Tag: Thursday July

  • Pillow Prep: MADBOOTS

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    Above: studio showing of (SAD BOYS), the newest work from MADBOOTS; photo by Travis Magee

    Thursday July 9th, 2015 – MADBOOTS, the daring and unique all-male dance company founded by Austin Diaz and Jonathan Campbell, will be presenting their newest work (SAD BOYS) from August 26th – 30th, 2015, at the Doris Duke Theatre at the Jacob’s Pillow Dance Festival. Tickets and more performance information here. Support this production by donating here.

    Today MADBOOTS hosted a studio showing of (SAD BOYS) for friends of the Company; my photographer/friend Travis Magee met me there to document the event. Joining Austin and Jonathan for (SAD BOYS) are dancers Robbie Moore, Dan Walczak, and Chuck Wilt.

    Performed to a deftly assembled musical suite, (SAD BOYS) runs nearly an hour and unfolds in sequences of madly passionate movement laced with interludes of reflective stillness. It explores so many facets of the transition from youth to manhood: the desire for companionship, the hesitant awakening of sexual awareness, and the harsh lessons of mistaken affection. Tenderness, amiable horseplay fraught with desire, betrayal, brutality, and soul-rending despair are all elements of this journey which so many of us have made over the years. (SAD BOYS) resonates with both the wary pleasures and the terror of self-discovery.

    The choreography is space-filling, alternating raw physicality with unexpected passages of lyricism. The five dancers are unabashed in the athleticism of their dancing and in the intimacy of their interaction. As the dance progresses, the boys gradually shed their clothing, leaving themselves in a state of touching vulnerability by the end.

    Without giving away anything more about (SAD BOYS), here are some of Travis Magee’s images from the studio showing:

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    Jonathan Campbell and Austin Diaz

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    Austin Diaz and Dan Walczak

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    Dan Walczak

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    Chuck Wilt

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    Robbie Moore, Jonathan Campbell, Austin Diaz

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    Dan Walczak, Austin Diaz

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    Dan Walczak, Jonathan Campbell

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    Dan Walczak

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    Jonathan, Chuck, Dan, and Robbie

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    Jonathan Campbell, Chuck Wilt

  • Emery LeCrone for Works & Process

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    Above: Emery LeCrone, photo by Kokyat

    Thursday July 25th, 2013 – Choreographer Emery LeCrone has a new and unusual commission from the Guggenheim’s Works & Process series. In the past, Works & Process have invited two choreographers to create works to the same piece of music and present them on the same programme. Emery’s current commission gives this concept a new twist: she has been asked to create two ballets to the same piece of music, using different dancers in each. Today at the Guggenheim, friends of the choreographer were invited to watch a working rehearsal for this project.

    The music is – blessedly – Bach, specifically the partita #2 in C minor. When we arrived, Emery was working out some partnering details with dancers Kaitlyn Gilliland and Alfredo Solivan. A second couple – Sarah Atkins and Richard Isaac – then rehearsed on a passage where they dance in unison, employing a fast-paced gestural language. As the hour drew to a close, the four dancers appeared together and ran thru the segment, dancing to the music which has now become visual.

    Specific dates for the Works & Process perfomances of Emery’s Bach double-bill have not yet been set, but it will most likely be seen in March 2014. Further details will be forthcoming.

  • BalaSole Dance Company @ DTW

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    Thursday July 28, 2011 – BalaSole Dance Company opening their season tonight at Dance Theater Workshop. Founded by Roberto Villanueva, BalaSole offers young dancers/choreographers a stage for performing their work and for introducing themselves to a wider public. In this, the second season of Balasole offerings, thirteen dancers (including Mr. Villanueva) were presented in self-created solo works. Click on the above photo to enlarge.

    This evening’s participants:

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    Teal Darkenwald
     
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    Rockshana Desances
     
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    Odman Felix
     
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    Liz Fleche
     
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    Marie-Christine Giordano
     
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    Martha Patricia Hernandez
     
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    Yuki Ishiguro
     
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    Alan Khoutakoun
     
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    Francesco Pireddu
     
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    Jessica Smith
     
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    William Tomaskovic
     
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    Roberto Villanueva

    To open and close the evening, Roberto Villanueva and his fellow performers devised a sunny, beachy ensemble number (top photo) set to Manuel de Falla’s Ritual Fire Dance.

    A full evening of solos might have become an exercise in tedious repetition but the individuality of each dancer assured that the programme maintained freshness from start to finish. The performance was well-paced with nary a lull, and the excellent lighting and stage management of Miriam Crowe were a big plus in this kind of presentation.

    We had attended the dress rehearsal (where Kokyat took all these photos) which was really good but it seemed for the performance that all the dancers really raised their communicative and technical level.

    Needless to say, some of the dancers and works presented were more appealing or impressive than others; it’s interesting that no one chose music that could be considered ‘classical’ (aside from the de Falla for the ensemble) but each dancer’s music worked well for his/her individual style.

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    The evening started beautifully with Marie-Christine Giordano in silhouette (above) as she began her solo entitled In and Out, a work-in-progress. Ms. Giordano is perhaps the best-established and most familiar name among the participants; her artistry and stage experience shone throughout this expressive solo.

    Thereafter it was the men who seemed to offer both the widest variety of dance-styling, personal appeal and technical polish. The women were all attractive and had lovely things to say but in a more generalized sense. 

    Here’s a detailing of the dancing boys:

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    Odman Felix (above) from Brazil gave a supple physicality to his solo. Masculine and posessed of raw power, his solo Forces had a contained sexuality that was somehow also spiritual.

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    Alan Khoutakoun’s solo (above) benefited not only from his subtle and intense delivery and his sleek physique but also from the most distinctive lighting of the evening.

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    William Tomaskovic (above) used the space with real command, his physical elasticity and brilliant dramatic focus making a particularly fine impression. His choice of Laurie Anderson to dance to was also inspired: quirky, yet oddly touching: “Come as you are, pay as you go…”

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    Yuki Ishiguro (above) from Japan called upon a fusion-style that incorporated elements of break-dance, hip-hop and ballet. In his solo Another World, Yuki seemed encased in glass and used his hands with subtle texturing to express his captivity. Sometimes collapsing like a broken marionette, his solo was perhaps the most personal of the evening. Having escaped his glass prison, he seems at the end to be pondering whether he had been safer inside.
      

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    Francesco Pireddu (from Sardinia) pictured above in his aptly-named solo Silence? There was nary a sound as this intriguing dancer evoked images of Marcel Marceau with his fluent mimetic gestures.

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    Roberto Villanueva: a boy and his bear. Roberto, a virtuoso by nature, tonight presented a playful solo called The Child Inside. I was left wondering which is cuddlier: Roberto or his teddy? 

    The sub-title of this evening’s programme by BalaSole was True Colors and the multi-cultural background of the participants gave the evening a fine sense of diversity and a perspective on dance that is broader than we usually see in a single evening’s presentation.

    There is an additional gallery of Kokyat’s images from this presentation here.

    Roberto Villanueva’s inspired concept of providing a stage for dancer-types that are under-represented in larger companies and his valuable mentoring of the participants make BalaSole as a unique venture in the contemporary New York dance scene. I’ll look forward now to keeping Roberto and BalaSole on my A-list.

    All photos by Kokyat, with my ever-lasting gratitude.