Tag: Nir Arieli

  • Lubovitch’s LEGEND OF TEN @ Martha Graham

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    Above: Abdiel Cedric Jacobsen and Anne Souder of the Martha Graham Dance Company; photo by Nir Arieli

    ~ Author: Oberon

    Friday November 17th, 2017 – The renowned choreographer Lar Lubovitch will celebrate the 50th anniversary of his Company in the coming Spring when the Lar Lubovitch Dance Company will perform two programs at the Joyce Theater from April 17th through April 22nd, 2018. Joining in the celebration, the dancers of the Martha Graham Dance Company will perform the Lubovitch masterpiece LEGEND OF TEN, set to Johannes Brahms’s Piano Quintet in F minor; the Lubovitch Company premiered this work in 2010.

    This afternoon, photographer Nir Arieli and I stopped by at the Graham Studios at Westbeth to watch a rehearsal of LEGEND OF TEN. The Graham dancers are the crème de la crème of the dance world: in their combination of athleticism and artistry, they have few rivals. On top of that, they’re all really nice people. So any chance to be in their presence has a special meaning for me.

    I’ve seen LEGEND OF TEN three times in the past, danced by the Lubovitch Company. Yet today, I was struck afresh by its power and beauty. Taking wing on the Brahms score, LEGEND sends the dancers swirling thru dynamic movement that melds ballet motifs with elements of folk dance.

    In the course of today’s rehearsal, Mr. Lubovitch did quite a bit of dancing himself as he demonstrated for the Graham dancers. Assisting Mr. Lubovitch was Kate Skarpetowska – an estimable choreographer in her own right who has danced with the Lubovitch Company and is intimately familiar with his work.

    Here’s a gallery of Nir Arieli’s images from this afternoon:

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    From left: Ben Schultz, Anne O’Donnell, Kate Skarpetowska, So Young An, Leslie Andrea Williams, Lorenzo Pagano

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    Abdiel Cedric Jacobsen, Anne Souder, and Kate Skarpetowska

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    Watching a film of LEGEND with Mr. Lubovitch

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    Lar Lubovitch coaching Abdiel and Anne Souder in a duet passage

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    Anne Souder and Anne O’Donnell

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    Leslie Andrea Williams

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    So Young An

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    Lorenzo Pagano

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    Ari Mayzick, Anne O’Donnell

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    Abdiel Cedric Jacobsen

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    Ecstatic moment

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    Abdiel with Anne Souder: pas de deux…continued below

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    Ensemble: Ari, Ben, Lorenzo, Laurel Dalley Smith, Leslie

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    Leslie Andrea Williams

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    Abdiel and Anne Souder

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    Leslie Andrea Williams

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    Many thanks to Denise Vale of the Graham Company for helping to arrange today’s studio visit, and also to Janet Eilber, publicist Janet Stapleton, to Mr. Lubovitch and Ms. Skarpetowska for letting us eavesdrop on their process, and – of course – to the phenomenal dancers. And although they weren’t dancing today, it was great to catch up briefly with Ying Xin and The Lloyds: Knight and Mayor.

    All photos by Nir Arieli.

    ~ Oberon

  • Lydia Johnson Dance @ NYLA

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    Above: Nir Arieli’s image of Dona Wiley, Sara Spangler, and Blair Reavis-Tyler in Lydia Johnson’s This, and my heart beside…

    Author: Oberon

    Wednesday June 21st, 2017 – Lydia Johnson Dance‘s annual New York season opened tonight at New York Live Arts in Chelsea. Performing in two new works, as well as the revival of a Johnson classic from 2012, and the repeat of a darkish ensemble work held over from last season, the Company dancers displayed the strength, technical accomplishment, emotional commitment, and ever-appealing individuality of face and form that sets them in a unique place on the Gotham dancescape. For Lydia Johnson’s work, rooted as it is classical ballet technique, is alive with dramatic nuances that paradoxically seem both contemporary and curiously evocative of ancient modes of dance. 

    Among current choreographers, Lydia’s work bristles and blooms with a poignant sense of humanity. There’s nary a trace of theatricality in her dances; rather, she uses the music as a canvas on which emotions – both the deep and the subtle – are painted. Expressions of tenderness (so lacking in our lives today), hope, remorse, uncertainty, and the frailty of the human heart well up on the music, sometimes unexpectedly. How often, watching Lydia’s troupe in rehearsal, have I fought back tears or felt pangs of regret as I connect memories from my own life with things she is depicting in dance.

    To Lydia’s good fortune, her work has always attracted dancers with an intrinsic gift for colouring their performances with expressive hues, drawing on their own recollections and experiences to captivate the viewer with their commitment, energy, and passion.

