and never tires of the excitement of a theatre opening!

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