Sunday, November 27, 2011

Dream Roles

My birthday was this past Wednesday and in light of the celebration and introspection that comes with birthdays, I would like to share some of my dream roles.  The various roles in dances already created that I would love to dance.

The Bluebird Pas de Deux from Sleeping Beauty


Neither the choreography nor the role are particularly interesting in terms of great pas de deuxs in the classical ballet canon, but there is something about this role that attracts me.  Maybe it's the pure classicism of the choreography or perhaps the iconographic status of the pas de deux, either way it is a part I want to dance.

Dancing on the Front Porch of Heaven by Ulysses Dove


I think Dove is one of the greatest under-rated choreographers.  His work is incredibly technically demanding and aesthetically stunning while still containing honest and interesting emotions and relationships, a challenge that very few contemporary ballet choreographers have been able to meet.  Danced to an evocative score by Arvo Part, Dancing on the Front Porch of Heaven is one of my favorite ballets.

The Bronze Idol from La Bayadere


This is one of my all time favorite male variations.  The music, the costume, the choreography, I love it all.  It is difficult to believe that it's less than two minutes because every second packs a punch that makes it feel wholly realized and complete.

Afternoon of the Faun by Jerome Robbins


I think this is one of the best re-conceptualizations of an already famous ballet.  Nijinsky and the Ballets Russes made this ballet famous in 1912 in Paris, and Jerome Robbins created his own version in 1952 in NYC, changing the roles from Ancient Greece to the contemporary and having the dancers play dancers acting as though the fourth wall of the audience were a mirror in a dance studio.  It's brilliant.

Emeralds by George Balanchine


Jewels is one of Balanchine's masterpieces, a non-narrative evening length work.  Emeralds is my favorite section of the ballet and I would be thrilled to dance any part in it.


Le sacre de printemps by Pina Bausch



I have a slight obsession with the history and continuing life of The Rite of Spring (more on that later), and this version is tied for first as my favorite choreography to match Stravinsky's beast of a score.  Bausch is known for using wild and at times outlandish sets in her work, and the simplicity of using soil in this work is so brilliant in its effectiveness and visibility in complementing the choreography.


In The Upper Room by Twyla Tharp


This is another one of my all time favorite works that I would relish the opportunity to dance.  This year marks the 25th anniversary of its creation and it has continued to maintain in repertory in companies all over the world.  I once read an interview with Ethan Stiefel who said that dancing this ballet was one of the greatest endurance tests of any ballet he has ever danced.  Bring it on.

Saturday, November 12, 2011

Pina!

Pina Bausch is one of my favorite choreographers and I cannot wait to see this film.

Monday, November 7, 2011

Appalachia

I lived in the Appalachian mountains of North Carolina for the last five years, and growing up in Chapel Hill, I would spend part of almost every summer as a child in the mountains with my family.  The Appalachian mountains have a rich cultural history in music and dance, amongst many other things.  Below is a clip from a documentary made in 1964 in Madison, NC, showing a community gathered in a home playing music and clogging.  Notice the how the rhythms of the dancers feet and the rhythm and melody created by the musicians play off each other, and the different partnering and floor patterns.


Appalachian clogging, like in this documentary, as well as Appalachian culture, have been highly influential on many choreographers across genres.  Last winter while visiting a friend in Mahattan, we went and saw New York City Ballet perform Balanchine's Square Dance.  In this work Balanchine joined the traditions of folk dancing with classical ballet.  He said, "the American style of classical dancing, its supple sharpness and richness of metrical invention, its superb preparation for risks, and its high spirits were some of the things I was trying to show in this ballet."  In the original choreography, Balanchine had a caller on stage directing the dancers.  Later in his career he removed the caller and added a male solo variation that is stunning.  The work is incredibly moving.  When we saw it performed, after the curtain fell, I could see that many of the people in the audience were misty.  While the steps are complex, the overall feel of the work is evocative of the spirit of Appalachian folk dancing.  You can see the rhythms of the dancers movements and the patterns of the clogging withing the ballet's choreography.  Unfortunately there are no public videos of Square Dance, so here is a clip of Pacific Northwest Ballet rehearsing the work to give an idea of what it is like.


One of Martha Graham's masterworks is Appalachian Spring.  This work draws more from the ideas of Americana as experienced through Appalachian culture, rather than directly through any folk lineage of dancing from the region.  The story told is a spring celebration of the American pioneers of the 1800s after building a new farmhouse. Among the central characters are a newlywed couple, a neighbor, a revivalist preacher and his followers.  Below is the first part of a four part recording of the work.

Thursday, November 3, 2011

The Four Elements

EARTH
Trey McIntyre's Limerance

 


This movement/dance video by the Trey McIntyre Project reminds me of the Butoh style movement of Eiko and Koma and the cinematography of  surface studies by Rauschenberg and other Black Mountain College artists.  The first part of the video creates strong imagery of  the body's connection with the sculpted landscape, continuing to the two dancers together on the shore performing movement that makes me think of tectonic plates slowly shifting, or the water eroding the sand of the beach.

AIR
Paul Taylor's Airs
 

This is possibly my favorite of Taylor's ballets.  The choreography is stunning and the dancers perform the incredibly difficult variations with such ease and grace that they perfectly embody the wind, the breeze, a gail, with amazing musicality.  It's hard to believe that there are only 7 dancers in this ballet as it moves with the constant speed that only baroque music provides.  In general I'm not a fan of baroque music, but the music of that era is responsible for accompanying some of the best dances ever created.

FIRE
Maurice Bejart's Firebird

This version of Bejart's Firebird is danced by the Wuyan Ballet.  Bejart was one of the most avant-garde ballet choreographers of the 20th century (if you want to see one of the trippiest Nutcrackers, watch his).   His choreography combined with the Stravinsky suite makes me feel like I'm watching a crackling fire breathe and grow.  The floor patterns reinforce the urgency and wildness of an uncontained fire, and the simple costuming works to create the image of a flame rising out of and fighting the ashes.

WATER
Doris Humphrey's Water Study


It is hard to believe that this study was originally choreographed in 1928 as it still holds up remarkably in the modern dance canon.  The beginning of the study looks like an optical illusion; it takes time to believe that those are simply people moving on a floor.  This study makes me think of looking at an abstract expressionist painting, like one of Rothko's color fields.  The movement is relatively simple and repetitive and the majority of the study the dancers are moving in varied unison, but it is so evocative of water that it is difficult to look away.