Tag: Takehiro Ueyama

  • BalletX @ The Joyce ~ 2024

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    Above: Savannah Green in Takehiro Ueyama’s HEROES; photo by Christopher Duggan for BalletX

    ~  Author: Oberon

    Wednesday September 25th, 2024 – Philadelphia’s BalletX at The Joyce tonight, offering three New York premieres: Takehiro Ueyama’s HEROES, Jodie Gates’ BEAUTIFUL ONCE, and Loughlan Prior’s MACARONI. Over the years, this Company has commissioned nearly 130 world premieres.

    The three works presented tonight were well-contrasted, and I must immediately praise the Lighting Designer, Michael Korsch, whose work was nothing less than sensational; this gave a special glow to the evening. Of the beautiful and highly accomplished BalletX dancers, two were known to me: Savannah Green (who danced in the closing work) and Jerard Palazo, who danced in the ballets by Loughlan Prior and Takehiro Ueyama, and who generated considerable star-power.

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    Above: Minori Sakita and Ashley Simpson in Jodie Gates’s BEAUTIFUL ONCE; photo by Christopher Duggan for BalletX

    The evening opened with Jodie Gates’s BEAUTIFUL ONCE, set to a score by Ryan Lott performed by Son Lux and yMusic. The slurring music of the opening moments soon transforms into rhapsodic themes as the dancers meet on the gorgeously lit stage, embracing one another with genuine affection. The choreography – danced on pointe – is full of sweeping lifts and swirling movement, all gracefully executed. A series of duets, laced with fleeting solos and passages danced as trios and quartets, keeps the eye thoroughly engaged. 

    The music becomes dense and passionate, and a sense of belonging pervades the stage. When the dancers are not dancing, they remain on the sidelines, as if supporting their colleagues. A lovely quintet for the women seems to offer a perfect ending to the piece, but then the men take over and the dancing flows on. As the ballet nears its end, individual couples step forward and embrace – not passionately, but tenderly.

    The program note refers to BEAUTIFUL ONCE as “a response to the chaotic moments in life”, and reminds us of the blessèd assurance of friendship and community.

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    Above: Jonathan Montepara and company in Loughlan Prior’s MACARONI; photo by Christopher Duggan for BalletX

    I hardly ever enjoy comic ballets (Jerome Robbins’ THE CONCERT being an exception) and I can’t say that I derived much pleasure from Loughlan Prior’s MACARONI, a spoof on gay manners from the powdered wig era. The music, by Claire Cowan, served the choreographer well, laced with sounds of the harpsichord to evoke the baroque.

    The cast of eight included three women en travesti, dancing on pointe. Everyone danced superbly whilst showing expert comic timing and entering fully into the campy atmosphere. But as the work progressed, I felt rather sad: yes, we have made so much progress over the years…and yes, we must be able to laugh at ourselves. But there is still rampant homophobia and plenty of anti-gay/anti-trans violence in this country. Just a week ago, I heard three Spanish boys talking about me on the subway, using their favorite slur: pato. Will it never end?

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    Above: Francesca Forcella and Jerard Palazo infrom Take Ueyema’s HEROES; photo by Christopher Duggan for BalletX

    After the interval, Takehiro Ueyama’s HEROES summoned up a world of poignant beauty and mystery – a world we can always access in our imaginations but which the choreographer here transforms into reality. In his program note, Take dedicates the ballet to citizens who played a crucial role in the recovery of Japan from the devastation of World War II.

    Here, Mr. Korsch’s lighting designs (in collaboration with Christopher Ham) were extraordinarily atmospheric, and Eugenia P. Stallings’ costume designs – red garments that seemed at once ancient and ultra-contemporary – evoked the priestly rites that bind the community together.

    The piece opens with a prologue: deep rumblings are heard, and the summoning sound of chimes. From the pit, Tokoshieni – composed by percussionist Kato Hideki and performed by him and violinist Ana Milosavljevic – transports us to an illusory place and time. A red-clad couple emerge from the shadows and perform a slow, stylized duet to the sound of mysterious whispers. An eerie, brooding feeling creeps in; the man performs a slow solo and and the woman responds in kind. They don red jackets and vanish into the darkness.

    The music of John Adams – The Chairman Dances – rises as the full stage becomes illuminated. A diagonal of white chairs stage right becomes a walkway as the dancers enter. They move the chairs about, establishing a place for the evolving ritual. The chairs are lined across the stage and there is a wonderful seated passage of arm and hand gestures. A unison dance and individual walkabouts are highlighted by brief solos. 

