International Dance Day

Come celebrate International Dance Day with Hickory Ballet & Performing Arts!  This free community event will showcase several dance styles in a day-long festival of master classes!  Everyone welcome, no dance experience necessary.

Date: Saturday, April 25th, 2026

Time: 9:00 AM to 3:00 PM

 

Cost: FREE

Wear: Any clothes you can move in! Bring dance shoes if you have them.  If not, socks or bare feet may be encouraged depending on the style.

Location: HBPA Studios, 116 3rd St NW Hickory, NC 28601

Click HERE for parking info.

Teaching Guest Artists:

Sarah Marie

Originally from California, Sarah Marie was introduced to English Country Dancing during a living history event at Hart Square Village in Vale, NC. For nearly four years she advised the Tar Heel Historical Dance Troupe, a 4-H Club and Tar Heel Junior Historian Club chapter to learn, demonstrate, and teach early American dancing in various community settings. As some of the founding dancers age-out of the youth organizations, her daughter Elisa has moved into the leadership position of the new performance troupe, sponsored by the Historic Burke Foundation. Sarah continues to facilitate the troupe’s workshops and performances, and she continues to regularly participate in events at Hart Square Village as a dancer and instructor for Folkways Classes.

 

 

 

 

 

Veronika Robinson

Veronika St Gilles, born and raised in Belarus, has over 15 years of dance experience. Her passion for dancing started with Salsa and Bachata. After discovering and falling in love with Kizomba, she formed Kizomba Alegria Dance Company. She is now teaching weekly classes and organizing regular social dance events in Charlotte, North Carolina. She committed to promoting Angolan style of Kizomba dancing in hopes to preserve and educate more people about the beautiful Afro-Caribbean culture and African roots of Kizomba/Semba dancing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Tamara Williams

Associate Professor Tamara Williams earned her BFA in Dance from Florida State University and received her MFA in Dance from Hollins University in collaboration with The American Dance Festival, The Forsythe Company, and Frankfurt University. She is a certified GYROTONIC(R) Trainer, Reiki Practitioner, and capoeirista.

Williams’ performing career includes work with Alpha Omega Theatrical Dance Company, David P. France Dance company, Errol Grimes Dance Group, Millicent and Company, Angela’s Pulse, Maverick Dance Experience, and Urban Bush Women’s apprentice company. Her choreography has been performed nationally and internationally including Serbia, Switzerland, Trinidad & Tobago, Jamaica, Mexico, and Brazil. In 2011, Williams created Moving Spirits, Inc., a contemporary arts organization dedicated to performing, researching, documenting, cultivating, and producing arts of the African Diaspora.

Williams has trained intensely in Salvador da Bahia, Brazil in Silvestre Technique and African Brazilian dance. She is a 2012 recipient of the Artist Residency Fellowship at the Dance & Performance Institute in Trinidad, a 2013 recipient of the Harlem Stage/Aaron Davis Hall Fund for New Work grant, and a 2014 and 2015 Community Arts Fund Grantee by the Brooklyn Arts Council. In 2015, Moving Spirits, Inc. was accepted as Company-in-Residence at the Jamaica Center for Arts & Leadership in Jamaica, Queens. Williams was a 2015 Turkey Land Grove Foundation recipient in which she participated in a seven-day dance writing residency in Martha’s Vineyard, and a 2015 Fall Space Grant recipient, awarded by the Brooklyn Arts Exchange. She is a recipient of the Digital Making Grant from UNC Charlotte’s College of Arts + Architecture and several Mini-Diversity and Chancellor Diversity Challenge Fund grants from UNC Charlotte’s Diversity Fund. She has received two Faculty Research Grants to further her studies of African American ring shout traditions in the Carolina’s low country and West Africa. Williams has received several Culture Block grants from Mecklenburg County’s Arts and Science Council to offer free African Diaspora dance and music programming for communities around Charlotte. In 2020, Williams was awarded the College of Arts + Architecture 2020 Board of Governors Teaching Award.

Williams’ research has been published in The Dancer-Citizen Journal and her book Giving Life to Movement, analyzing African-Brazilian dance histories and cultures, was published by McFarland Press in 2021. Her monograph, The African Diaspora and Civic Responsibility: Addressing Social Justice through the Arts, Education and Community Engagement, is currently under contract with McFarland. This latter text investigates how African American, African-Brazilian, Haitian, and Latinx artists and scholars address civic responsibility and social justice issues through the arts. Williams’ research on African American Ring Shout traditions has been disseminated at several colleges and universities in the United States and Brazil. Her article, “Reviving Culture Through Ring Shout,” was published in the scholarly journal, The Dancer-Citizen.

Williams has researched and developed various community programs focusing on marginalized people in New York City and Charlotte. The programs provide opportunities for underserved communities to learn and practice dances of the African diaspora; histories and cultures which are strategically neglected in US education systems.