Tag: Matt Murphy

  • Jennifer Muller Has Passed Away

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    It is very sad to read of the death of Jennifer Muller, a wonderfully musical and inventive choreographer. She was always very kind to me, opening her rehearsals to me and treating me almost like a member of her Company. I loved everyone who danced for her over the years that I knew her, and I grew very fond of her cozy rehearsal space. Above photo: Matt Murphy
     
    Some of my favorite memories of Jennifer’s work:
     
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    Above: from  MISERERE NOBIS
     
    Click each title to view:
     
     
     
     

  • MADboots Prepare for ACADEMY

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    Tuesday November 12, 2013 – Photographer Matt Murphy and I dropped in at New York Live Arts today to watch the MADboyz of MADboots working on their latest creation, ACADEMY.

    Jonathan Campbell and Austin Diaz, the founders of MADboots, were joined last season by Eli Bauer; and now the trio have embraced another new dancer, Garth Johnson, and also have a guest artist for this work: David Norsworthy. ACADEMY will be presented at the 92nd Street Y on December 7th and 8th, 2013. Information here.

    ACADEMY will stand as a counterpoise to the boys’ most recent previous creation, blue, which will be sharing the bill at the 92nd Street Y. Whereas blue is lyrical and intimate, ACADEMY is dynamic, intense and madly physical.

    My first thought when I heard that the MADboys were creating ACADEMY was that it would be about life at a prep school or first-year college – like something out of Maurice or Another Country – where young men would be experiencing both academic and athletic competition whilst at the same time grappling (sometimes literally) with their awakening sexuality and forming their first relationships. But in fact, it’s more like a military academy or a police training program: rigorous, sweaty, boisterously masculine, and highly competitive. 

    Calisthenics and running dominate the action, laced with poignant or disturbing moments of physical contact in which a transient glimmer of tenderness can be followed by almost violent abuse. The five dancers gave a full-tilt run-thru of the piece for me and Matt, and their generosity was much appreciated.

    Here are some of Matt’s images from the studio:

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    David, Austin and Eli

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    Jonathan

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    Austin, David

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    Garth

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    Jonathan

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    Garth

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    David, Austin, Eli

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    David, Eli

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    David

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    Garth (foreground)

    My thanks to Austin and Jonathan for giving me a preview of ACADEMY, and to Matt Murphy who managed to find a free hour in his madly busy schedule to come and photograph this rehearsal.

  • She Lights Up My Life

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    Follow the link to watch a film about Wendy Whelan!

    Photo by Matt Murphy.

    Follow Wendy’s current project, RESTLESS CREATURE, here.

  • CONTRASTS at Riverside Church

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    Above: Morales Dance rehearsal photo by Matt Murphy. The dancers are Leonel Linares and Nicole Corea.

    Saturday September 22, 2012 – Tony Morales of Morales Dance is the driving force behind CONTRASTS, a programme of works by four choreographers presented at The Theater at Riverside Church. Tony’s guest choreographers are Lydia Johnson (Artistic
    Director of Lydia Johnson Dance), Yesid Lopez (Director of DeMa Dance
    Co
    ) and Henning Rübsam (Artistic Director of SENSEDANCE).

    I’d been looking forward to this alignment of dance and dancers for some time, and the evening came off very well indeed, with major kudos to Mike Riggs for his lighting designs that produced some striking images in the varied works.

    Morales Dance presented three works on the programme, opening with the Spring-like freshness of SCENES. To music of Benedetto Marcello, the dancers are first seen kneeling in a circle in a pool of light. The opening sequence has a ritualistic feel which envolves into an airy and pleasing series of dances: an allegro duet for Nicole Corea (a guest dancer from Lar Lubovitch Dance Company) and MarieLorene Fichaux, a pas de trois for Alison Cook Beatty, Jerome Stigler and Leonel Linares. Kate Loh makes a lovely impression in her dancing here (and later, in AMOR BRUTAL), A solo for Alison Cook Beatty, danced in silence, forms a bridge to the concluding passages danced to Chopin. As the work moves to its finale, the dancers return to their opening circle of light.

