Folk! Captures
Passion of Ukrainian Folk Dancers in
Folk! is the first feature-length
documentary about the
culture and history of Ukrainian dance in North America and
The documentary
features Ukrainian prima ballerina Roma Pryma Bohachevsky, among the first to introduce
ballet-style Ukrainian folk dance to
Following
World War II, Bohachevsky
settled in the
“Basically,
when I met her, I couldn’t believe that no one had actually done a film about her,”
said Folk!’s New York-based director
Roxy Toporowych.
From a young
age, Toporowych was exposed to Ukrainian folk dancing in her home town of
“I quit dancing
when I moved to
At the time,
Cybyk was the assistant artistic director at Syzokryli. He was one of the
few dancers who worked for the company and danced under Bohachevsky. Others included
Orlando Pagan, a Puerto Rican from the
Like Toporowych,
Cybyk started dancing in
“He kind
of convinced me to come back and to start taking classes,” said Toporowych.
Roxy Toporowych,
director and producer of “Folk!” has worked on
Toporowych
shot Bohachevsky preparing for her 40th anniversary gala show set for November 2004.
The company sewed new costumes, called alumni dancers back to perform, and booked
a venue at the
“I wasn’t
sure what I was going to do,” said Toporowych. “I got permission and I spoke with
her family and with Andrij and Orlando and everybody said, ‘Go ahead keep shooting.’
And I wasn’t sure what it was going to turn into.”
So she kept
on filming. During rehearsal days she brought her ballet slippers and the camera.
At alumni workshops she grabbed people between classes or in the hallways to shoot
interviews.
“It was a
lot of work. ... I worked full time. Managing everything was not easy, but I managed
it - there was no option but to make it happen for me.”
Folk! took about 10 years to complete. Toporowych took her camera
to rehearsal in 2001 and two years later, decided to make a feature film. After
the footage was complete in 2004, it took another six years to produce the documentary.
“When you
work on a project this long, there comes a point where you’re just sick of it, and
you can’t look at it, you can’t watch it. And you’re so overwhelmed by the amount
of work that you can’t even stomach thinking about it,” Toporowych said.
“Then you
get past that. Then you start realizing that, you know, I made something, and I
produced it and it took lots of blood and tears and a long time and I should be
proud of it and I should love it.”
Shot in English, Folk! played at a sold-out
screening (selling all DVDs on-hand) in
The film is available
on DVD. For more information, visit kinorox.com Follow article link: http://epochtim.es/4
PHOTO
Folk! Director and Producer Roxy Toporowych