She’s Really Gone!

Pointe shoes, electric guitars, muscle and fierce art collide on the MCA Stage this weekend.  Karole Armitage, dubbed the “punk ballerina” in 1984 by Vanity Fair Magazine brings her troupe to Chicago as a compliment to the museum’s exhibition This Will Have Been:  Art, Love & Politics in the 1980s.  After taking a break from her company Armitage Ballet for 15 years while working in Europe, she came back to revive and rename the group Armitage Gone! Dance in 2005.  Why gone?  “One of the early pieces I did, almost my first piece was called Gone (A Real Gone Dance – 1982),” Armitage said.  “I feel like I’m gone from the mainstream, I’m gone from the predictable, I’m often just plain gone.  It’s also a hipster term from the 50’s, like ‘she’s a real gone gal’.  I liked the multiple meanings.  I just didn’t want to take myself so seriously.” This woman that doesn’t take herself seriously, it seems, has done it all.  She’s danced for George Balanchine and Merce Cunningham, started her own company, lived in Europe for 15 years choreographing and directing companies, re-started her own company, worked with Mikhail Baryshnikov, Rudolph Nureyev and Michael Jackson, choreographed Madonna’s Vogue video, received a Tony nomination for choreographing the Broadway revival of Hair and is currently choreographing the newest Cirque du Soleil tent show in Montreal.  “It’s funny.  In my career, I’ve worked with children, singers, dancers a now every kind of acrobat and very shortly I’ll be working with William Wegman on a dog ballet, so I’m adding animals to my list,” she said.  “I’ve covered the spectrum now.”

For the MCA appearance, the company’s first since 2008, AGD revives two of Armitage’s 80’s works –  Drastic-Classicism (1981) and The Watteau Duets (1985) – and her 2011 piece GAGA-Gaku.  The Rogue Ballerina talked with the Punk Ballerina over the phone one Sunday afternoon.  Here are some excerpts from our fascinating conversation.

You were born in Wisconsin and grew up in Kansas and Colorado.  How did you end up in Switzerland for your first job?

I started taking ballet when I was 4 years old in Kansas with a woman from New York City Ballet, so I was bitten by the magic of the art form.  At age 12 or 13, everyone was saying to be really serious, you have to go study full-time, you can’t just take class in Kansas.   So I went to the School of American Ballet in NY in the summer.  I started going to junior high and high school at the North Carolina School for the Arts.  That was the only school in the U.S. both academics and very serious artistic, performing arts training at the time.  Summers were in NY.  Balanchine fell in love with Suzanne Farrell and she got married to someone else, so he decided to move part-time to Switzerland to escape his lovelorn state and he took all of us from the graduating class with him to Switzerland.  That’s how I got there, by a kind of fluke. 

And then you went to dance with Merce.  What made you want to make that jump?

I always loved doing the leotard ballets by Balanchine ( “Agon”, “The Four Temperaments”) that were really more modern.  Psychologically, I was a modern woman. I never felt comfortable, at that age, putting on a tutu and being kind of European.  It didn’t make sense to me, so why not do something even more modern, more of my time.  I’d never seen Cunningham, I’d never studied modern dance.  I went and took a class and I just loved it.  It used all of the technique you have in ballet, plus new thinking about movement and music.  It was a very exciting place to confront ideas.

Had you always been interested in choreography?

I never really thought about becoming a choreographer or anything.  I just thought there was no one doing what I imagined dance to be.  There was this oozing gap and I just decided to try and people really liked it.  I thought I’d probably only do one piece.  It was just an experiment and it just kind of snowballed.  I was asked to another piece and another piece, then Paris Opera asked me…it all happened in an organic, unexpected way. 

What do you look for in a dancer?

