Dance Beat: KST, PBT

April 5, 2012

TEASING. Kelly Strayhorn Theater has issued a teaser for what promises to be another terrific newMoves Dance Festival May 10-12. Janera Solomon revealed one company, called BLOOM! Dance Collective. It’s a Hungarian group that will offer the Pittsburgh premiere of CITY, which won the Rudolph Laban Award for best choreographic work in 2010. BLOOM!  will be part of a three-city tour, which will include NYC and Philadelphia. In addition there will be a dance symposium at Dance Alloy Studios on Thursday and Friday bringing leaders and innovators from around the country for panel discussions and workshops. Guests will include Pittsburgh native Kyle Abraham, Reggie Wilson (Fist & Heal Performance Group and a favorite of NY Times critics), Ben Pryor (Producing Director, tbspMGMT), Sara Nash (National Dance Project) and Marya Wethers (New York Live Arts), among others.

SHALOM! Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre will head to Israel in August to participate in the Karmiel Dance Festival, which hosts some 5,000 dancers from Israel and abroad and attracts more than 300,000 visitors. The official announcement will take place at JFest on Apr. 26 when PBT will perform.

MORE KST. Pearlann Porter and Attack Theatre music director and fab cellist, Dave Eggar, will be part of the Kelly Strayhorn’s Hear/Now Festival of New Sound Apr. 13-14. 82 musicians. 30 composers. 3 venues. Click on KST.


On Stage: Traveling with Attack Theatre

April 2, 2012

So Attack Theatre brought Traveling, its touring show for its finale in Pittsburgh. It was in good shape, as you can read in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. But I’ve also included some clips from past performances, now on Youtube. Sample The Kitchen Sink which defined the group’s maturity for its 10th anniversary and a wonderful duet from Trapped, featuring Ashley Williams and Jeff Davis. You can check the others on your own Youtube, from Peter, Michele and Dave Eggar in Avignon and through the years.


On Stage: Peter Kope — Still on the Attack

March 30, 2012

Never one to be a wallflower, Attack Theatre co-founder Peter Kope is considering himself “shameless” and “brazen” — just because he’s celebrating his birthday.

The occasion, his 45th, happens to coincide with the opening of the company’s latest dance bash, Traveling, which will pass through the New Hazlett Theater this weekend. (Friday night includes a post-performance party for the man of the day.)

Birthdays usually aren’t a topic of conversation approached by journalists with dancers. But then, Attack Theatre never focuses on the usual. In fact, Traveling will be the reverse of the group’s customary dance plan.

Pittsburgh has seen Attack productions that have gone on to travel on their own, such as the Japanese collaboration No-to: memory fades, the interactive art experience of Some Assembly Required (which also toured Pittsburgh) and, perhaps most notably, Games of Steel, which garnered National Dance Project touring support.

But Traveling was simply born to roam, concocted for a performance Delaware last summer, as a matter of fact, and complete with live music from Ben Hardt and the New Victorians.

Of course, in true Attack Theatre fashion, they’ve changed “this and that” for its latest incarnation, which began with a tour of five West Virginia towns, including Fairmont State University and Pocohontas Opera House in Marlinton, where the man who ran the sound coincidentally had given Attack dancer and West Virginia native Dane Toney his first professional job.

But then, this company has all the best connections; few of us have established more. Traveling itself was always about a journey, but somewhere along the way it turned into the idea of a traveling salesman.

As it so happens, Peter’s father travelled quite a bit and always came back home with little presents inside his valise (often those little liquor bottles that went on to fill a locker in the cellar). So the first act of Traveling will be about “what you can do with the little things matters most in life.”

That translates to “every prop Attack Theatre has ever used” — a table, ladder, pole rings, the “blue monster,” a red tube and more. The segment was created to be open and accessible, “an introduction to the style of the company, how we introduce ourselves to a new site.”

The second act will have “full-on, hardcore, beautiful dance” and a more abstract feel, all about traveling in time and “missing relationships, connecting relationships, opening doors.”

watch?v=6M6PnbNBHCQ&feature=relmfu

But Peter and wife and co-founder Michele de la Reza have been opening the doors for Pittsburgh dance fans since 1991, when they met as members of Dance Alloy. It didn’t take long for the energetic duo to make their own connection and start their trademark multi-tasking. They also performed with the New York-based PerksDanceMusicTheatre and by 1995 were formulating Attack Theatre, going on the “attack” in window fronts and living rooms in bringing art to the people.

