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14 Dance Performances to See This September

By: Susan Reiter
Date: Sep 04, 2025
Dance

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Catch New York City Ballet, Fall for Dance, the Arpino Dance Festival and more

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The fall dance season starts fast and furious this year. September is full of festivals, major companies including New York City Ballet and fancy footwork in venues both large and small. There are even a few FREE events.

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Gather Round: Let's Dance

Manhattan West Plaza, 385 Ninth Avenue between 31st and 33rd Streets in Midtown West

Wednesdays, September 3, 10, 17 and 24. FREE.

The Guggenheim's celebrated series Works & Process presents free dance events at this public plaza every Wednesday in September at 5 p.m. Enjoy evenings devoted to the Latin hustle (September 3), swing with Gaby Cook and the Eyal Vilner Big Band (September 10), Sekou McMiller and friends doing salsa to the Palladium Mambo Band (September 17) and queer country dancing with Stud Country. Every performance ends in a dance party!

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Trajal Harrell: Monkey Off My Back or The Cat's Meow

Park Avenue Armory, 643 Park Avenue between 66th and 67th Streets on the Upper East Side

Runs September 9-20. If you're a TDF member, log in to your account to purchase discount tickets.

Dubbed a "runway spectacular," Trajal Harrell's Monkey Off My Back or The Cat's Meow fuses the Zurich-based choreographer's broad range of creative interests—contemporary dance, fashion, music and spoken word—into an extravaganza celebrating joy and freedom. He turns his imagination loose in the expanse of the Armory's Drill Hall, where 17 dancers, outfitted in 60 delicious looks designed by Harrell, will preen, pose and perform during this eye-popping pageant on a 150-foot runway.

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Juilliard Fall Festival Opening Night

Peter Jay Sharp Theater, 155 West 65th Street between Broadway and Amsterdam Avenue in Lincoln Square

Runs September 12.

Choreographer Jamar Roberts, whose busy fall schedule includes City Center's Fall for Dance and a premiere for New York City Ballet, directs the opening event for Juilliard's extensive Fall Festival starring the school's talented students. For this kickoff performance, Roberts creates a new dance set to music by Caroline Shaw. Melissa Toogood, the recently appointed director of Juilliard's Dance Division, will also stage excerpts from two Merce Cunningham works and there will be a preview of a piece by Bobbi Jene Smith choreographed to Ligeti, which can be seen in its entirety on September 20. If you can't make this performance in person, it will also be live-streamed on Juilliard's website.

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Miro Magloire: New Chamber Ballet

Mark Morris Dance Center, 3 Lafayette Avenue between Rockwell and Ashland Places in Fort Greene, Brooklyn

Runs September 12-13.

Prolific choreographer Miro Magloire is always on the lookout for new and interesting musical scores to use for his New Chamber Ballet company. Staged in the round, Twine, his latest intimately scaled, elegantly formal work, is set to five pieces by Tonia Ko played live on piano and violin. A new solo for Rachele Perla rounds out the program.

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Indigenous Enterprise: Still Here

The Joyce Theater, 175 Eighth Avenue at 19th Street in Chelsea

Runs September 16-21.

Admired for presenting traditional dances and storytelling in a theatrical context, Indigenous Enterprise returns to The Joyce with Still Here. Through a tale focused on the relationship between a grandfather and his grandson, the dancers, powwow drummers and singers pay homage to their ancestors while celebrating their ever-vibrant culture.

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Fall for Dance Festival

New York City Center, 131 West 55th Street between Sixth and Seventh Avenues in Midtown West

Runs September 16-27.

The always invigorating Fall for Dance Festival jump-starts the City Center season with an eclectic mix of artists. This year's five programs feature tantalizing juxtapositions: dancers from major classical troupes (Paris Opera Ballet, San Francisco Ballet, Dutch National Ballet, The Stuttgart Ballet) alongside luminaries of tap and tango. Commissioned premieres include a collaboration between jookin master Lil Buck and baritone Davóne Tines, and The Missing Fruit (Part I) choreographed by Roderick George. There will also be recent works by Akram Khan and the team of Bobbi Jene Smith & Or Schraiber, Lucinda Childs' luminous Three Dances (for prepared piano) John Cage for Gibney Company and Jamar Roberts' Dance Is a Mother featuring his return to the stage alongside Sara Mearns.