    Later in the evening we saw Tony Morales’ AMOR BRUTAL, a narrative work that I’ve watched being developed in the studio over time. In August, Matt Murphy produced some beautiful images at a rehearsal of the piece. Soft billows of smoke waft across the stage as singer Mary Ann Stewart and pianist Sandro Russo (performing live onstage) embark on the Manuel de Falla songs which provide the setting for this domestic drama. Nicole Corea and Leonel Linares have reached the point of no return in their marital conflict and now it’s a question of where the couple’s three daughters will set their allegiance. Nicole, dancing with her ever-radiant personal commitment, naturally assumes that her girls will be in her camp. But it’s the n’er-do-well father, danced with easy charm by Leonel, who has his daughters in the palm of his hand. The work ends with Nicole completely marginalized; the sisters (Kate Loh, Alison Cook Beatty, MarieLorene Fichaux) turn their backs on her and her husband slips out of the picture entirely. Adding a last personal touch to this work, the concluding song Amor Brutal is performed on a recording by Tony Morales’ father, who passed away earlier this year.

    Three duets comprise the final Morales work on the programme: PIANO PIECES: the first danced by Kate Loh and Alison Cook Beatty to a waltz tune, the second performed by MarieLorene Fichaux and Jerome Stigler to Scriabin, and the third danced by Nicole Corea and Leonel Linares to Scarlatti.

    The opening image of Lydia Johnson’s CHANGE OF HEART, enhanced by Mike Riggs’ lighting, caused me to gasp for breath momentarily: this work-  which I have watched being created over the past several months – and these dancers have a special significance to me. Some people close to me know of my unhappy Summer and of the rift between me and my cherished friend who should have been with me tonight watching Lydia’s work. However, sometimes the very things that remind us of past happiness also reassure us as we try to move on. Between the Bach music and the sheer expressive beauty of Lydia’s troupe of dancers, the experience was uplifting.

    For musicality and fine structuring, few people currently choreographing in the New York dance scene can compare with Lydia Johnson. There is thought, passion and tenderness in her work, and a depth of musical resonance that is very satisfying to behold. Yet for all that, in the end it’s the dancers whose ‘speaking’ of a choreographer’s unique dialect will make a dancework meaningful or not.

    This evening Lydia’s ensemble was led by two of her core dancers: Jessica Sand and Laura DiOrio. Having watched these two young women countless times in the studio or in performance, it is still and always a moving experience to see them rendering Lydia’s choreography with such clarity and grace. Reed Luplau (guest dancer from Lar Lubovitch Dance Company) created a remarkable impression in Lydia’s SUMMER HOUSE earlier this year; he wears Lydia’s style like a second skin. Katie Martin, Natalia Wodnicka and Min Seon Kim have been dancing for Lydia for the past few months and are blending well into the ensemble, each with her own distinctive signature. The newest comers to Lydia’s work – Lauren Perry, Christopher Bloom and Eric Williams – already look more than at home here, and Ms. Perry with her fresh face and feel put me in mind of a favorite dancer from the past: Kate Johnson of the Paul Taylor Dance Company.

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    Rehearsal image: Laura DiOrio, Eric Williams, Jessica Sand.

    And so this particular collective of dancers worked beautifully together to develop the flowing patterns of CHANGE OF HEART: solo moments, duets and ensembles sweep graciously by on the Bach score. A pas de trois for Laura, Reed and Eric, a duet for Jessica and Reed, a men’s trio…these are some of the moments that stood out. But it’s not really a work of highlights but rather a tapestry in which each thread seems richly colourful and alive.