But then, Peter was the seventh of eight kids in his family, where “the things we would do with a table were outrageous.” Like “monstrously long battles,” which were foot scuffles on the table brace during meals. Attack, indeed.

He also learned to share early on and that would serve him well as the young company, without the resources to buy its own building, moved from studio to studio, like 937 Liberty Avenue Downtown, Penn Avenue Garfield and the current home at Pittsburgh Opera in the Strip District. They “talked with people, trying to make arrangements, borrowing and renovating and repairing and working with community groups and community development organizations. It’s become an extension of the program, what Attack Theatre is.”

“It made us better collaborators because we HAD to collaborate,” Peter emphasizes.

He has had the opportunity to watch the Pittsburgh dance community evolve, how support from both foundations and individuals has stabilized over those years. And he shows awe and admiration for the “plethora of college programs,” where schools like Point Park and Slippery Rock are “churning out amazing movers.”

But Peter is most proud of the fact that he and Michele “worked together to create this dance company, one that is providing honest jobs for people.” And he takes note that they provided health insurance and added vision and dental this year.

“We all work really hard,” Peter says. “But we’re doing what we love.”

But the birthday might help.

While Peter is equally conversant in pie charts and exploring dance on camera, he tends to do less of the “big, bombastic, throwing-Michele-around that we’re used to, although there’s still a fair amount of that.” Still, he feels great. “We’ve always focused on being performers in our lives,” he says. “I think, ‘Forty-five — what the hell?’ Besides, I have a three-year old [Xander] who’s killing me. I sleep more, I eat better vegetables and the number of times I’ve fallen asleep before nine at night is beyond me.”

But there is still that passion for creation and a passion for performance that drives this dancer/father/arts administrator/handyman. What more could he ask for? Well, maybe attend his birthday, the proceeds of which will increase Attack’s creative fund, a solution to support “our crazy silliness and wacky dreams.”

So Peter, too, can dream — and dance — on. And continue sharing.

 

 


On Film: India Meets Pina

March 27, 2012

Her name, Shantala Shivalingappa, may be confounding at first glance, but her dance, a SOLO created in conjunction with the legendary Pina Bausch, shows a clarity of intent from the first movement.


On Stage: Science to the Forefront

March 7, 2012

Karole Armitage delved into the scientific realm with Three Theories, which nuzzled the mind and challenged visual perception. Would love to have more dance do so…check the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.


On Stage: Adventures in Art

February 17, 2012

What goes up, must come down. Now, what was out, must come in. Parkour and Freerunning, once the territory of Neanderthals, soldiers and Jackie Chan, who all employed similar survival skills, is taking to the concert stage.

Perhaps Dance Works Rotterdam was the first to embrace that concept, mostly due to artistic director Andre Gingras, who has been something of an artistic adventurer for most of his adult life. As a student of theater, English literature and contemporary dance in Toronto, he wanted to expand himself, primarily as a dancer. And that meant New York City, the ultimate mecca for the young Canadian.

Almost immediately he landed a scholarship at the Paul Taylor studio, where principal dancer, Christopher Gillis, became a mentor.  Andre eventually moved on to the Doris Humphrey and Doug Varone companies. But it was on a European vacation five years later that he auditioned for theatrical wizard Robert Wilson, who was creating a major work for the Weimar Festival in Berlin.

It was an immediate click with his work,” Andre recalls. And thus started a four year period where he became a regular contributor to Wilson productions. “Bob is very collaborative. He’s very, very curious about what young artists have to say. He has a huge love and respect for dancers and is really open to your input.”

Andre admits that the experience transformed him as an artist. Since it didn’t matter where Wilson artists lived, Andre slept on the couch in some friends’ apartment in Rotterdam.

Slowly he began dancing with small Rotterdam companies, then making his own work. It started to “take over his life” and Dance Works soon followed.

But he never stopped searching, with forays to India, North Africa and the Middle East. “My goal was to ‘hybridize’ and expand the art form, to really look at what other things could be integrated,” Andre explains.