    This season, a particularly striking ensemble has gathered together to offer up Lydia’s ballets: from Company mainstays Laura DiOrio, Katie Martin-Lohiya, MinSeon Kim, Brynt Beitman, and Chazz Fenner- McBride to newcomers Daniel Pigliavento, Dona Wiley, Lauren Treat, Blair Reavis-Tyler, and Hope K Ruth, everyone shone: each in his or her own way. Debuting with the Company, a marvelous ballet-duo, Mary Beth Hansohn and Peter Chusin, left me hoping that tonight marks the start of their ongoing involvement with Lydia’s troupe.

    Of special joy was the re-appearance at Lydia Johnson Dance of a pair of beloved dancers, Sarah Pon and Blake Hennessy-York; they had moved to the West Coast last year, and have graciously flown in to reprise their roles in Giving Way. And we also welcomed back Lisa Iannacito McBride, a key dancer during her seasons with Lydia Johnson Dance. Lisa has come back to perform a role made on her in 2012 in Crossings by River; in the intervening years, Lisa has been raising her son and dancing in her current neighborhood, up the Hudson River. This was not a sentimental return, but rather a vibrant and supremely assured performance from a dancer who always lights up the stage. 

    As we sat waiting for the performance to start, I was reflecting on all that has happened since the Company last danced in New York City. I felt quite certain, having seen some rehearsals, that this would be a strong program. As the evening flowed onward, I found the impact of the music, the choreography, and the dancing exceeded expectations in every regard.

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    Above: Lisa Iannacito McBride, Laura DiOrio, and Katie Martin-Lohiya in Crossings by River; photo by Nir Arieli

    In Crossings by River, music of Osvaldo Golijov is the ideal setting for a dancework depicting the quiet rituals of a group of five women. Their flowing golden skirts and black lace bodices lend a Spanish flavour to the proceedings and, from the rooted, gestural elements at the start thru to spacious circlings laced with solo passages, and on to the consoling, rocking motifs of the sisterhood, Lydia Johnson’s choreography takes the Balanchinian stance of letting us see the music.

    The five women gave an exceptionally well-integrated performance; two members of the original cast for Crossings were re-visiting their roles today: Lisa Iannacito McBride and Laura DiOrio. Their confident, expressive dancing resonates from the depths of their feminine spirits. Since the creation of this ballet, both Lisa and Laura have become mothers; this added an intangible layer of richness to their portrayals. 

    Katie Martin-Lohiya, who has become a paragon of the Lydia Johnson style, radiated assurance and grace, and MinSeon Kim stepped into one of Lydia’s most intriguing solos – the dancer subtly changes directions as she moves about the space – and made it her own. Dona Wiley, in her first performances with Lydia Johnson Dance, was an elegant presence and danced beautifully in this finely-integrated ensemble work.

    Here are some of Nir Arieli’s images from Crossings by River:

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    Katie Martin-Lohiya

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    Dona Wiley, Min SeonKim, Katie Martin-Lohiya

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    Min, Lisa, Dona, Laura, Katie

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    Lisa Iannacito McBride

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    Katie, Laura, and Lisa

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    Katie, gently rocked by Lisa and Laura

    Giving Way is being presented for the third consecutive season; I must say it seemed even more vital this year than previously, though I cannot put my finger on the reason. A sense of urgency was in full flourish among the dancers, whilst the more lyrical passages were hauntingly evocative.

    Following a dynamic opening in which opposing quartets of men and women advance and retreat, Lydia Johnson brings forth an intensely personal duet for two boys: Blake Hennessy-York and Brynt Beitman. Their performance was a highlight of the evening, as Nir’s images attest:

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    A men’s quartet – swaying at first and then more animated – leads on the the heart of the ballet, set to a gorgeously mystical music for marimba and cello. A folkish cello passage for the men evolves to a memorable pas de deux danced by Laura Di Orio and Brynt Beitman:

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    In a unique passage, girls are lifted by pairs of men:

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    Sarah Pon

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    Katie Martin-Lohiya

    Spectacular solo dancing from Chazz Fenner-McBride in Giving Way brought another outstanding performance from this incredibly gifted and vividly communicative dancer. I have been following Chazz over the past few seasons, dancing first for Robin Becker and now for Lydia Johnson. He just gets better and better: fearless, powerful, but always lyrical at heart: such a perpetual pleasure to watch him.

    Giving Way ends with the dancers undulating in a wave-like passage as the light fades. 

    Here are more of Nir images from Giving Way:

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    Peter Chursin, Blake Hennessy-York

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    Blake Hennessy-York

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    Chazz Fenner-McBride & MinSeon Kim

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    Katie Martin-Lohiya, Peter Chursin

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    Brynt Beitman, Laura DiOrio

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    Peter Chursin

    The music of Georg Friedrich Handel cries out: “Dance to me!” The contrasts between the lively allegros and the lyrical andantes set up a perfect opportunity for choreographers to show off both their dancers’ technical proficiency and their emotive qualities.