I do love technique.  The more skill that way, the better because I think it gives you freedom.  You can just carve it and not even think about it.  I like virtuosity. I like being able to see the body go to the absolute with new dimensions of movement.  Technique is important for that freedom, but only if it is a real person living inside that body that has something to say.  I’m not interested in virtuosity for virtuosity’s sake.  I really look for personality and imagination.  People who are daring, who are willing to participate in a the creative process that the rules are unknown…it takes people who really have courage and are willing to go down these unknown paths.  It’s very hard to find dancers who combine all of those qualities.  Looking at the whole company, it’s like each person is a different spice and I’m always trying to make a beautiful meal.  I don’t want two people that are alike.  I want people who are different.

Everything I’ve been reading about Drastic-Classicism says it is an iconic work.  Why was it such a big deal in 1981?

There are electric guitars on stage. It used Cunningham technique in the model of Balanchine, so a new vocabulary was born.  In addition to that, it really had this raw, theatricality and wildness and jubilation of destruction.  That punk feeling.  It’s a very youthful piece.  It’s very free-spirited.  Sometimes the guitars are used as partners.  It really was punk, modern dance and ballet put together.  That was a very new idea. 

With the two revivals, did you change anything?

 There’s not a great video, so every step isn’t exactly as it used to be.  The dancers in my company weren’t even born yet!  That was about the spirit of counter-culture and the joy of being marginal.  There is no counter-culture now.  Their inner life is different.  I don’t know how to recreate literally that spirit and put it into people.  They’re different people, so it’s somewhat different.  That’s one of the extraordinary things about dance, it’s so of its moment. That’s a great part of its power.  It gets you in touch with now.  Being in the moment and feeling our time. We change – even though the notes are the same, it comes out different.  It’s as close as I knew how to do it.  The Watteau Duets is a little easier to revive.  It was me and one partner, so it’s quite the same.  It’s a relationship from attraction to romance to erotic complicity to neurosis.  It’s been fascinating to work with my dancers who technically they’re better than I was on pointe.  When they put on their pointe shoes and dance a duet, they take on this “I have to be perfect” ballet mentality.  To free them from that and get them to be completely comfortable with who they are and show who they are rather than trying to conform to an idea of what ballet looks like, which was a big process.  It’s fascinating to me that it wouldn’t be completely natural to them.

How did you get them to not think that way?

A lot of rehearsal and talking about it from lots of different points of view to help them find it for themselves.  It needs a sense of irony and freedom that takes a lot of work to get to be so comfortable and confident and secure in their sense of being a woman.  It’s a complicated thing to demand of them.  It took quite a bit of work to have them break free from the mold and become completely themselves. 

When Vanity Fair dubbed you the “punk ballerina”, what was your initial reaction?  Was your career helped by the exposure or did you not want to be labeled? 

I think I liked the label.  To me it really captured that I was interested in the most fine articulate balletic side of dance, but also the raw, visceral and unpredictable side that comes from rock-and-roll culture.  I thought it summed up the spirit of my work in a great way.  Honestly, I think it caused a lot of jealousy. I wasn’t in the ballet world, I wasn’t in the modern world and I think it was disturbing to the traditional dance world.  But, of course, that’s who I was and who I think I still am.  I don’t really fit into these categories.  It’s some other different kind of thing.  I’m still this odd-ball person.  Of course, the publicity was fantastic.  If only Vanity Fair was doing more dance.  Dance has become more marginalized in mainstream America.  It’s just not part of mass culture.  We need that exposure.  I wish there was more of it.

Armitage Gone! Dance at the MCA Stage, 220 E. Chicago Ave.  April 26 – 28 at 7:30 p.m.  Tickets are $35.  Call 312.397.4010 or visit mcachicago.org.

 

Sneak Peek: Joffrey’s Incantations

Choreographer Val Caniparoli.

RB sat in on a run-thru of Val Caniparoli’s world premiere for Joffrey Ballet this afternoon. Incantations is a whirlwind of movement from start to finish. As lead dancer Matthew Adamczyk* said, “It’s like being shot out of a cannon.”  The full-costume run (men shirtless in nude tights w/ sanscrit verse, women in nude leotards with spirals and lines) showed off dancers still a week out from the premiere, but at the top of their game.  This work is difficult and non-stop, yet some of the dancers were smiling as if they were delighted (or perhaps delirious) with performing it.  Solo passes garnered applause from the dancers watching.  Duets are dramatic and fast, with a few partnering moves reminiscent of Mr. A’s Light Rain and William Forsythe’s works.  A brief male duet featuring Adamczyk and Rory Hohenstein is…hot!  In fact, every dancer in the piece looks great – a tribute to the choreographer.

