Showing posts with label Abrons Art Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Abrons Art Center. Show all posts

Saturday, February 11, 2012

Anchises: Intergenerational Respect, 11/18/10

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Jonah Bokaer's Anchises at Abrons Art Center
http://www.thirteen.org/sundayarts/blog/performance/anchises-intergenerational-respect/953/


Dancers: Jonah Bokaer, James McGinn, Valda Setterfield, Meg Harper, Catherine Miller. Photo taken at Arnolfini in Bristol, courtesy of: Ariane and Seth Harrison, Harrison Atelier (HAt), 2010.
Jonah Bokaer’s new dance work,Anchises, is a subtle reminder of how navel-gazing and ego-driven our daily lives can be. The cast mixes older (Valda Setterfield and Meg Harper) and younger dancers (Catherine Miller, James McGinn, and Bokaer). They frequently pair off, one older and one younger, prodding, leaning, and teasing one another gently. There is a great sense of familarity, respect, and devotion between generations, where a tender touch can be as moving as when Bokaer carries Setterfield across the stage. In a recent New York Times article, Bokaer cited as a point of inspiration how he and another dancer carried Merce Cunningham down the studio’s stairs during a blackout, in addition to the story from Greek mythology about Aeneas carrying his father, Anchises, out of a burning Troy. It’s a distant cry from so much of what we see in small dance venues.
The design firm Harrison Atelier created the intriguing, functional set, featuring gray foam cubes scattered on the floor, and white foam cylinders suspended in a cluster of plastic tubing; the cylinders are released to become additional props and furniture that the dancers sit on or move about. In fact, so much time is performing the task of moving the blocks that it evokes Judson, where any movement can be choreography. The dancier movement eschews virtuosic technique in favor of simple passages in which geometrical poses alternate with brisk lunges or tilts. In a duet between Miller and McGinn and a solo for Bokaer, the tempo quickens and the dancers eat up space more rapidly. Yet the dynamic is consistently gentle.  Loren Dempster created the ebbing and flowing score, performed live in the pit.

Wednesday, February 8, 2012

Nicholas Leichter’s Dance Wizardry, 6/17/10

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Nicholas Leichter’s The Whiz: Obamaland at Abrons Art Center
http://www.thirteen.org/sundayarts/blog/performance/nicholas-leichter-dances-whizardry/854/


Nicholas Leichter Dance performs The Whiz: Obamaland at Abrons Arts Center this week, from June 16-19. Choreographer Leichter collaborated with Monstah Black, who wrote the commissioned score (plus added musical selections); they perform alongside NLD’s seven dancers, plus special guests. Leichter answered some questions about The Whiz.
The WizWhy The Whiz, now?
If you look at the history of the major productions of The Wizard of Oz/The Wiz, from the initial book to the Judy Garland movie, to the all African American production, there stems a pattern of examining these ideas of hope, fantasy and dreams during times of major political, economic and cultural change-from the great depression to post civil rights, etc. The idea that this “wizard” is some sort of God who will make all our dreams come true and bring wealth and prosperity to those desperately in need is really just a “fantasy.” In truth, if the wizard did really exist, according to the 1900 L. Frank Baum novel, he was really just a man who governed the land of Oz—he was really Oz’s president. The same holds true for the 1975 musical. It’s the “idea” that one day there would/could be this black president who shines light and hope on our fears. And at the end of the day it was just a dream. And yet now, someof that dream is a reality… Since the Encores version at City Center couldn’t take off I thought the timing was right to experiment with these ideas and really invert and juxtapose as much of the traditions as possible.