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    In the premiere of her new Handel ballet, Trio Sonatas, Lydia Johnson shows her usual structural deftness and musicality. The dancers strike off-kilter, stylized poses (above) before things turn more animated, with small leaps in place and the girls flinging themselves dramatically into Chazz’s arms.

    Duet motifs, and a walking ensemble ensue: the Company’s newest members have opportunities to shine. Daniel Pigliavento dances with Katie Martin-Lohiya – their long limbs and tender sense of lyricism shaping the movement persuasively:

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    Lydia’s newest ladies – Dona Wiley, Lauren Treat, Blair Reavis-Tyler, and Hope K Ruth – are seen to advantage in the Handel work. A sprightly finale strikes up, with the dancers doing swift lay-downs before springing back to action. Chazz Fenner-McBride’s daring catches of the petite and charming Hope K Ruth drew appreciative murmurs from the crowd. A female ensemble with decorative gestures, another bit of brightness from Ms. Ruth, and a duo passage for Chazz and Blair Reavis-Tyler draw Trio Sonatas to its close. 

    Trio Sonatas images from Nir Arieli:

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    Chazz fenner-McBride and MinSeon Kim

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    Laura DiOrio and Katie Martin-Lohiya

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    Chazz Fenner-McBride and MinSeon Kim

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    Chazz Fenner-McBride and Dona Wiley

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    Hope K Ruth

    This, and my heart beside… is Lydia Johnson’s very newest work, and let’s say it flat-out: it’s a masterpiece. The title of the ballet is drawn from this Emily Dickinson poem:

    “It’s all I have to bring today—
    This, and my heart beside—
    This, and my heart, and all the fields—
    And all the meadows wide—
    Be sure you count—should I forget
    Some one the sum could tell—
    This, and my heart, and all the Bees
    Which in the Clover dwell.” 

    To music by Marc Mellits and Philip Glass, the choreographer has deployed her large cast in an inspired manner; the ballet features the appearance of a young girl, Sara Spangler, and centers on three couples: Mary Beth Hansohn and Peter Chursin, MinSeon Kim and Chazz Fenner-McBride, and Katie Martin-Lohiya dancing with Daniel Pigliavento.

    One aspect of this work that is most intriguing is that its narrative qualities seem to loom up along a fluid timeline; rather than linear storytelling, the dancers seem to slip from the here-and-now into memories from the past and dreams of things to come. Philip Glass’s music amplifies this sense of layers of time, just as it did in Lydia Johnson’s earlier work Summer House, also danced to Glass.

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    The Marc Mellitts segment of This, and my heart beside… has the feeling of a prologue. Sara Spangler’s perfection in the role of The Child (above, with Katie Martin-Lohiya) removed the risk of any inadvertent scene-stealing on her part: she was a calm, natural, lovely presence throughout.

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    Sara Spangler and Katie Martin-Lohiya

    Once the Philip Glass music commences, we are drawn deeper into the drama. In a dancework rife with emotion, the exact inter-relationships of the characters become a matter of what the individual viewer chooses to focus on. There is much going on; the ballet will require additional viewings before one can draw any definitive conclusions – though, on the other hand, definitive conclusions may not be possible in this case.

    In a striking partnership, Mary Beth Hansohn and Peter Chursin delved into both the passion and the problems inherent in a long-time love affair. Resistance and surrender vie for the upper hand, and it is all so true-to-life. Here are some of Nir’s images of this charismatic pair of dancers:

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    One memorable moment in the Hansohn/Chursin relationship came when they seemed to express opposing viewpoints in flashes of pirouettes.

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    The second couple, Katie Martin-Lohiya and Daniel Pigliavento (above), seem more steadfast in their love. It is they, in the end, who have charge of the young girl.

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    MinSeon Kim and Chazz Fenner-McBride (above) are a youthful couple, alternately joyous and a bit scrappy; all seems well between them until – as the ballet nears its end – Chazz becomes intrigued with Mary Beth. This sets up a brief and subtle but tension-filled encounter for Chazz and Peter. The situation remains unresolved, as does the music. As the light fades, Peter and MinSeon are on their own, with Mary Beth in Chazz’s encircling arms. The child, for whom all that has gone before may be a vision of the future, is safe in the protective love of Katie and Daniel.

    Others will have seen variable narratives in this complex but wonderfully absorbing work; and over time, I may change my opinion of what has happened in the course of This, and my heart beside…

    But I won’t change my mind about the work itself: it’s something to treasure.

    ~ Oberon

  • Rehearsing: Lydia Johnson Dance

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    Above: Nir Arieli’s rehearsal photo from the final moments of Lydia Johnson’s new creation This, and my heart beside…

    Author: Oberon

    Lydia Johnson Dance will be at New York Live Arts, 219 West 19th Street, on June 21st, 22nd, and 23rd, 2017. The performances are at 7:30 PM each evening. Tickets here.