Caniparoli’s Incantations is joined by Edwaard Liang’s Age of Innocence and Jerome Robbins’ In the Night on the Spring Desire program.  Fantastic news!  RB also learned that Miguel Angel  Blanco, who was sidelined with an Achilles tendon injury last season requiring two surgeries, will be performing a piece on opening night.  Welcome back.

Joffrey Ballet Spring Desire runs April 25 – May 6 at the Auditorium Theatre, 50 E. Congress Pkwy.  Tickets:  800.982.2787 or visit ticketmaster.com.

*Click here to read my preview of Incantations in Windy City Times.

Meeting at the Edge

Natya & Mordine collide in "Pushed to the Edge". Photo by Ravi Ganapathy.

Last Saturday, East met West choreographically on the stage in Skokie.  Supported in part by the Audience Architects MetLife Stages for Dance Initiative, Indian Bharata Natyam dance company Natya Dance Theatre and modern staple Mordine & Co. Dance Theater shared an evening of dance at the North Shore Center for the Performing Arts.  The two stylistically divergent companies have worked together before and the respect for the respective art forms was evident in the performance.  A note from directors Hema Rajagopalan and Shirley Mordine in the front of the program talked about the collaboration.  “The choreography is undertaken with the understanding that culture is written by, in and through the body, and that how we move is in many respects who we are.”

Two works from early collaborations  started the show.  Two Rivers (2007) presented two duets side by side: one gestural, precise and percussive – the other earthy, grounded and present with the two rivers theme representing “the image of two bodies of water moving separately”.  The couples dancing in linear patterns intersected and passed each other like streams and seemed to be using the aesthetically different styles to say the same thing.  Lovely.  Sahridaya, from 2008, was a short, sweet duet to Philip Glass music with one dancer representing each company.  The stark contrast of the dancers, choreography and styles made for a really interesting study in form.  Ushasi Naha’s thin frame and pristine, placed approach against Mary Kate Sickel’s muscular, rounded, organic movement.

The title work – Pushed to the Edge – featured live musicians (barefoot) on stage.  Wings out, the stage deconstructed as well as folding chairs a la Ohad Naharin’s Minus 16 and video panels on the back scrim added a contemporary feel to the 15-dancer, all-female, cross-company piece.   The groups with Natya in beige and Mordine in sage green (beautiful costumes for all pieces by the fabulous Jeff Hancock!) took turns center stage in a passive, progressive dance off joining together at the edge of choreographic similarities, but never fully crossing over to the other style.  It was wonderful to see so many talented dancers together in such a cohesive and unique work.

 

Spring Desire Affinity Night

I’m excited to announce that three weeks from today, Wednesday, May 2nd, RB is partnering with the fabulous Catherine Tully of 4dancers and the Joffrey Ballet for an exclusive event at Joffrey Tower.  Spring Desire Affinity Night is a chance for you to see live excerpts from the Spring Desire program, listen to a Q&A about the show with Joffrey Artistic Director Ashley Wheater and stay for FREE cocktails and hors d’ouervres.  This is the perfect chance to get an insiders view of the beautiful studios and mingle with some of the finest artists in our city.  Bring a friend that’s never seen ballet before and show them what they’ve been missing.

Attendees will receive 50% off tickets* to the final weekend of Spring Desire at the Auditorium Theatre of Roosevelt University.
*Offer not valid on previously purchased tickets.  (Please note: attendees are NOT required to purchase tickets.)