    The evening was entitled CONTRASTS, and so something really dark and wild was bound to crop up along the way. Henning Rubsam’s HALF-LIFE is set to a thunderously propulsive score by Laibach. With the ever-vibrant Temple Kemezis and Jacqueline Stewart on pointe, this non-stop dark revel of contemporary ballet style came lke a jolt. Paul Oisin Monaghan, one of Gotham’s most intriguing dancers, always captures the eye. And the astounding power and presence of Max van der Sterre was electrifying. Musically disturbing and on-the-edge in its movement, HALF-LIFE has a life of its own. Mike Riggs’ lighting made a big impression here.

    The one choreographer with whose work I was unfamiliar, Yesid Lopez, offered a really appealing work for four girls entitled STRINGS. The costumes – corset-like bodices and gauzy soft-hued pantalooons – were especially lovely and the music (Chopin, Nyman, Dvorak) was matched by the atmospheric glow of Mike Riggs’ lighting. Jessica Black was featured in a solo passage, and the work made me want to see more of Mr. Lopez’s choreography.

  • Continuum Contemporary/Ballet to The Pillow

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    Donna Salgado (above) took her troupe Continuum Contemporary/Ballet to Jacob’s Pillow on August 25th for an Inside/Out performance. I met Donna and some of her dancers earlier this summer when they were preparing for the Latin Choreographers Festival. On Monday August 22nd, photographer Matt Murphy and I went to the DANY Studios to watch the Company rehearsing for their Pillow appearance. The work being performed is Donna’s setting of THE FOUR SEASONS to the familiar Antonio Vivaldi score. 

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    This ballet calls for a large ensemble so there were some new (to me) faces in the studio. Above: the women included Cassandra Coulas, Virginia Horne, Kate Loh, Sarah Atkins, Ashly Noel and Donna herself.

    Here is a galllery of Matt’s photographs from the rehearsal:

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    Alfredo Solivan

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    Cassandra Coulas

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    Matthew Uriniak

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    Donna Salgado, Sarah Atkins

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    Kate Loh

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    Vanessa Salgado

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    Ted Keener

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    Sarah Atkins

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    Donna Salgado

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    Sarah Atkins, Kate Loh

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    Ted Keener, Sarah Atkins

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    I was so lucky to catch Matt with a free hour in his schedule and he produced these images with his usual sureness of eye before rushing off to another shoot. 

  • SENSEDANCE Rehearsal @ Joyce SoHo

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    Thursday June 23, 2011 – Since I wasn’t able to attend their Joyce SoHo performances, Henning Rubsam of SENSEDANCE invited photographer Matt Murphy and me to watch a rehearsal this evening. My friend Paul Monaghan is dancing with SENSEDANCE, and so is Max van der Sterre (Paul & Max above, in Matt Murphy’s photo).

    The SENSEDANCE performances, which took place on the following two evenings, played to full houses. I was glad to have a chance to see Henning’s work which melds classic ballet technique with a contemporary accent. The dancers are strong and appealing as individual personalities.

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    Amarathine Road” Music by Beata Moon/dancersTemple Kemezis & Max van der Sterre (above)

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     “Impending Re-Visit” Music by Rafael Aponte-Ledée/dancers Erin Ginn & Uthman Ebrahim (above)
      
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     “Göttingen” Music by Barbara (recording by Daniel Isengart)/dancer Paul Monaghan (above)

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     “HALF-LIFE” (premiere) Music: Laibach/dancers Max van der Sterre, Erin Ginn (above). Temple and Paul also appear in this work.
     
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    Above: choreographer Henning Rubsam watching Erin and Uthman.
     
     Here are some more of Matt Murphy’s images from this SENSEDANCE rehearsal:
     
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     Temple Kemezis, Temple reminds me a lot of Pascale van Kipnis.
     
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    Max van der Sterre
     
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     Erin Ginn, Uthman Ebrahim
     
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     Temple Kemezis and Max van der Sterre
     
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     Paul Monaghan
     
    All photos by Matt Murphy.