Mayoral Proclamation #2

It’s seems our beloved Mayor Emanuel has been busy showing his love for dance.  On the heels of declaring this past Monday Bill Kurtis & Donna La Pietra Day for their contributions to the city’s arts and non-profit scene, he comes out with another proclamation making Friday, November 18, 2011 MERCE CUNNINGHAM DAY in Chicago!

This is to coincide with the Merce Cunningham Dance Company who will be in town November 18 and 19 performing at the Harris Theater (co-presented by the Dance Center at Columbia College) on the second to last stop on their Legacy Tour which kicked off two years ago.

 

Happy Halloween!

RB as the Evil Queen in "Snow White".

Dance this weekend:  Check out Lucky Plush Productions at the MCA tonight or Saturday, Could Gate Dance Theatre at the Harris this weekend, Synapse Arts tonight at Holstein Park or Ailey II tonight at Governors State University.  I’m going to Cloud Gate tonight and  the Zombie Revolution at House of Blues tomorrow.  Merde to my zombie dancers!  Have a fun and safe weekend!

Henry V Delights at Dance Center

Post modern guru David Gordon has a way with words.  He uses them as a structure, a starting point, an inspiration and then turns them into a complex living creative act right before your eyes on the stage.  So it is with his Pick Up Performance Co(s)‘ presentation of Dancing Henry Five this weekend at The Dance Center of Columbia College.  This 2004 revival is part theater, part performance art, part dance, part music collage.  A deconstructed take on Shakespeare’s Henry V, it not only entertains, but offers a commentary on war that still resonates today.

The program calls it a “reduction” of Shakespeare’s work.  Once in the theater, the stage shows what Gordon has reduced it down to – the bare necessities.  Everything for the performance is on the stage in plain view.  No wings, props strewn about the stage and performers standing around the edges waiting.  Costumes of colorful, but faded rugby shirts with shorts suggest uniforms of a different kind of battle, rather than the 1415 Battle of Agincourt that they are about to partially recreate.  The performers walk around the stage carrying signs with pertinent information (title, names, please turn off cell phones) passing by like the opening credits of a movie.  Valda Setterfield (Gordon’s wife and former dancer with Merce Cunningham) acts as narrator and chorus moving the action along and adding sly, sometimes biting commentary – Gordon’s,  not her own, she states – as well as joining in the dance.  At 77, she’s still a dynamic performer with impeccable timing.  (Go on with your bad self, Valda!)

Dancing Henry Five incorporates spoken word along with audio excerpts from the stage and movie versions of Henry V with musical interjections of William Walton’s score from the film.  The first Shakespeare quote heard is “a kingdom for a stage” and Gordon transforms this stage into a kingdom, ocean and battlefield.  At times funny, poignant, sad and moving, the one-hour production is a creative, quirky take on a classic historical poem.  Shakespeare through the looking glass.  Seven dancers make the action happen, most notable former American Ballet Theatre and New York City Ballet star Robert La Fosse.  His trademark mole on his left cheek is barely visible through his make up, but watching him do a low quick jeté shows the technique, if not the flexibility, is still there.

As the plot takes us to war against the French, one can’t help but be reminded of more current events.  “War takes minds off deficits”, says the narrator.  Indeed.  Originally choreographed in 2004, a year after we began the war in Iraq, the words bring a poignant pause to the audience.  A quilt carried across the “water” includes an American flag, even though Columbus wouldn’t discover America for another 77 years.  One image that sticks is dancers standing on sheets of material being slowly pulled across the stage like ships.

There is one performance left of this interesting post modern take on Shakespeare’s play.  Tickets are still available.

Pick Up Performance Co(s) – Dancing Henry Five

The Dance Center at Columbia College, 1306 S, Michigan, 312.369.8330

Modern Maven

Dancer Adriana Durant. Photo by William Frederking.

The dance form is illusive to many, at times, including me.  The maven is Shirley Mordine. With  her namesake company performing for an astounding 42 years, plus her creation in ’69 of The Dance Center of Columbia College and the fact that she’s mentored, taught or worked with pretty much everyone in the city’s modern community – Mordine is nothing short of a force of nature.  This weekend, Mordine & Co. Dance Theater, along with RE|Dance Group and mentee Alitra Cartman, will be performing its spring concert NEXT 2011 at the Ruth Page Center.  On the program:  a revival of Mordine’s 2009 work Illuminations, a trio The Mysterious Disappearance of the Second Youngest Sister by RE|Dance’s Michael Estanich, Mordine & Co’s Emerging Artist Mentee for 2011, Alitra Cartman’s new work and the world premiere of Mordine’s LifeSpeak.

