In 1994 her second book,
Lamb at the Altar: The Story of a Dance (
Duke University Press), Hay documents the unique creative process that defined these
playing awake works. In the late-1990s Hay focused on performing solo dances based on her
playing awake experimental choreographic method: such as "The Man Who Grew Common in Wisdom", "Voilà", "The Other Side of O", "Fire", "Boom Boom Boom", "Music", "Beauty" and "The Ridge, Room". Hay performed these and other solo dances around the world in the 1990s.
My Body, The Buddhist, her third book, was published by
Wesleyan University Press in 2000. It contains her reflections on her interest in
Buddhism and the big lessons she learned by paying close attention to her body while it was dancing. From 1998 through 2012, Hay conducted annual
Postmodern dance Solo Performance Commissioning Projects on
Whidbey Island in
Washington State and at
Findhorn Foundation in
Findhorn,
Scotland. A one-hour
documentary film about
Solo Performance Commissioning Projects titled
Turn Your F*^king Head was made by Becky Edmunds in 2012. It was produced and distributed by
Routledge. In 2000 Hay departed from her usual solo dance-making to create a
duet for herself and
Mikhail Baryshnikov. This duet toured extensively with the
Past/Forward: a series of
Postmodern dance and
happening performances that updated works of the
Judson Dance Theater. In 2006 Hay choreographed "O, O" for five New York City
Postmodern choreographers/dancers. This was followed by her work with seven
French professional dancers. In
Paris, The Festival d’Automne presented Hay's "The Match" in 2005, "O, O" in 2006, and "If I Sing To You" in 2008, which was commissioned by
The Forsythe Company and toured extensively in Europe and Australia. In 2009 The
Toronto Dance Theatre premiered her work "Up Until Now". In 2010 Hay created a dance for six
Finnish dancers/choreographers called "Lightening". It premiered at the 2010
Helsinki Festival. == 2010s-present ==