    Two new works choreographed by Lydia Johnson will be presented: Trio Sonatas, to music of Georg Friedrich Handel, and This, and my heart beside…, inspired by Emily Dickinson’s poem “It’s All I Have to Bring Today” and set to music by Marc Mellits and Philip Glass. Completing the program will be a revival of Lydia’s 2012 ballet for five women, Crossings By River, to music by Osvaldo Golijov, and Giving Way, returning from last season, with music by Mellits and Golijov.

    On Friday June 16th, Lydia invited photographer Nir Arieli and me to her rehearsal at the Ballet Hispanico studios. Giving Way was being run when we arrived, and here are some of Nir’s images from that work.

    Click on each photo to enlarge.

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    Laura DiOrio

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    Brynt Beitman

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    Blake Hennessy-York and Brynt Beitman

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    Blake and Brynt

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    Above: Lydia with Sarah Pon, who will be dancing in Giving Way at NYLA, giving notes

    After a brief respite, the large ensemble involved in This, and my heart beside… took their places and I got to see this moving and disturbingly beautiful work in a full run-thru. 

    Here is the Emily Dickinson poem from which the ballet’s title is derived:

    “It’s all I have to bring today—
    This, and my heart beside—
    This, and my heart, and all the fields—
    And all the meadows wide—
    Be sure you count—should I forget
    Someone the sum could tell—
    This, and my heart, and all the Bees
    Which in the Clover dwell.”

    The ballet is built around three couples, each of them at a different stage in their relationship:

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    MinSeon Kim and Chazz Fenner-McBride, observed by the ensemble…

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    …Mary Beth Hansohn and Peter Chursin…

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    …and Daniel Pigliavento and Katie Martin-Lohiya.

    Dona Wiley, Hope K Ruth, Blair Reavis-Tyler, and Lauren Treat form the ensemble for this poetic work, and also appearing will be Sara Spangler, a very young dancer who was not at today’s rehearsal.

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    This, and my heart beside… opens with a sort of prologue set to a Marc Mellits score which serves to set the stage for the drama which will unfold. Above: Dona Wiley, and Katie Martin-Lohiya (seated).

    Lydia then turns to one of Philip Glass’s most haunting works, from his Etudes, Book 2: No 17, for the unfolding of the ballet. I won’t give away too much about the piece – Nir’s photos will say more than words can express – but this is a dancework which grasps the heart and never lets go. 

    Here is This, and my heart beside… in rehearsal:

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    Katie and Daniel

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    Daniel, Katie, Chazz, Min

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    Peter

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    Chazz and Min, observed by Mary Beth

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    Peter and Mary Beth

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    Mary Beth and Min

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    Daniel and Katie

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    Min, Mary Beth, Chazz, Peter

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    Min and Chazz

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    Mary Beth and Peter

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    Mary Beth and Peter

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    Katie and Daniel

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    Daniel and Katie

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    Mary Beth and Peter

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    Peter, Mary Beth, Chazz

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    Mary Beth and Peter

    This, and my heart beside… ends without a musical resolution. It is a ballet filled with unanswered questions.

    All photos by Nir Arieli, with my sincere appreciation.

    ~ Oberon

  • Ballet Hispanico in Rehearsal

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    Above: Martina Calcagno rehearsing at Ballet Hispanico today; photo by Nir Arieli

    Monday March 28th, 2016 – In anticipation of Ballet Hispanico‘s upcoming season at The Joyce, photographer Nir Arieli and I stopped by the Company’s home space on West 89th Street to watch a rehearsal.

    The Hispanico dancers are among the most vivid in New York City’s vibrant community of dance. Watching them in the up-close-and-personal studio setting, their power, unstinting energy, and sheer sexiness are a testament to their generosity and commitment.

    For their impending Joyce performances, Ballet Hispanico will offer the New York premiere of Gustavo Ramírez Sansano’s Flabbergast. The Company have previously performed Mr. Sansano’s dramatic narrative ballet CARMEN.maquia and his charming El Beso.

    Flabbergast is a complete joy to experience: lively, sexy, and playful, the choreography calls for non-stop action. And the dancers are even called upon to sing, which they do enthusiastically. Here are some of Nir’s images from today’s run-thru of this exciting dancework:

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    Eila Valls and Lyvan Verdecia

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    Chris Bloom

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    Mark Gieringer

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    Mark (foreground) & Company

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    The Flabbergast ensemble

    As an ideal contrast to the extroverted Flabbergast, choreographer’s Ramón Oller’s darkly ritualistic Bury Me Standing will also be on the Joyce program. A section of this ballet, in which a cortege of mourners move slowly across the space while a male soloist performs an expressive dance of lamentation, was being rehearsed today with Hispanico’s charismatic Mario Ismael Espinoza in the featured role.

