Tag: Hibbard Nash

  • Graham @ City Center 2024 ~ RITE OF SPRING

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    Above:  Marzia Memoli and Lloyd Knight ~ THE RITE OF SPRING ~ photo by Hibbard Nash

    ~ Author: Oberon

    Friday April 19th, 2024 – Two of Martha Graham’s masterworks book-ended a repeat of Jamar Roberts’ newest work as the Martha Graham Dance Company continued their stint at City Center.

    The Aaron Copland score for APPALACHIAN SPRING was performed by the Mannes Orchestra under the baton of David Hayes. From my 5th row seat on house left, I had a great perspective of the Isamu Noguchi set, and a close-up view of the dancers’ expressive faces. The cast was perfection: the preacher’s followers were a delightful quartet of Graham girls: So Young An, Meagan King, Devin Loh, and Marzia Memoli; their worshipful interest in the pastor was charming.

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    Above: Leslie Andrea Williams and Alessio Crognale-Roberts as the Pioneering Woman and The Preacher; photo by Melissa Sherwood

    As the object of his followers attentions, Alessio Corgnale-Roberts made a vivid impression, both in his dancing and his acting. The Preacher is framed as a good guy, but he has a dark side; in a solo danced while the young marrieds pray, Alessio showed a sinister undercurrent in the holy man’s personality. Brilliant!  And Leslie Andrea Williams as the Pioneering Woman was captivating in her quiet strength, her face reflecting the character’s innate nobility. Leslie is the epitome of personal magnetism; even when she is sitting stock still while others dance, you are drawn to her. 

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    Above: Jacob Larsen and Anne Souder in APPALACHIAN SPRING; photo by Melissa Sherwood

    Over the years, I have seen many wonderful partnerships in the roles of the Husbandman and his Bride, back to those incredible Graham artists, Miki Orihara and Tadej Brdnik: my first Graham experience – many years ago – at Jacob’s Pillow. Each couple since then have seemed ideal in their own way, and this evening I felt an intrinsic perfection in Jacob Larsen and Anne Souder. Their sheer personal attractiveness would be enough to make them engrossing to watch, but they made so much of their roles, both in their dancing and their acting, that the time-honored ballet took on a new freshness.

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    Jacob (above, in Melissa Sherwood’s photo) brings all the facets of his character to life: the energy of a young man, but also his far-searching gaze as he looks out over the land, and the pensive qualities of a new husband who now has a bride to care for and – undoubtedly – a family to raise in his future. Jacob’s athleticism was evidenced in the jumps and barrel turns that Graham weaves into the choreography. His partnering has lyricism and grace.

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    Anne Souder as The Bride (above, in Melissa Sherwood’s photo) is a dancer who captures the nuance of every expression, step, and gesture; in doing so, she is never fussy or theatrical…rather, she dances from the heart. Her smile speaks of tenderness, and of hope for the future. There is a solo passage, though, when a shadow of worry passes over this young woman’s lovely face: can she do – and become – everything that is expected of her? Her husband’s embrace reassures her; the dark cloud vanishes.

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    Ms. Souder’s technique has a silken, seamless quality; she has the extension of a prima ballerina as well as the combination of power and poetry that is the requisite of a great Graham dancer. I expected so much from her in this role, and was thrilled by her perfection.

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    In the end, the newlyweds are left alone, and life begins.

    (APPALACHIAN SPRING photos by Melissa Sherwood)

    WE THE PEOPLE seemed even more powerful than on opening night, which is really saying something. The choreographer described the piece as “Part lament, part protest” which is manifested in the alternating passages of silent solos and vibrant, big-rhythm dance passages for the ensemble. 

    On opening night, I was far back from the stage and, in the prevailing darkness of the piece, I could not always tell who was dancing at any given moment. Tonight, sitting close, I could savour the individual energy and personality of each person onstage. Two of the company’s newer dancers – Devin Loh and Ane Arrieta – seemed super-charged by the music. The spotlit solos for Leslie Andrea Williams, Alessio Crognale-Roberts, and Lloyd Knight were riveting, and the duet for Meagan King and Jacob Larsen provides a contrasting touch of lightness and subtle humor. Laurel Dalley Smith, still on a RODEO high, was fantastic. There were times when it felt like someone (or maybe two) was missing, and that certain phrases had changed hands. A sextet for six women seemed like an octet on opening night, or am I hallucinating?  

    At any rate, WE THE PEOPLE should become a repertory staple of the Graham Company: it’s that good

    The evening closed with my favorite Graham work: RITE OF SPRING. The Mannes Orchestra were back in the pit, playing very impressively indeed under David Hayes’ vibrant command. The Stravinsky score, which – along with Nijinsky’s controversial choreography – caused a near riot at the ballet’s 1913 premiere, no longer seems radical, but instead is a powerful musical document of an unforgettable date in dance history. The wind players of the Mannes ensemble reveled in the score’s quirky demands. The setting where the ritual sacrifice takes place, conceived by the Company’s Artistic Director, Janet Eilber, is under an ominous sky; the feeling is both vast and curiously claustrophobic.

    The choreography is some of the most demanding imaginable, calling for extreme athleticism, intricate steps and gestural motifs, and pinpoint timing. The full Company participates in this grand-scale work, and so we get to know the apprentices – Zachary Jeppsen, Matthew Spangler, Justin Valentine, and Jai Perez – as well as the newest dancers (already making a mark for themselves) – Ane Arrieta, Meagan King, and Antonio Leone. 

