Peggy Baker’s 50th Anniversary
Celebrating a Transformational Dance Career

Peggy Baker Dance Projects to wind down in 2023

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April 8, 2021 - This year Peggy Baker, one of the most influential dancers and choreographers of her generation, celebrates 50 years of performing and creating extraordinary dance in Canada and around the world. Ms. Baker will present a new major production in the fall of 2022 and will then wind down her company, Peggy Baker Dance Projects, in 2023.

After arriving in Toronto in 1971 from Edmonton, Ms. Baker had her first professional contract with Toronto Dance Theatre (1973); was one of 5 founding members - and later Co-Director - of Dancemakers (1974-1980); and moved to New York City where she danced with Lar Lubovitch followed by the White Oak Dance Project led by Mark Morris and Mikhail Baryshnikov. She returned to Canada in 1990 to launch her own company, Peggy Baker Solo Dance which became Peggy Baker Dance Projects in 1996. For over thirty years, her company has built a varied repertoire of solo and ensemble work created by Ms. Baker and commissioned from outstanding choreographers including Molissa Fenley, Paul-André Fortier, James Kudelka, Tere O’Connor, and Doug Varone.

“It is with a profound sense of gratitude to the Canadian dance milieu, and to the Toronto community in particular, that I move toward the closure of the organization that has supported my artistic development over the past three decades. My creative life has been nurtured by my teachers, by the superb choreographers in whose work I performed, and by my extraordinary colleagues and collaborators. Every artistic encounter was a privilege.

I could not have proceeded in my professional life without the generosity of Canada’s National Ballet School & without the magnificent individuals who have managed Peggy Baker Dance Projects, served on the board, and rallied around us to make the financial contributions that allowed us to move forward. I am indebted to the presenters who have brought my work into the public sphere, and to the audiences who have supported us by witnessing our offerings.

I have enjoyed a deeply fulfilling career. At this pivotal moment, I believe that the most significant action I can take is to free up space and resources. I want to contribute to an environment in which artists who have been historically marginalized can thrive. I have always framed my work in dance within the context of community, and I see the wind down and closure of my company as the very best way for me to support the vitality and evolution of the art form and community I believe in so ferociously.” – Peggy Baker