    The music turns spacious and the dance slows, only to rebound as the dancers march about. Another unison passage leads to everyone dropping to the floor…only to rise and race about in a circle. Now the jackets come off and are collected; the dancers sit in a semi-circle, with the corpse of a woman covered with a jacket.

    A new beat develops; there is an intense duet which evolves into a trio and then a wild female solo. The lighting continues to play a powerful part in the effect of the choreography. In a visual coup, there is a striking line-up across the space, and the dancers advance towards us. They then fall into single-file and proceed to cross the bridge of chairs, sure of their destiny.

    More of Christopher Duggan’s images from HEROES:

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    Above: dancers Skyler Lubin and Mathis Joubert

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    Above: dancer Itzkan Barbosa

    ~ Oberon

  • TAKE Dance: THERE AND HERE

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    Friday March 27th, 2015 – Takehiro Ueyama’s TAKE Dance celebrating their tenth anniversary with an evening-long work entitled THERE AND HERE, presented at the Schimmel Center. For this special occasion, guest artists Miki Orihara, Amy Young, Nana Tsuda, and Orion Duckstein joined the members of Take’s company, and Take himself appeared in an enigmatic role. Take talks about influences and inspiration here.

    Composer Kato Hideki performed his mystical score live, perched on high in the shadows at the rear of the stage. The music feels improvisational, giving the dancers a soundscape in which their individual expressiveness can be sustained. Hideki’s score has an other-worldly quality, with the sounds of wind blowing, resonant drumming, and a sustained motif of perpetual sonic beeps, which seems like a signal from another world that is trying to reach us.

    For indeed THERE AND HERE straddles two worlds: the world of the living and the unknown world of the afterlife. The performing space, open to the riggings on the sides, is a patch of desert – the sands of time – with a small mound to one side. Pieces of broken altar-rock are scattered in the space, indicating it as a once-sacred setting for some lost or forgotten tribe.

    Darkness has settled over the land, yet a spirit (Nana Tsuda) slowly awakens to sombre, eerily ominous music. Over time various wanderers come into the space, moving in a stylized manner; at times they seem almost like sleepwalkers. Fleeting connections between dancers – all but Take clad in red, unisex overalls – maintain the sense of mystery. Much of the choreography is slow-paced and ritualistic; from time to time there are bursts of activity and ensemble passages where the dancers seem increasingly absorbed into the landscape. The stones are piled, cast down, walked or sat upon; and sand sometimes falls from the sky or is sprinkled in handfuls by the participants. 

    In this purgatorial setting, there were numerous passages which seized our imagination: Jill Echo quietly seeks to re-build the shattered altar; John Eirich and Nana Tsuda rushing about like flying birds and go scampering up the hill; a combative duet for John and Brynt Beitman; an inventively-choreograhed pas de deux duet for Amy Young and Orion Duckstein. Brynt has a solo, observed by the others seated on the rocks. A vivid swaying motif is danced to drummed rhythms; Gina Ianni’s impressive solo (later joined by John Eirich) and a wild duet for Marie Zvosec and Kile Hotchkiss followed by solos for Kile and Brynt show off the members of Take’s company to distinct advantage.

    The girls fling themselves into the arms of the waiting boys, then all the dancers collapse in a domino effect. As the others perform gestural sequences, Orion is isolated and is perhaps being judged. Amy Young appears as a living statue; to intense music she sifts the sands. In a moment of exquisite beauty, Miki Orihara walks along a pathway of stone blocks – so simple yet so effective.

    At last Take – a priestly figure all in black – returns, and the restless spirits at last sink into rest on the desolate Earth.

  • TAKE Dance @ WestFest/Rehearsal

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    On December 10th, the men of TAKE Dance will perform the dazzling quartet from Takehiro Ueyama’s SALARYMAN at WestFest as part of the four-night celebration of dance at the Cunningham Studio at Westbeth, 55 Bethune Street in Manhattan.

    SALARYMAN premiered in May 2011 and was received with great enthusiasm; another opportunity to see the complete work arises this Winter when TAKE Dance appear at Baruch Performing Arts Center, February 8th – 12th, 2012. Details to follow.

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    Kokyat’s photos here are from a studio rehearsal for the SALARYMAN quartet on November 26th at DANY Studios. The dancers are John Eirich, Kile Hotchkiss, Clinton Edward Martin and Kei Tsuruharatani.

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    John Eirich, Kei Tsuruharatani

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    Kyle Hotchkiss, John Eirich

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    Clinton Edward Martin

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    Bump

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    Swirl

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    The dance is breathless in its energy and relentless in its pacing.

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    Choreographer Take Ueyama giving notes, with dancer Kei Tsuruharatani.

    All photos by Kokyat.