    Alessio Crognale-Roberts and Jacob Larsen have a prominent place in the ritual; as the Shaman’s acolytes, they have a lot of work to do, and they do it handsomely, and with stoic resolve.

    It is The Shaman whose solo opens the piece with a ceremonial dance to sanctify the space for the dire ritual to come. The charismatic Lloyd Knight gave a magnificent portrayal as the man ordained by the gods to perform the sacrificial ritual; nothing will deter or distract him from his cold-hearted purpose. Lloyd’s command of the role’s uncanny partnering demands was something to behold. 

    In her debut performance as The Chosen One, Marzia Memoli gave a thrilling performance as she moved from being just another village girl to being the central figure in the gruesome ritual that will keep the community in the good graces of the gods for another year.

    Marzia has always been a truly vivid dancer, fearless and committed, and she now has a role that suits her to perfection. It is a role in which the dancer cannot simply portray the ill-fated character, but must become her. With a font of strength and energy that belies her slender frame, Marzia, with her mane of golden hair, gave a consummate performance, wherein the cross-currents of vulnerability and resolute courage ebb and flow as the girl’s fate closes in on her.

    The dancers were hit by a tidal wave of applause as they filled the stage for a bow. Lloyd Knight was hailed as the king of the Gotham dance world, and then Marzia took her solo bow to rapturous applause while Lloyd handed her a bouquet and they embraced. 

    I was sorry to hear that this memorable RITE had not been photographed for posterity, aside from the studio photo at the top of this article. But I have indelible images from the evening in my mind.

    ~ Oberon

  • Celebrating 70 Years of APPALACHIAN SPRING

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    Above: Mariya Dashkina Maddux and Lloyd Mayor in Martha Graham’s APPALACHIAN SPRING; photo by Hibbard Nash

    Thursday October 30th, 2014 – Friends of the Martha Graham Dance Company gathered this evening at the Company’s home space on Bethune Street to celebrate the 70th birthday of the great American dance classic, APPALACHIAN SPRING. The event, Appalachian Spring Up Close and Personal – a complete performance of APPALACHIAN SPRING in costume and with the classic Noguchi set pieces – came on the exact 70th anniversary of its premiere, October 30, 1944.

    This once-in-a-lifetime event also featured film clips and projected photographs from the premiere, and a spoken introduction with quotes from Martha Graham’s correspondence with Aaron Copland at the time of the ballet’s creation. Mariya Dashkina Maddux headed the cast in Graham’s role of The Bride. She was joined by Lloyd Mayor, Natasha Diamond-Walker, Lloyd Knight, Xiaochuan Xie, Ying Xin, Charlotte Landreau, and Lauren Newman. This was my first opportunity to see Masha, Natasha, and Lloyd Mayor in these roles; Lloyd Knight repeated the role of the Preacher in which he was wonderfully cast during the Company’s City Center season earlier this year.

    This brief film features some of the dancers who have performed the principal roles in this ballet over the years.

    Janet Eilber, the artistic director of the Martha Graham Dance Company, is always such a wonderful hostess at Company events. Her speaking voice falls pleasingly on the ear and the information she imparts is always meaningful and illuminating to the dance we are about to see. This evening, Janet’s voice faltered tearfully as she spoke the names of the immortal dancers who first performed APPALACHIAN SPRING seventy years ago: Martha Graham, Erick Hawkins, May O’Donnell, and Merce Cunningham. 

    And then APPALACHIAN SPRING unfolded before us in all its heartfelt glory, the dancing taking place just a few feet away from us. The timeless simplicity of the Noguchi setting tells us immediately where we are; and for tonight we seemed in fact to be very much a part of the action, like observant guests at the wedding.

    Mariya Dashkina Maddux gave a powerfully poetic interpretation of the role of The Bride, her eyes shining and filled with hope, her body fluently expressive. Lloyd Mayor’s Husbandman danced with a spacious energy that could fill the Great Plains. In both the expansive and the intimate moments of this role, Lloyd’s handsome presence was captivating. Together Masha and Lloyd brought all the hopes of youth and forward-looking courage to their portrayals of this iconic couple.

    Natasha Diamond-Walker, lithe and elegant of posture and surpassingly fair of face, danced vividly as the Pioneering Woman. The strength of her dancing matches the character’s strength of virtue, yet Natasha was also deeply feminine in her portrayal and in her womanly rapport with Masha’s young Bride. Lloyd Knight’s Preacher was a powerful force in his stillness and a dynamic force when he danced. His vivid delineation of the steps underscored the great demands Graham puts on her dancers: technique and theatrical nuance must mesh in perfect balance. These demands extend to the quartet of Followers –   Xiaochuan Xie, Ying Xin, Charlotte Landreau, and Lauren Newman – who have a great deal of tricky dancing to do, though we tend to view them more for their decorative loveliness.

    The performance overall marked one of the most engrossing and meaningful dance experiences in my long ‘career’, in part because of the intimacy of the setting, and also because of the sense of dance as a resonating continuum that draws us ever back into the past whilst time and the universe sail inevitably forward. Evenings like this serve as illuminated markers on our journey.

    In a beautiful gesture at the end of the performance, the Lloyds (Mayor and Knight) presented bouquets to Janet Eilber and to Denise Vale, the Company’s senior artistic associate. Both Janet and Denise have danced the Pioneering Woman in APPALACHIAN SPRING, and thus the sense of lineage in the realm of Graham was graciously underscored.