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    Above, and in the following images: Mario Ismael Espinoza

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    During this run-thru from Bury Me Standing, I had one of those unusual experiences that you can only get at a rehearsal: while Mario was performing the solo and Nir was capturing it, I was at the other end of the studio where Mario’s alternate, Christopher Hernandez, was also dancing the solo directly in front of me. Mario and Christopher have very different physiques and stage personalities; shifting my gaze between the two, I was able to experience their interpretations simultaneously; an exciting finale to our studio visit.

    I want to thank publicist Michelle Tabnick for arranging everything, Mr. Sansano for his cordial greeting and very appealing choreography, Hispanico’s Michelle Manzanales – ever the gracious hostess – and every single one of the Company’s incredible dancers.

    And I’m particularly grateful – as always – to photographer Nir Arieli.

    I want to draw your attention to Nir’s upcoming gallery show of Flocks at Daniel Cooney|Fine Art on West 26th Street, which will run from April 21st thru June 4th, 2016. Ballet Hispanico is among the companies featured in this series. More information below:

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  • Lydia Johnson Dance: Audition Notice

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    Above: from Lydia Johnson’s NIGHT OF THE FLYING HORSES; photo by Nir Arieli

    Lydia Johnson Dance have announced auditions for male and female dancers, to be held in September (on Fridays…applicants will be notified of the specific date). Complete audition information here.

  • Claudia Schreier & Company @ Ailey Citigroup

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    Above: Amber Neff and Drew Grant dancing with Claudia Schreier & Company at Ailey Citigroup Theatre; photo by Nir Arieli

    Saturday August 8th, 2015 – Exactly one year ago tonight, Claudia Schreier won the Breaking Glass Project’s competition for female choreographers with her brilliant ballet, HARMONIC. Her prize was to present a full evening of her own work at Ailey Citigroup Theatre, and that prize was claimed tonight as five of Claudia’s works were performed by an array dancers drawn together specially for the occasion.

    The evening was an unalloyed triumph for all concerned, including two contemporary composers whose works were choreographed by Claudia (Jeff Beal and Douwe Eisenga – both of them were present and took a bow at the end); the choral group Tapestry who performed live for the ballet VIGIL; a chamber quartet playing Jeff Beal’s score for ALMOST MORNING live, and – of course – the superb ensemble of dancers.

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    Above: the chamber musicians, with dancers Amber Neff and Drew Grant, in ALMOST MORNING

    When we first started watching House of Cards, my partner and I were very much taken with Jeff Beal’s score: “…this music would make a great ballet!” And now it’s come to pass: ALMOST MORNING is set to an original score composed for Ms. Schreier by the multi-Emmy Award-winning Mr.Beal. Six dancers appear in a series of overlapping duets interspersed among ensemble passages. The music pulses and percolates, but can also turn moody or melodious along the way. The musicians – Kieran Ledwidge (violin), Tia Allen (viola), Kirin McElwain (cello) and Ta-Wei Yu (piano) – delivered the score with propulsive assurance.

    The choreographer responds to this music with movement that has a broad overall sweep but also features countless felicitous and original touches. Amber Neff is thrice tossed into the air, spiraling before being caught by her partner Drew Grant; the blondes – Kaitlyn Gilliland and Elizabeth Claire Walker – dance in tandem; and a sustained duo for Ms. Walker and Mr. Grant is particularly striking. A pas de trois for Ms. Neff, Francis Lawrence, and Da’Von Doane progresses to a pensive solo danced by the incomparable Kaitlyn Gilliland. There are stretches of visual polyphony; the dancers form a circle before sweeping into a triple pas de deux set to the score’s most lyrical theme. Then the dancers rush off in the end, leaving the stage to the musicians.

    The conclusion of the ballet triggered the first of the evening’s enthusiastic ovations: having observed ALMOST MORNING in a keen state of silence, the audience demonstrated their approval for both the music and the dancing in no uncertain terms. And this was only the beginning.

    The evening continued on its soaring trajectory with HARMONIC, the ballet to Douwe Eisenga’s stimulating score which clinched the prize for Claudia Schreier at last year’s Breaking Glass competition. HARMONIC was originally created by Ms. Schreier in 2013 for the Columbia Ballet Collaborative, and was subsequently re-staged for Craig Salstein’s Intermezzo Dance Company, who performed it at Vassar College in March 2014. Inspired by Mr. Eisenga’s magical score, HARMONIC is a contemporary ballet that seems built to last.