Here are the deets:

Wednesday, May 2
5:45 pm Registration
6:00 pm Program and Q&A
7:00 pm Cocktails and Hors d’ouevres

Joffrey Tower
10 East Randolph Street, Chicago

World-class dancing on a week night, inside scoop on the creative process and don’t forget – this is a FREE event!  Make your reservation now.  I hope to see you there.

RSVP by Wednesday, April 25 – Please include your name and number of attendees.  Email affinity@joffrey.org or call 312-784-4640

 

Another Daley in Chicago

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre dancers in "Revelations". Photo by Christopher Duggan.

In middle school, Sarah Daley came to Chicago’s Auditorium Theatre (ATRU) to see Alvin Ailey American Dance Theater (AAADT) perform.  She left inspired, but never anticipating that a few years later, at 25, she would be getting ready to perform on that very stage as part of the acclaimed company.  “It’s so crazy.  It’s very surreal the closer I get to it,” she said.  “Especially dancing at the Auditorium, because that’s where growing up I got to see all these amazing companies.  To be on that stage is going to be great.”  Tomorrow night, Daley will take the stage with her fellow AAADT dancers for opening night of a six performance run.  Dreams – with a lot of hard work – really do come true.

Daley grew up in up in South Elgin and started dancing at the Faubourg School of Ballet in Hanover Park.  When looking for colleges (her Mom said not going to college was not an option), a dance program was paramount.  She ended up at Fordham University which has a partnership with AAADT.  After two years dancing with Ailey II,  she’s now in her first season with the main company.  This is also the first season under new artistic director Robert Battle.   While traditional Ailey pieces like Revelations are still in the rep, Battle includes his choreography but is also bringing in different styles of work to challenge the dancers and the audience.  On the Chicago programs are works from Ailey, Battle, Rennie Harris, Paul Taylor and Ohad Naharin.

I spoke with Daley over the phone earlier this week.  The company arrives in Chicago today.

Did you always want to be in Ailey? Was this your goal?

It was definitely a goal.  I wasn’t sure how realistic it was…it seemed like a long shot, but it was always something that I really wanted to do.  I was going to do everything I could do to make that happen.  

It’s an exciting time with the company going in a new direction.  What’s it been like for you?

Like you said, it’s really exciting.  There’s this air around Ailey everywhere we tour, everybody knows it’s the beginning of a new chapter.  Everyone is excited to see what Mr. Battle is bringing.  He’s a great person to be around. He has a really great energy that’s trickled down into the company and how we work with each other.  It’s good to be a part of it.

Has it been challenging changing the rep to include a Paul Taylor or Ohad Naharin piece?  For instance, Ohad’s work is so particular. Was it hard for your body, since you aren’t used to his technique?

It was difficult in the rehearsal process.  Some things came easier for some people.  “Arden Court” was a bit more natural for me.  It seemed more familiar than “Home”.  I’ve never been a hop hop dancer.  I love that whole genre of dance, but I’d never done it.  “Minus 16” was just totally new for everybody.  It was research – a total investigation, pare down of everything you know and start from the beginning with a new language.  It was definitely something to get used to, but it was a lot of fun.  It made “Minus 16” a lot easier to transition into once we’d started learning his way of moving.

Tell me about the Rennie Harris piece, Home.

We had a three-week workshop when he came in to set the piece.  A lot of people weren’t hip hop/house dancers and he wanted it to be authentic and not us just mimicking the moves he would teach us.  We learned the basic house language for the whole time he was there.  It was inspired by people living with or affected by HIV/AIDS.  I think it’s more of a celebration of life and music and dance than it is anything else.  When you’re inspired by a topic like that, it can get really dark and heavy, but he wanted it to be about the music and the dance.  It’s a club setting, so we’re almost in a trance at times.  I really enjoy doing it.  It’s so much fun and you get to relax on stage.  The audiences everywhere we’ve gone really love it.  

Can you describe to me what it feels like to do Revelations.  It’s such an iconic work.  What’s it like to actually be doing it?

