Posted by: trailerpilot | 10:23::2009

Review: Lucky Plush’s sampladelic conversation piece.

Meghann Wilkinson, Hogan McLaughlin and Jeremy Blair in Punk Yankees. Photo by William Frederking.

Meghann Wilkinson, Hogan McLaughlin and Jeremy Blair in Punk Yankees. Photo by William Frederking.

Julia Rhoads‘ latest evening-length work bucks trends by embracing them. Before and after Punk Yankees — and during a brief intermission packed with enough stimuli to make me regret needing to use the restroom — a live feed of at-replies to Lucky Plush’s Twitter handle were met with instantaneous responses from the account as well as those of the piece’s eight performers. The transition from pre-show music by Girl Talk into a score only slightly less mashed-up similarly showed no fear toward new forms and boundary-testing of copyright law. What sticks about Yankees is how it turns a spotlight on aging notions about choreographic originality gone translucent from living in shadow.

A surprising and very funny opening scene gives way to a deluge of information recognizable to avid dancegoers (less-so to casual or novice audiences — more on that in a bit). Samplings of Ohad Naharin, Bob Fosse and Trisha Brown are fed to Lucky Plush’s ravenous grinder and made into sausages of new and old, classical and modern, obscure and iconic. Rhoads’ own repertoire is a primary ingredient throughout, satisfying to longtime followers of her company. For those that aren’t, it probably works just as well as a visual bonding agent. Read More…

Posted by: trailerpilot | 10:22::2009

Flo-mo.

Posted by: trailerpilot | 10:20::2009

In dance, this is what we call “big news.”

Gustavo Ramirez Sansano. Photo by Cheryl Mann.

Gustavo Ramirez Sansano. Photo by Cheryl Mann.

Luna Negra Dance Theater has announced the long-awaited appointment of founder Eduardo Vilaro’s successor. Gustavo Ramirez Sansano, whom Vilaro invited to create on the company beginning in 2001, is a Spanish-born dancer and choreographer whose international career began at Nederlands Dans Theater II under Gerald Tibbs and Jiří Kylián and Hubbard Street Dance Chicago under Jim Vincent. His choreographic career has been prolific and acclaimed, garnering him top awards at Barcelona’s Ricardo Moragas Barcelona Competition, Hamburg’s Dom Perignon Choreographic Competition and Las Artes Escénicas de la Comunidad Valenciana 2. Companies on which he’s created include Compañía Nacional de Danza, Hamburg Ballett, BalletMet, Budapest Dance Theatre, NDT II and Dominic Walsh Dance Theater, among many others in the U.S. and Europe. For the last four years he has served as the Artistic Director of his own company in Valencia, TITOYAYA Dance Project.

It’s a solid and exciting choice for the company, and very good news for Chicago and Luna Negra’s rapidly-expanding list of tour venues. His repertoire and new work are a great fit for LNDT’s unique roster of talented dancers; he’ll take up the post formally in June. Sansano says, “I’m eager to begin.”

Posted by: trailerpilot | 10:20::2009

How to end a week.

Molly Shanahan/Mad Shak in Stamina of Curiosity. Photo by William Frederking.

Molly Shanahan/Mad Shak in Stamina of Curiosity. Photo by William Frederking.

I gave myself a pat on the back for surviving the first four days of this month, but the action just won’t let up (in the best way). I’ve already told you a thing or two about Lucky Plush Productions and Hedwig Dances‘ engagements this weekend, both of which I’m checking out after a music doubleheader Wednesday of Dead Man’s Bones [Ryan Gosling (yes, that one) and Zach Shields’ band] and my pop obsession of 2009, La Roux. Giordano Jazz Dance Chicago is decidedly not messing around with their fall Harris program, whose tentpole is the world premiere of Rennie Harris‘ “I Want You” but also includes a horn o’ beyond-plenty o’ new works (by Autumn Eckman, with musicians Dan Myers and John Ovnik, and Lindsey Leduc Brenner) and repertory faves. I had such a lovely time in Madison last weekend I’m going back to Wisco this Saturday for Molly Shanahan/Mad Shak’s Stamina of Curiosity: Our Strange Elevations at Alverno Presents in Milwaukee. Previous presentations from the Stamina series — three of which I danced in — have built upon/recontextualized their predecessors the way a grandmother can transfix her children’s children with the same story time and time again. How Shanahan’s research will play out on a large proscenium stage like the Pitman Theatre can’t be guessed, but you can count on every facet of the experience figuring into the ensemble’s performance. Read More…

Posted by: trailerpilot | 10:19::2009

How to start a week.

Jessica Hudson. Photo courtesy Walkabout Theater Company.

Jessica Hudson. Photo courtesy Walkabout Theater Company.