    Tonight HARMONIC received a mesmerizing performance, with ABT’s entrancing Stephanie Williams displaying marvelous technique and a particularly attractive presence. Earlier this month, Stephanie danced – splendidly – for Joshua Beamish at The Joyce. The principal male role here was taken by Dance Theatre of Harlem’s intrepid Da’Von Doane; Da’Von danced in four ballets tonight and, after a long day of tech/dress/performance, he seemed totally fresh at the end of the evening and looked ready to repeat the whole programme. Strength and stamina are essential, but when you add Da’Von’s stunning physique, impeccable partnering, generosity of spirit, and his intangible gift for making everything seem right with the world, you have a paragon.

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    Da’Von’s dancing with Ms. Williams (above) was electrifying to behold, for they are well-matched in terms of both daring and allure.

    One could say there are no supporting roles in Claudia Schreier’s ballets: she puts demands on everyone involved in a given work and then rewards them with opportunities to shine. Thus tonight in HARMONIC, Amber Neff and Elinor Hitt were utterly essential; they danced their hearts out, and basked beautifully in those passages of being partnered by Da’Von. Again, the audience response was thunderous.

    More images from HARMONIC:

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    Elinor Hitt

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    Stephanie Williams

    A new production of Ms. Schreier’s 2009 ballet ANOMIE is imbued with a striking atmosphere of lyricism and poetry. Set to the heartfelt beauty of César Franck’s Prelude, Fugue and Variation

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    ANOMIE opens (above) with New York City Ballet’s distinctive Lydia Wellington posed in Daniel Applebaum’s arms in a pool of light; Lydia slowly unfolds and the ballet begins its beautiful flight. In addition to the abounding artistry of this wonderfully simpatico City Ballet duo, we could also savor the ever-vivid clarity of Amber Neff’s dancing, the aristocratic face and silken line of Elizabeth Claire Walker, and the handsomely assured presence of Drew Grant.

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    Elizabeth Claire Walker (above) with Drew Grant…

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    Elizabeth Claire Walker and Daniel Applebaum

    All five dancers appear in a diagonal, with a canonic dramatic port de bras motif, before Lydia Wellington and Daniel Applebaum meet again to end the ballet as in a fading dream.

    I can’t resist sharing more of Nir Arieli’s images from ANOMIE:

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    Daniel Applebaum and Elizabeth Claire Walker

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    Lydia Wellington, aloft

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    Daniel Appebaum and Elizabeth Claire Walker: a most congenial partnership

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    Daniel Applebaum and Lydia Wellington

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    Lydia Wellington and Daniel Applebaum

    Following the interval, the atmosphere became spiritual as Vigil, a pas de deux danced by Elinor Hitt and Da’Von Doane to sacred choral music by Tomás Luis de Victoria and Sergei Rachmaninoff which was performed live onstage by the 20-member choir Tapestry. The singers, clad in black, arranged themselves in a semi-circle around the dance-space; they are a wonderful, physically diverse group of musicians and they harmonized with a kind of gentle intensity that created an atmosphere of both reverence and hope. 

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    Above from VIGIL, danced by Elinor Hitt and Da’Von Doane

    Ms. Hitt was one of the revelations of the evening; her jazzy dancing in HARMONIC made us think of her as an extroverted allegro dancer, yet in VIGIL she displayed a poignantly expressive adagio style that put me in mind of Sara Mearns’ elegiac luminosity. It almost goes without saying that Da’Von Doane achieved another miracle of control, strength, and grace here; the partnership had a gorgeous flow and resonance, so finely attuned to the music. The dancers seemed angel-like in their white costumes, and their shaping of Ms. Schreier’s port de bras and the heavenly quality of the duet’s numerous lifts really cast a spell. The performance moved me to tears.

    More of Nir Arieli’s images from VIGIL: 

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    PULSE, a driving full-company work, is set to Dutch composer Douwe Eisenga‘s marvelous Piano Concerto: I. With her customary flair for visualizing the music, Claudia Schreier molded the Eisenga score into another fascinating dancework: as exciting as HARMONIC, but bigger and splashier. In its dynamic thrust, PULSE reminded me at times of Robbins’s GLASS PIECES.

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    Claudia’s full contingent of dancers took the stage for this impressively-structured ballet, and there were some dancers in the cast we hadn’t seen earlier in the evening, including New York City Ballet soloist Lauren King (above); always a welcome sight onstage, Lauren danced with her trademark mixture of lyricism and edge: a combination that always makes her so exciting to watch. Also appearing in PULSE were Nayara Lopes and Craig Wasserman, vivid dancers who I wish we could have seen more of over the course of the evening.

    Da’Von Doane’s opening solo in PULSE showed yet another facet of this dancer…a dancer to whom the word “amazing” can most truly be applied. The solo becomes an echo-duet for Da’Von and Craig Wasserman…

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    …with motifs later taken up by the male ensemble (above): Da’Von, Craig, Daniel,and Francis.