It’s definitely an experience, especially the first few times you do it.  You’re excited and thinking about the history of the piece and how many people have done it before.  I pretty much do it every night, so there’s always another chance to investigate and get deeper into it.  Sometimes it’s good to take a break and watch it from the audience, so you remember why everyone loves it so much.  You get the full effect of it, so when you go back, you have something to work with.  It’s really an experience to do such an historical work. 

Recently on the Ailey Facebook page, they asked the question: what is your favorite section of Revelations?  What’s yours?

My favorite section to do is “Didn’t My Lord Deliver Daniel”.  It’s short and gets right to the point.  It’s high energy.  I don’t know why – out of all the sections – when I do it, I really feel like I’ve made an impact on the audience when I do it.  I really enjoy doing it. My favorite to watch is “I Wanna Be Ready”.  It has a lot to do with the people I get to watch do it.  Being able to watch Matthew Rushing from off stage do this piece is ridiculous. 

Your bio includes this quote:  “Dance for me is becoming more and more about discovery and imagination.”  Can you explain that?

I started to think about this in Ailey II when we started to tour and perform a lot…to think of ways to keep what I’m doing fresh, not just for me but for the audience. If a dancer is over what they’re doing, the audience totally feels that.  I’ve been trying to go a little deeper with everything I do.  I can focus on something different in “Minus 16”, every time I do it.  That’s been my discovery and revelation in a way.

Alvin Ailey American Dance Theatre – April 11 – 15 at the Auditorium Theatre, 50 E. Congress Pkwy

Tickets are $30-$90. Call 800.982.2787 or visit ticketmaster.com/auditorium.

 

 

 

 

Celebrate Tax Day with Dance

Lou Conte Dance Studio is celebrating Tax Day by offering all classes on Tuesday, April 17th at a “pay-what-you-can” rate.  Sweet.  A suggested donation of $5 helps cover working costs.

That day the studio offers classes in ballet, jazz, modern, hip hop, Pilates, Zumba and yoga.  Tuesday’s schedule is here. (I highly recommend Birute’s Intermediate/Advanced Ballet at 1:45. She is awesome!)

For more information call 312.850.9766

Spring Break

After the whirlwind that was the spring dance season, it is time for spring break. Spring cleaning, holidays for some, chocolate (hopefully) for all and a little down time until we hit the theaters again with for another run of performances.  I saw a truckload of fantastic dance in the last few weeks.  In fact, the final performance of ABT‘s Giselle still haunts my dreams with its beauty.  My hopes are to put up delayed reviews at some point, but for now lé brain is fried and Seabiscuit needs a nap.

Happy Spring!

My version of Giselle

Giselle "Gigi" Crain at home.

Her extensions aren’t so good and she isn’t known for sticking to the choreography (although she is a wonderful marcher).  But what she lacks in technique, she more than makes up for with enthusiasm…and kisses.

Stepping Into Hope & Change

 

 

Career Transition For Dancers will host a free career development conference on Sunday, April 1st at the Hubbard Street Dance Center (1147 W. Jackson Blvd).  All dancers are invited to attend.  You can be actively dancing, retired, getting ready to retire or just want some information to see what else is out there and available.  You do not need to be a client of Career Transition or a union member to come to the event.   Hubbard Street Dance Chicago is hosting the event and providing the space.  There will be light refreshments served and you don’t have to stay for the entire day.

The conference is from 12:00 (noon) to 6:00 pm.  There will be a client services consultant and a career counselor on site, as well as Keynote Speaker Harrison McEldowney and Plenary Speaker Ron De Jesus, both well-known dancers and choreographers.  A panel of former dancers that have successfully transitioned to new, thriving careers includes Carl Corry, Keith Elliott, Cheryl Mann and Rachel Northway.

RSVP here in advance or call 312.666.0234.  For more information contact Tiffiny Flaim at tflaim@careertransition.org.

The Power of Love

ABT's Yuriko Kajiya in "Giselle". Photo by Rosalie O'Connor.

