Tag: DANCE FROM THE HEART

  • Dance From The Heart 2013

    6a00d8341c4e3853ef0162fcfe6730970d

    Above: Kile Hotchkiss and John Eirich of TAKE Dance rehearsing the men’s quartet from Take’s SALARYMAN, the closing number on this evening’s DANCE FROM THE HEART programme at Cedar Lake Theater. Photo by Kokyat. Click on the image to enlarge.

    Tuesday January 29, 2013 – This cloudy, drizzly day was a bright and
    dance-filled day for me, starting with a visit to Luca Veggetti’s
    rehearsal at the Martha Graham studio where Luca and five Graham
    beauties were polishing up his new creation which will be shown at the
    upcoming Graham season at The Joyce. Then a brisk walk up to 26th Street
    to Cedar Lake for the annual Dancers Responding to AIDS gala.

    The evening offered a nice diversity of dance styles, opening with an impressive tap solo by Ayodele Casel. Its title, ACID, seemed to herald an edgy and ominous piece yet it was anything but: the dancer was lovely and her dancing was lyrical, with delicate nuances in her tap technique.

    Christina Noel Reaves and Lonnie Poupard in tangy orange costumes used the space beautifully in a Jody Oberfelder duet THROB in which the dancers are called upon for bold physicality, momentarily pausing from time to time in geometric constructions. The duet was well-sustained by Andy Akiho’s score, and the dancers were excellent.

    A shift in programmme order produced a slight glitch when the ‘wrong’ music started to play, but the tall and stately Julia Burrer of Doug Varone’s troupe simply held her pose and her composure until things were set to rights. The excerpt from Varone’s TUGGING UNDER was darkly entrancing: beautifully restless quality of movement with passing punctuations of stillness. A Julia Wolfe score set the dancers on their speedy trajectories with partnering motifs worked into the flow. Aside from Ms. Burrer, the dancers were Erin Owen, Hollis Bartlett, Alex Springer and Eddie Takata: a very handsome ensemble.

    Mark Dendy’s opening solo to Peggy Lee’s “My Analyst Told Me” was witty and wonderful; but then there was a lull with too much talking and a bagpiper…until a ravishing goddess, Catherine Miller, rose spot-lit in the audience and took the stage for a shadowdance as Ms. Lee’s sultry voice intoned “Me And My Shadow”. Clinging to the brick wall, Ms. Miller looked sensational.

    In gorgeously fitted quasi-Baroque Santo Loquasto costumes, two of the dance world’s most marvelous creatures – Michelle Fleet and Michael Trusnovec – appeared to dance the courtly duet from Paul Taylor’s Bach ballet CASCADE. Heavenly bodies? Look no further than these two superb dancers. They moved with measured elegance yet an undercurrent of sensuality is ever-present. A delicious appetizer to the upcoming Taylor season at Lincoln Center.

    Tom Gold’s SOME KIND OF ROMANCE takes wing on the lilting music of the Vitamin String Quartet. Stylish, witty and rooted in the vocabulary of classical ballet (the girls are on pointe) the fast-paced choreography has a touch of contemporary spice here and there, and the three sexy boys look enticing in their sparkly silver briefs. Tom culled his ensemble of young dancers from Pennsylvania Ballet (Abigail Mentzer – who also designed the costumes – Alexander Peters and Amir Yogev) and Miami City Ballet (Zoe Zien and Ezra Hurwitz). Last week I’d seen a rehearsal of this work, at which Tom told me he plans to expand on the currrent structure; we should be seeing the finished creation during his New York season.

    The evening came to a fittingly exciting climax as the beautiful boys from TAKE Dance set the stage afire in Take’s murderously demanding male quartet from SALARYMAN. To the relentless driving percussive throb of “Soul’s Ville” by AUN, the guys (in suits and ties) stunningly fling themselves around the space, crashing into one another, leaping and swirling in competitive combinations and improbably off-kilter phrases, hitting the floor only to rise again and literally climb the walls. A momentary pause for a battery-charge and they are off again in this mad and magnificent masterwork for men dancers.

    The boys – John Eirich, Kile Hotchkiss, Brynt Beitman and Jeffrey Sykes – bought down the house with their remarkable performance. In a brief respite, Take’s girls – Kristen Arnold, Gina Ianni, Marie Zvosec and Lynda Senisi – appear as coat-check girls and divest the boys of their jackets. Then the wildness continues. Great finale for an evening of dance.

  • In the Studio with Tom Gold & Willy Burmann

    BRI_0085-Edit-9-L

    Monday January 21, 2013 – Tom Gold is creating a new ballet to be premiered at the upcoming Dance From The Heart gala performances. This annual dance event, which benefits Dancers Responding to AIDS, will take place this year at the Cedar Lake Theater on January 28th and 29th. Details and ticket info here. Tom’s ballet will be performed on the 29th at both the 6:30 PM and 8:30 PM shows.

    The new ballet is entitled SOME KIND OF ROMANCE and will feature five dancers: Abigail Mentzer, Alexander Peters and Amir Yogev from Pennsylvania Ballet, and Zoe Zien and Ezra Hurwitz from Miami City Ballet. Earlier in the week, Tom invited me and photographer Brian Krontz to a studio rehearsal at DANY where the three Pennsylvania-based dancers were working on the piece.

    We arrived near the end of the rehearsal period and watched the dancers run the ballet twice: it is fast-paced, witty and physically demanding, and I was constantly wondering how it will look with the two additional dancers. 

    Bri_0056-1a

    Above: Willy Burmann with Amir Yogev.

    Willy Burmann is Tom’s ballet master, and at the rehearsal he was giving a virtual master-class in technical refinement. His suggestions and his hands-on shaping of the dancers at various points in the rehearsal are a revelation to observe and a key element in preparing the ballet for the stage. Willy’s spot-on analysis of the steps and combinations and his wry sense of humour create a tension-free work environment; he treats the dancers like colleagues and his advice invariably turns something that already looks really good into something that looks great. There were plenty of laughs but also a sense of diligence as the dancers took Willy’s suggestions to heart. As the rehearsal progressed the ballet took on a very nice polish. It’ll be interesting to see it onstage next week, and Tom spoke of his plan to expand on it in the future.

    BRI_0081-2-L

    Abigail Mentzer

    Amir

    Amir Yogev

    BRI_0245-4-L

    Alexander Peters

    BRI_0148-Edit-Edit-Edit-11-L

    Abigail

    BRI_0649-6-L

    Stretch: Amir

    Bri_0155-edit-edit-edit-8a

    Abigail

    BRI_0367-Edit-7-L

    Tom Gold in a Bad Boy of the Ballet moment.

    BRI_0267-Edit-10-L

    One of the best things about going to Tom Gold’s rehearsals is watching him demonstrate!

    All photos by Brian Krontz. Click on each image to enlarge.

    Tom Gold Dance will have their second New York season March 12th and 13th, 2013 at the Gerald Lynch Theater at John Jay College. Details will be announced soon.