Sitting in on rehearsal last week, I was fascinated by how the group worked.  There seemed to be an unseen force guiding the process, an energy connecting them all physically, mentally and emotionally, so that everyone was on the same page without saying anything.  Of course, the initial source was Mordine herself, quietly interjecting  notes while the group ran through the pieces.  Speak to us…tell us the story.  Use your phrasing, rhythmic sense.  If you hear yourself landing, your not absorbing your weight.  Play with your weight, don’t force it.  The dancers — and this is an impressive group of six – take in the corrections on the fly, evolving as they go.  *Side note:  It was especially nice to see Atalee Judy, a unique and strong presence, dancing.  I haven’t seen her perform in quite a while (my mistake), but I’m still reeling from a duet she create a million years ago with Robbie Cook involving straight jackets.

It was a treat to finally meet the Modern Maven I’d heard so much about over the last 15-or-so years.  I have to say, I’m smitten.  Here are some excerpts from our conversation.

RB:  42 years – can you give me some insight into why you think this company has lasted this long?

SM:  I’ve never been asked this question.  I think it’s persistence, for one thing.  I always say that when I’m about ¾ of the way through the piece I’m working on, I know what I want to explore next.  You explore that area and that stimulates another kind of curiosity.  I think that’s the reason.  I’ve had some really solid groups of companies…really excellent people.  I think they come to understand that there really is an aesthetic operating here that has continuity to it, that has a clear focus to it.

RB:  You mentioned “next” and what’s next, is that why you titled the show NEXT?

SM:  This started about three years ago and we decided to make it an annual event.  We usually premiere some new work and include our mentoring project.  I like to invite companies perhaps that haven’t been seen as much, companies that maybe are a little younger and could stand some exposure.  It becomes more than just your company.  First of all, it’s great for audience development.  But you’ve got the mentoring project, and work from another company and our work.  We always try to do something new.   It’s a little collage of performances and it opens it up, so it’s not just exclusively a company performance.

RB:  How did you pick RE|Dance?

SM:  Michael  was a mentee of mine many years ago when we were at The Dance Center, and he had gone off to Ohio State and got his masters and is working professionally and is now teaching at a college in Wisconsin, but he’s beginning to show work here in this area.  I went to see Michael and Lucy’s (Vurusic Riner) performance at Hamlin Park two or three months ago.  I just think he’s a really fine young choreographer.  He’s the kind of kid I like to give more exposure.

RB:  Tell me about the new work, the world premiere.

SM:  I’ve done a lot of work that has to do with giving power to your voice…that has to do with a sense of insurgency and that undervoice would always come through.  It will out time you eventually.  Look at what’s happening in the Middle East. Here are people, that for the first time, can sense that their voice means something.  It took me back immediately to what theater is fundamentally.  You’ve got a group of people sitting in a circle, whatever culture…and they’re telling stories to each other.  It’s completely natural.  If one pulls back and gesticulates a little bit, you’ve got theater.  That’s what we come from, telling stories to each other.  Then you start thinking how stories evolve.  (Laughing) We are all the best liars in the world.  I was playing with that phenomenon of how stories come about and how information changes and how they evolve into something else.  We really worked through a difficult process with the dancers discovering how to tell their own stories.  That’s not an easy thing to help them figure out how to embed sensation and information and then work it through gesture that is not literal, but that, to me, is dance.  I’m always curious as to what someone has to say.  I’m always curious about information, how it transforms and changes.  That’s always been my impulse in most of my work.

RB:  For Life Speak, what was the process like?

 SM:  My dropping words, improvising to drop sensation, learning the skill of not interpreting that, but the sensation itself having physical reality.  And that, of course, is the ultimate example of abstraction.  You’re not demonstrating, but feeling…just trust the feeling coming through.  I’m curious how people examine and look at information, especially kinetically because that’s my field.

NEXT 2011, April 29 & 30 at 8 pm

Ruth Page Center for the Arts

Tickets:  800.838.3006 or brownpapertickets.com