Hostess and MC Jyl Fehrenkamp does a fine job of spreading the word, but in case you haven’t been checking in over the weekend, another Poonie’s Cabaret lands at Links Hall tonight. Per tradition, it’s $5 or PWYC, starts at 8:00pm, well maybe 8:15, and fills up fast. The lineup esta noche:

Tina Gillis
David Lakein
Silvita Diaz Brown
J’Sun Howard
Ashley Thornton
Clowns Lez BoBo and Na KoKo
The Poonie’s Cabaret Singers
Jessica Hudson

Posted by: trailerpilot | 10:19::2009

Review: The Tasting Room

I had to wait until tonight to see The Moving Architects‘ bill at Links Hall  — three works from TMA and a solo by guest Ayako Kato — due to a weekend road trip. Called The Tasting Room (bait for food analogies I’ll do my best to resist), each short dance was a direct shot of bold flavor whose components, and the chemistry between them, are difficult to name and only in retrospect.

ECN

Erin Carlisle Norton.

“Standing Girl with Raised Right Elbow” a premiere solo created and performed by Erin Carlisle Norton, opened the evening with a glimpse of the source from which her choreography on others springs. In the vein of the big-picture-minded, cusp-of-theatrical pieces I know and love as her unique style, “Elbow” heralded developments in it of recondite density and coordinational complexity. In a jewel-toned, asymmetrical dress and leggings, Norton makes her way across upstage with a spill of small, precise movements that face her in every direction yet somehow feel collectively profile. Lighting designer Francesca Bourgault, in whom Norton has found a partner perfectly-attuned to the temper of her work, drew attention to her every move, leaving her alone in dim whites and plunging her into luxurious golds. Read More…

Posted by: trailerpilot | 10:17::2009

Double paned.

The full spectrum of Philip Glass was on display Friday at the MCA. A remount of his collaboration with Lucinda Childs and Sol LeWitt framed his work as the uttermost in formal invention and rigorous intricacy, while his solo performance at the piano stripped that same mystique from his reputation leaving himself, the artist and individual, admirably available and unceremoniously human.

Philip Glass. Photo by Stewart Cohen.

Philip Glass. Photo by Stewart Cohen.

At the bench, Glass’ familiar selections developed new existences influenced by the moment. Upon beginning a suite of eight of his Etudes, he introduced them as “studies of methods of playing.” The way this statement unfolded itself as his performance continued was profound. His readings shared meticulousness, ambition, abandon, humanity and humility. His compositions’ trademark trills were sometimes crystalline, sometimes fused by heat and age into miasmatic soundscapes. The second étude in evinced gravity acting on the muscles and bones of his arms as he’d raise them up, form tools, and release to visit their weight upon the keys; the second to last was by contrast pure and objective, an example of the technique his work sings with or without.

Metamorphosis 2 and the opening/closing of Glassworks, pieces that’ve become inescapable — especially in the concert dance realm — bookended the evening (I didn’t see him, but hope to God someone invited Alejandro Cerrudo). The breadth of both feeling and concept during his performance of each amazed and brought me back to what familiarity through recordings has dulled. Read More…

Posted by: trailerpilot | 10:15::2009

Review: Othello

Wednesday’s well-sold opening of Othello was received with snowballing enthusiasm: the Joffrey’s first round of bows got a generous helping of whoops and hollers, but by the third curtain call (and Lar Lubovitch’s surprise appearance), the crowd was on its feet yelling “Bravo!”

Fabrice Calmels as Othello.

Fabrice Calmels as Othello.

All the ingredients that usually lead an audience to that response — hey, I guess it was great! — are there: it feels about half as long as its three acts and two-plus hours, and the George Tsypin scenery and Ann Hould-Ward costumes, production originals on loan from ABT and SFB, look like a million bucks (making their 600-grand budget a bargain). Lubovitch’s choreography ricochets between epic gestures and showy lifts without ever getting stuck between and its male leads, while not on the same page, were having a blast. Where the cracks show, besides in Tsypin’s ice-sculpturesque pillars and panels, is in Lubovitch’s trouble deciding how much story to tell and how to tell it. April Daly’s Desdemona, beautiful legs and feet and a furrowed brow where a character should’ve been, didn’t help.

Program notes tell us the choreographer “does not seek to create a precise telling…but rather to relate the legend of the Moor through a passage of images in movement which, over time, accumulate to capture the essence of the characters and their story.” Sounds great in theory, but by the third act we’re a stone’s throw from pantomime — the idea of an Othello-as-tone-poem, it seems, went the way of the Turkish fleet. And it’s too bad, because Lubovitch can tug a narrative fragment in all kinds of directions in dances where no plot is involved; a true abstraction of Shakespeare’s tragedy, perhaps à la Jean-Christophe Maillot’s Roméo et Juliette, is something he’s shown elsewhere he has the creative tools for. Read More…

Posted by: trailerpilot | 10:15::2009

Fresh Flavor: Plush ‘Wig Edition

Michel Rodriguez, left, and Jessie Gutierrez of Hedwig Dances.

Michel Rodriguez, left, and Jessie Gutierrez of Hedwig Dances.

Pop my ‘pill for Lucky Plush’s 10th Anniversary production at the Dance Center, Punk Yankees and read up on the next event of Hedwig Dances’ 25th.

Posted by: trailerpilot | 10:14::2009

Fresh Feats: Happy Anniversary! Edition

Anniversary

In today’s Windy City Times I run down what Hedwig Dances, Lucky Plush Productions and River North Chicago Dance Company have planned for their birthdays, as well as The Moving Architects’ upcoming show and other hap’nins.

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