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New York City Ballet Fall Season

David H. Koch Theater at Lincoln Center, 20 Lincoln Center Plaza at 63rd Street and Columbus Avenue in Lincoln Square

Runs September 16-October 12. If you're a TDF member, log in to your account to purchase discount tickets to select programs.

New York City Ballet launches its season with a jam-packed four-week run. Highlights include the company premiere of Justin Peck's Heatscape featuring vivid scenic design by Shepard Fairey, and a Jamar Roberts world premiere with costumes by Dutch fashion designer Iris van Herpen. There are also a pair of estimable programs dedicated to the work of company cofounder George Balanchine and the return of Jerome Robbins' majestically imaginative The Goldberg Variations.

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Rashaun Mitchell + Silas Riener: Open Machine

NYU Skirball, 566 LaGuardia Place at Washington Square South in the West Village

Runs September 19-20. If you're a TDF member, log in to your account to purchase discount tickets.

Former Merce Cunningham dancers and longtime collaborators Rashaun Mitchell and Silas Riener present their ambitious new work Open Machine. This Skirball commission incorporates projected images and virtual renderings that respond in real time to the dancers' movements. AI meets experimental dance in this boldly high-tech work, performed to a sound score by electronic musician Mas Ysa.

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Delirious Dances: WASTELANDIA

Newhouse Center at Snug Harbor, 1000 Richmond Terrace on Staten Island

Runs September 19-28.

Equal parts performance, immersive experience and participatory workshop, WASTELANDIA is the brainchild of Edisa Weeks, who choreographed and penned the text. This multilayered project confronts our ecological crisis by inviting the audience to interact with an environment constructed from recycled materials as a way to imagine a more sustainable future.

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Erasing Borders Dance Festival

Ailey Citigroup Theater, 405 West 55th Street at Ninth Avenue in Midtown West

Runs September 20-21.

The annual Erasing Borders fest offers a deep dive into the contrasting styles and rich traditions of Indian dance. Presented by the Indo-American Arts Council, the two evenings showcase performances by eminent Bharatanatyam artists and several US-based companies that specialize in the style.

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Noé Soulier: Movement on Movement

Le Skyroom at L'Alliance New York, 22 East 60th Street between Madison and Park Avenues in Midtown East

Runs September 24-25.

Noé Soulier, an emerging figure in French contemporary dance, brings his new work Movement on Movement to L'Alliance New York's Crossing The Line Festival. Soulier's lecture-performance riffs on William Forsythe's Improvisation Technologies to explore the relationship between movement and meaning.

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BalletX

The Joyce Theater, 175 Eighth Avenue at 19th Street in Chelsea

Runs September 24-28.

The adventurous Philadelphia-based BalletX has been commissioning and performing contemporary dance works for two decades now. With 16 highly versatile dancers, the troupe celebrates its 20th anniversary season at The Joyce with a pair of NYC premieres: Gregory Dawson's Sojourner featuring a live jazz ensemble playing Luke Carlos O'Reilly's score, and Noelle Kayser's Scales on the Wings of a Butterfly inspired by the art of microscopic photography. Excerpts from Darrell Grand Moultrie's Vivir (2018) and Nicola Wills' Two People in Love Never Shake Hands (2024) round out the program.

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A.I.M by Kyle Abraham

Lincoln Center's Rose Theater, Broadway at West 60th Street in Lincoln Square

Runs September 25-27.

Lincoln Center presents choreographer Kyle Abraham's company of eloquent dancers in three recent pieces, all performed to intriguing musical scores. 2x4 is set to an experimental classical composition by Shelley Washington played live by two baritone saxophonists. Created in collaboration with renowned visual artist Glenn Ligon, The Gettin' is danced to a jazz score by Robert Glasper. The tunes of Nina Simone serve as the music for If We Were a Love Song. Tickets are pay-what-you-wish starting at $35, so not many are left!

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Arpino Dance Festival

The Joyce Theater, 175 Eighth Avenue at 19th Street in Chelsea

Runs September 30-October 12.

For decades, the ballets of Gerald Arpino (1923-2008) were frequently seen on NYC stages. As cofounder and resident choreographer of The Joffrey Ballet, he created energetic and varied dances that were distinctly American. With The Joffrey based in Chicago for the past three decades, his work isn't seen as often here. That's why this festival devoted to this brash original is so exciting, with two programs featuring seven Arpino ballets performed by leading members of The Joffrey, San Francisco Ballet, Houston Ballet, Dance Theatre of Harlem, Ballet West and other troupes.

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Susan Reiter covers dance for TDF Stages.