If you like a good love story, then get thee to the Auditorium Theatre this weekend, poste-haste.  A romantic tale on par with Romeo and Juliet takes over the stage with some of the top ballet dancers in the world bringing the action to life.  Originally created in 1841 for the Paris Opera Ballet (they are coming to Chicago this summer for the first time ever!), Giselle tells the story of a young peasant girl who falls in love with a prince, only to find out he is betrothed to another.  She goes mad, dies of a broken heart, then proceeds to come back from the grave to save her love from an untimely death.  Drama.

American Ballet Theatre (ABT) brings its version of “the quintessential Romantic ballet” to town for five performance starting tomorrow.  The lead roles of Giselle, Prince Albrecht and Myrta, Queen of the Wilis are some of the most sought after in ballet.  On top of difficult technical feats, the dancer must add emotion and dramatic acting skills to aid the plot while making it all look easy.  And the women are dead in Act II!   It takes a tremendous amount of technique to do a series of entré chats and look as if you are other-worldly.  Of course, there are artistic choices to be made.  Some Albrecht’s play the cad who later tragically regrets his actions.  Some Giselle’s commit suicide with her lover’s sword.  For real-life couple Yuriko Kajiya and Jared Matthews (both soloists who will be debuting as Giselle and Albrecht in ABT’s version this Sunday, March 25th) they rely on the power of love.  Matthew’s Albrecht is truly in love with Giselle and Kajiya’s Giselle dies of a broken heart, yet relies on her love for him to save his life in Act II.  “Albrecht is a role you aspire to achieve and work on,” said Matthews.  “It’s more than just about dance, you have to bring them into your world.”  Kajiya has the dual challenge of the dramatic mad scene at the end of Act I and then switching into Wili-mode for Act II.  She’s been working with her coach Irina Kolpakova on the nuances of the character.  “In Act II, the upper body has to change,” she said.  “You have to be very much forward.  That helps with the illusion.”  But Matthews adds, “It takes a lot of work to make her look weightless.”

ABT's Jared Matthew's in "Le Corsaire". Photo by MIRA.

The duo have performed together often outside of the company and have even performed Act II of Giselle together, but they have never performed the full-length ballet together until now.  The couple met as teenagers while in ABT’s Studio Company (now ABT II) and have been together romantincally for eight years, literally growing up physically and artistically side by side.  ( I spoke with them separately from NY on consecutive days off.) “We have a huge passion for ballet,” Kajiya said.  “We love and know each other so well.  We work really well together in and out of the studio.”  Matthews agreed, “We both want the same things and we’re both willing to put in the time…refining and honing, growing and changing…to become better artists. We have the same goals.” With vastly different backgrounds – she is from Japan and moved to China to study ballet at age ten, he grew up in Texas – they both came to know of ABT via the screen.  Matthews remembers watching Baryshnikov on television and Kajiya saw videos of the company at school and on the big screen in the movie Centerstage.  It is another love story that has them ending up at the same place together now.

They have fond memories of Chicago having danced in the first two years of the Chicago Dancing Festival at Pritzker Pavilion.  Some may remember them as well from a July 2010 guest appearance on So You Think You Can Dance, where they performed the second act pas de deux from Don Quixote.  “Every few minutes, someone would come by to remind us that the show was live,” said Kajiya.  Executive Producer and judge Nigel Lithgoe had seen her perform at a gala and asked her if she’d like to perform on the show.  Matthews said, “The air conditioning was on high, which made the floor slick like ice.  Once we were out there dancing, it was fun.”

Come see Kajiya and Matthews fall in love again on stage this Sunday with live music by the Chicago Sinfonietta.  This story of romance, love, betrayal and forgiveness, set to the achingly gorgeous score by Adolphe Adam is not to be missed.

American Ballet Theatre performs Giselle at the Auditorium Theatre, 50 E. Congress Pkwy.

Thurs & Friday, March 22-23 at 7:30 pm, Saturday, March 24 at 2 & 8 pm, and Sunday, March 25 at 2 pm.

Tickets are $32-$137. Call 800.982.2787 or visit ticketmaster.com.