Over the weekend on the MCA Stage, Hubbard Street Dance Chicago (HSDC) presented nine new works created by HSDC dancers/choreographers and the winners of HSDC’s 2010 National Choreographic Competition. danc(e)volve – preview here – proved to be an interesting and intimate look into what makes HSDC tick: its artists. Tickets for the four shows were sold out early, but there are tickets still available for the upcoming shows this weekend except for Saturday, which is already sold out. (Hint: get your tickets now!)
Unlike most HSDC programs, this new works festival serves up multiple shorter pieces averaging 15-minutes a pop. It’s like going to your favorite restaurant for a five-course chef tasting. You aren’t sure what you’re going to get, but you’re confident you’re going to like it. Unlike a big, gluttonous meal like an Ohad Naharin work, with a number of smaller pieces, you get varying tastes: an amuse bouche, a palette cleanser, complex notes, sweet and light and the one course that wow’s you. If you don’t like one course, something completely different is coming next. (Hmm…note to self: remember to eat before the show!)
Each work in danc(e)volve looked remarkably like the dancers that choreographed them, which is testament to their honesty as an artist. The natural way they move embedding itself into their art. Many took the opportunity to play with traditional conventions, pushing the definition of what the audience is used to seeing. Lighting effects – shout out to lighting designer Matt Miller! – (downstage footlights creating shadows on the back wall), entrances and exits (utilizing the side door in the audience), even starting/ending points (music beginning in darkness or the dance ending in darkness, while the music still plays). Some were greeted with tentative applause (is it over?), others with a murmur of surprised approval.
Resident Choreographer Alejandro Cerrudo’s duet Never was, at seven minutes one of the shortest pieces, served as the main course of each program. Placed in the middle of Programs A and B, his newest work takes trademark moves (a quick sauté in second, a perky parallel pop up like a pencil, a partnered promenade slide in plié) and distills them into their purest essence. You see moments of Cerrudo’s previous works woven in and watch as he hones his craft before your eyes. Straight up props to Emile Leriche and Johnny McMillan (two of the younger dancers in HS2) for their strong showing in this dense, intense piece.
Other pieces of note: Robyn Mineko Williams’ Recall, a techno-infused meditation on memory with some breaking tossed in for fun; Penny Saunder’s humorous and slightly creepy Vaudevillian Bonobo; and Terry Marling’s thrice, which completely transformed from its previous incarnation, twice (once) that premiered last December. Many of the works used the dancers from HS2. It was nice to see the younger dancers perform at home (they tour a LOT) and in challenging works made by their HSDC mentors.
Hubbard Street presents danc(e)volve, Jan 26 – 29
MCA Stage, 220 E Chicago, 312.397.4010