    PULSE plunges forward, Claudia Schreier’s choreography ever-attentive to the nuances of the Eisenga score. At one moment, an air of mystery pervades only to surrender to the inevitable forward impetus of the music. There’s a buildup as waves of dancers enter…

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    …and then suddenly we are lured into a solo passage for Kaitlyn Gilliland (above), dancing with goddess-like authority. Lines of dancers along a right-angle converge…

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    …and then Lauren King and Da’Von Doane (above) meet up for a duet, followed by other fleeting episodes. The women dance as a group, and then the men, and then everyone, as PULSE sprints to the finish line: a perfect finale for a grand evening of dance.    

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    Amber Neff and Da’Von Doane in PULSE: “We could have danced all night…in fact, we did!” To the dancers, one and all, heaps of roses and buckets of iced champagne.

    The performance ended with a colossal standing ovation and a din of cheers; the enthusiasm poured out into the lobby where the audience seemed reluctant to take leave after such an extraordinary evening. Although I have been following Claudia Schreier’s work for a few seasons, I must say that experiencing a full programme of her choreography surpassed my expectations, which were very high indeed. In addition to her enviable ability to choose just the right music and fill it with meaningful movement, her work is blessedly free of gimmicks or self-indulgence. Claudia knows the value of not over-extending her ideas, so that after each piece we are left wanting more.

    All photo by Nir Arieli, with my sincere thanks for his patience and his artistry.

  • Rehearsal: Knight/Beamish DANCE FOR NEPAL

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    Above: Lloyd Knight rehearsing a new Joshua Beamish solo, ‘Adoration‘, for the upcoming gala benefit DANCE FOR NEPAL; photo by Nir Arieli

    Saturday June 27th, 2015 – On Tuesday June 30th, 2015, DANCE FOR NEPAL will be presented at the Union Square Theatre. The program, conceived by Simona Ferrera, is under the artistic direction of Lloyd Knight, principal dancer of The Martha Graham Dance Company.  All proceeds from this gala performance will benefit the survivors of the devastating earthquake that struck Nepal on April 25th, 2015. A stellar group of dancers will perform; tickets and more information here.

    On an overcast afternoon, photographer Nir Arieli and I dropped in at the Martha Graham studios for a rehearsal/preview of the new Beamish solo work. The choreographer has chosen the adagio from Haydn’s concerto in C-Major for cello and orchestra: a perfect setting for his fluent and expressive choreography and for Lloyd Knight’s powerful, emotive dancing. Demanding in its physicality, the solo has a deeply spiritual quality which gives Lloyd a perfect impetus for his interpretation: a striking mixture of muscularity and grace. 

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    Joshua Beamish (above, with Lloyd), the Canadian dancer/choreographer and founder of MOVE: the company, was recently seen here in New York City as one of Wendy Whelan’s choreographer-cavaliers in her RESTLESS CREATURE presentation at The Joyce. In August 2015, Josh will be presenting MOVE: the company for two performances at The Joyce. Details here.

    The studio atmosphere today was paradoxically calm and intense; I could have gone on watching endlessly since the combination of the music, Josh’s mapping of the movement, and Lloyd’s inspiring dancing were a welcome balm to the spirit.

    Here’s a gallery of Nir Arieli’s images from this rehearsal; I have chosen quite a few since they really capture the atmosphere:

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    Click on each image to enlarge.

  • Upcoming: Ballet Hispanico @ The Joyce

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    Above: Ballet Hispanico‘s Mario Ismael Espinoza and Kimberly van Woesik in CARMEN.maquia; rehearsal photo by Nir Arieli

    Ballet Hispanico return to the Joyce Theater from April 14th – 26th, 2015 with 15 performances featuring five dynamic programs. Tickets start at $10 and are on sale here.

    Under the artistic direction of Eduardo Vilaro, Ballet Hispanico‘s style combines the fire and passion of their Latino roots with elements of contemporary ballet.

    Highlights of this year’s Joyce season include a raw and athletic world premiere by Mexico-based choreographer Miguel Mancillas and the dazzling New York premiere of Show.Girl. by Miami-based, Princess Grace Award-winning choreographer Rosie Herrera. Also in the Joyce repertory are Ballet Hispanico’s striking production of Gustavo Ramírez Sansano’s CARMEN.maquia, a contemporary look at the iconic story of a passionate gypsy woman; the marvelous all-male Sombrerísimo, choreographed by Annabelle Lopez Ochoa and commissioned by New York City Center for the 10thanniversary of the Fall for Dance Festival; and El Beso, choreographed by Gustavo Ramírez Sansano, with original costumes by Venezuelan fashion designer Angel Sanchez.

    For the first time during its New York Season, Ballet Hispanico will also offer a 90-minute matinee on Saturday, April 18th that is specially curated for children and families featuring excerpts from the Company’s diverse repertory and a Q & A with the dancers. Hosted by Artistic Director Eduardo Vilaro and Education Director AnaMaria Correa, Ballet Hispanico’s fun, interactive, and educational Performances for Young People – now celebrating 30 years – give families a glimpse into the beauty of the arts and Latino culture.

