Adams Theater Hosts a Dance Residency with NVA and Guests

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ADAMS, Mass. —Nicole von Arx and six dancers will be at The Adams Theater for a residency from September 7-14, ahead of their NYC premiere of "Cry Wolf," a dance-theater production that interlaces the urgency of climate change awareness with the classic narrative of "The Boy Who Cried Wolf."

NVA & Guests will present a showing of "Cry Wolf" at the Adams Theater on September 13 at 7:30 p.m. Von Arx said she'll be using the space to explore how dance theater can capture the urgency of the changing environment, blending dynamic choreography, humor, and theatricality to create an emotional landscape that invites audiences into a deeply human experience. 

Through physical storytelling and virtuosic choreography, "Cry Wolf" delves into the complexities of perception, truth, and the consequences of our actions. 

Von Arx, who has been creating under the name NVA and Guests since 2014, has performed and toured with The Norwegian National Company for Contemporary Dance, the Metropolitan Opera and the Royal Opera House and worked with companies like Stanford Live and Wolf Trap Opera, alongside guest teaching gigs at universities like NYU's Tisch School of Dance and the Boston Conservatory of Dance at Berkeley.

"My research process for "Cry Wolf" began in early 2024, but the ideas behind it have been evolving for much longer," von Arx said. "This is a piece I've felt compelled to explore in greater depth over time, as the way I approach its themes continues to shift in response to the world around us. The inspiration also stems from conversations with Melissa Gomis, a mentor, former senior officer at the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, and childhood friend, who often shares that the greatest challenge in addressing environmental issues is not science, but fear."

Von Arx is a 2020 recipient of The Ann & Weston Hicks Choreography Fellowship at Jacob's Pillow and the 2024-2025 CUNY Dance Initiative Artist in Residence at the Gerald W. Lynch Theater at John Jay College. She has received numerous accolades, including the 2025 Danse Mirage Foundation grant, 2024 Brooklyn Arts Council grant, 2025 and 2023 NYSCA grants.

Reserve tickets and see our full season lineup at www.adamstheater.org/events

The Adams Theater is proud to participate in Mass Cultural Council's Card to Culture program, in collaboration with the Department of Transitional Assistance, the Women, Infants & Children Nutrition Program, and the Mass Health Connector.

EBT, WIC, and ConnectorCare cardholders receive free admission to our shows and events by presenting their cards at our Box Office. See the complete list of participating organizations offering EBTWIC, and ConnectorCare discounts.

 

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Voters Pick Newcomers in Adams, Cheshire Elections

Staff Reports
ADAMS, Mass. — Voters picked newcomers over veteran members in select board races in both Adams and Cheshire on Monday.
 
Kelly Rice decisively beat three-term incumbent Christine Hoyt in Adams and Scott McWhirt led a successful write-in vote against formr Cheshire board member Mark Biagini, winning 190-162.
 
Rice is a newcomer to the Board of Selectmen but not to Town Hall. She was treasurer for 12 years before retiring as of Monday, and as an administrative assistant in town departments for 14 years previously.  
 
'I'm excited. Can't wait. My first meeting will be Wednesday," she said after results were read at the Memorial Building.
 
When asked what she would like to see the board do, Rice said she wanted to get in first and see what happens. However, one thing she'd like to see is "reorganizing the board of how they pick chairman and vice chairman."
 
Hoyt was disappointed but sanguine about the results. 
 
"It's the will of the voters, so I do respect that, and I wish Kelly well," she said. "I still love this town, Pete and I have lived here for 20 years. It is the place we chose to call home, and I'm always going to be rooting for it, so hoping that it's in good hands with the Board of Selectmen."
 
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