She received a scholarship from the mayor for her work as a child choreographer/director, and was invited to teach dance to a local group of students following the show produced in her junior year of high school.
With her established school and developing choreography, Bommer began to codify the technique and artistic philosophy that now sustains her career and choreographic work.
[4] Ketzev Hagoof still teaches dance to children throughout Israel, offering classes at their original location and multiple branches throughout the country.
The final stage of the method, Animato, was completed in 2006, leading to a new phase of the company centered in comedic narrative dance works.
The piece departs from Bommer's signature comedic tone, for a more dramatic work centered around powerfully evolving sea creature characters.
[15] In addition to this work, the company continues to tour internationally,[16] with repertory out of NYC and Israel, most recently visiting South Korea, Russia, and Poland.
This improvisational method is inspired by the endless motion of the sea and split into two core principles: The Body (Kinetica) and The Character (Animato).
Nevet was the initial iteration of the method codified in 1994, and is still used as an anchoring entry point in the process of pairing the imagination and internal listening with the body.
With popular chants and roaring crowds, this unique theater-dance piece illustrates a surprising, hilarious, and multi-cultural mash-up of the game from the moment the audience arrives at the theater.
Journeying through a world of their own creation, these creatures display a feminine strength, ability to change, and inherent danger through the signature Nadine Bommer movement language.
Their daughter Gaya Bommer-Yemini is a professional dancer, Youth America Grand Prix winner, and featured artist in Bess Kargman's award-winning documentary First Position.