  • Preview: Ballet Hispanico’s CARMEN.maquia

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    Above: Ballet Hispanico‘s Chris Bloom and Kimberly van Woesik in rehearsal for CARMEN.maquia  Photo: Nir Arieli

    Normally I don’t do previews of upcoming dance productions unless I’m planning to see them in performance. Ballet Hispanico‘s premiere presentation of Gustavo Ramirez Sansano’s CARMEN.maquia happens to fall on a night when I have tickets for the New York Philharmonic. But because I admire the Hispanico dancers so much (and their director, Eduardo Vilaro, is such a wonderful guy) I jumped at the chance to see a rehearsal today. I was so impressed with the work – for so many different reasons – that I have to send out the word: this is a must-see dancework. Ticket information for the November 22nd performance at the Apollo Theater here

    Luckily, photographer Nir Arieli was available to meet me and document the rehearsal today, which – as it turned out – was the first ‘costume-run-thru’ of the full work. I’m so grateful to publicist Michelle Tabnick for arranging things and to Ballet Hispanico‘s rehearsal director Michelle Manzanales for welcoming us to the studio.

    As a long-time opera-goer (yes, I even went to the Old Met!) Bizet’s CARMEN has been in my blood for over half-a-century, starting with my first experience of hearing the great Rise Stevens singing the ‘Habanera’ on an old LP my parents owned. I know all the music intimately…and 99% of the words, which I found myself singing along today.

    I don’t want to give away any secrets, but Mr. Sansano takes a non-literal stance towards the opera’s score for his new ballet, and he even incorporates music from other Bizet works. One interpolation in particular was truly daring, but I’m not going to spoil the surprise. In terms of relating to the story as told in the Bizet opera, we have dancers representing Carmen, Don Jose, Escamillo, and Micaela as well as smugglers, cigarette girls, and soldiers. But the choreographer makes some stunning re-assignments of music normally associated with one scene in the opera to a different situation in his ballet. For example…no, wait…you’ll have to go and find out for yourself!

    In fact, I should not really say anything more lest I say too much. But I will mention that the black-and-white costumes are inspired by Picasso’s drawings, and that the personifications of the main characters by the marvelous Hispanico dancers transcend steps, acting, and music to create living, breathing men and women who wear their passions proudly. The work is provocative in so many different ways, from the aforementioned musical placements to the characterizations of the major players (they don’t always fit our stereotyped ideas), and even a bit of nudity.

    So, rather than let too many cats out of the proverbial bag at this pre-premiere stage, I’ll share with you some of Nir Arieli’s rehearsal images. I had a terrible time deciding which ones to include, because I wanted to post them all. 

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    Kimberly van Woesik (Carmen)

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    Kimberly van Woesik and Chris Bloom (Don Jose)

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    Mario Ismael Espinoza (Escamillo)

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    Min-Tzu Li (Micaela) and Chris Bloom

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    Min-Tzu Li and Chris Bloom 

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    Melissa Fernandez

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    Jessica Alejandra Wyatt

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    Jamal Rashann Callender

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    Joshua Winzeler, Johan Rivera Mendez, and Lauren Alzamora

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    Christopher Hernandez and Marcos Rodriguez

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    Martina Calcagno

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    Johan Rivera Mendez and Marcos Rodriguez

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    The ensemble

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    Min-Tzu Li and Chris Bloom

    The following images are from a duet for Carmen and her toreador: Kimberly van Woesik and Mario Ismael Espinoza:

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    All photography by Nir Arieli.

  • Pontus Lidberg Dance: Recent & Upcoming

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    Above: from Pontus Lidberg’s FAUNE; photo by Nir Arieli

    Photographer Nir Arieli has sent me some images from Pontus Lidberg Dance‘s recent performance at Kykuit, the Rockefeller Estate at Pocantico, NY. The Company danced there on August 8th, 2014, in beautiful outdoor setting.

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    Above: Adrian Danchig-Waring and Georgina Pazcoguin in an excerpt from WITHIN (Labyrinth Within)
     
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    Above: Isabella Boylston and James Whiteside in a work-in-progress: a new duet scheduled to premiere at Fall For Dance on October 18th, 2014.
     
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    Above: Adrian Danchig-Waring and Nadja Sellrup in TACTILE
     
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    Above: Pontus Lidberg Dance in TACTILE
     
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    Above: Pontus Lidberg Dance in TACTILE
     
    UPCOMING: Pontus Lidberg Dance will perform Pontus’s atmospheric Debussy ballet FAUNE on Saturday October 11th at the Hudson Valley Dance Festival. And on October 18th and 19th, Pontus’s duet for  Isabella Boylston and James Whiteside will premiere at the annual Fall For Dance Festival at New York’s City Center.