That included martial arts, especially Brazilian capoeira. Or medical subjects, where he used the “beautiful, interesting vocabulary” of Terret’s Syndrome for his first solo piece, P17.

And the Netherlands sponsors Dancing on the Edge, a special festival in Amsterdam that focuses almost entirely on dance in the Middle East and then sends them through a network of cities.

Through the festival, Andre was connected with a group, El Funoun, in Palistine. He did workshops on contemporary dance technique. But the company was based in folk lore and had young dancers who were trying to look at “what would be the most authentic contemporary manifestation of their indigenous dance.” So they delved into choreography, with great success.

By now it was obvious to Andre that he saw dance everywhere he turned. Freerunning had become a hot commodity in parts of Europe. It’s an offshoot of Parkour, a new movement form that came out of the French army and became an art form of “getting from A to B with the least amount of flourishes, but the most effective way.”

Freerunning “embraced the flourishes and fun things.” It’s almost the same vocabulary, but it’s “a bit more spectacular.” In 2006, Andre was already asking, “Wow — why can’t we put this in a theater? Why does it have to be on the street? It’s such a beautiful language.”

So he hired a guy “to teach these insane things” to his dancers. Although he called the dancers “amazing” in absorbing the information, he realized that he had to put limits on the technique.

“You don’t do it once for a video — you have to do it every night.”

But it worked. Now it’s part of the repertory and his new dancers have to embrace those skills. But he’s careful, noting that “we’re a European dance company and we have workman’s comp people looking over my shoulder. I can’t have them jump four meters down onto concrete. And you can’t do another show like that the next day.”

Pittsburgh audiences can see for themselves this weekend (see CrossCurrents Listings for more information) when Dance Works Rotterdam brings Anatomica to the Byham Theater.

Well, part of it. Andre originally envisioned a three-part series about “the body on display. Why do we display the body? How do we display the body?” He thought it should be three pieces, but only had a good idea for the third one, so he decided to work on that first.

“The body is that magnificent instrument that can do all these extraordinary, remarkable, virtuosic things that fly through the air,” Andre explains of #3. “So it’s very acrobatic.” Next came #1, a beginning segment that shows “why do we show the body. Well, very often that’s tied to sexual drive, the desire to find a mate, to procreate. So we look at courtship rituals, mating dances and online chat room experiences — every that makes us put ourselves out there.”

And what about #2? Andre thinks that he’ll make it in 2014. He quips, “I’m in no rush.”


On Stage: We love you, Bill.

February 13, 2012

August Wilson Center Dance Ensemble uncorked its dancers in their own brand of choreography for Suite Bill, the latest in a series of such performances by local groups.

I guess you would have to say that advanced training institutions, whether in an academy or university setting, are doing their job in encouraging students to find their particular movement. But companies are also doing their job in presenting company members’ choreography in substantial performance formats — Attack Theatre with University of Pittsburgh graduate composers, Bodiography at the Kelly Strayhorn with guest artists, both musical and professional, the Conservatory Dance Company’s Student Choreography Project, with an application process and mentoring, Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre members constructing their annual Dancers Trust, from program and lighting to the choreography itself, and The Pillow Project, where the dancers are intensely involved in the improvisational aspect of the group and beyond.

AWCDE joined the ranks recently. I thought it would be a largely informal gathering — after all, the company is barely two years old and it was being held in the August Wilson Center dance studio, although it is a handsome one, with a floor-to-ceiling carved wooden door that pivots on a central peg and windows that play out onto the delicious urban environment along Liberty Avenue from its second story perspective.

Surprise! Lighting designer and long-time Pittsburgh dance company friend Bob Steineck had rented curtains for the built-in tracks with some basic lighting and about 100 chairs were neatly arranged in four rows. (I’m sure, though, that a set of risers is on AWC’s wish list for the future.)

Yes, it was informal, but a great way to develop a core audience for the fledgling group. But there were perks, including a terrific video of William Harrison “Bill” Withers that was projected larger-than-life on the back wall and looked at the man behind Lean on Me and so many more hits. Artistic director Greer Reed explained that this was a part of AWC’s Affrilachia theme this season, spotlighting black artists who had flourished in the Appalachian Mountain region, as Bill did in West Virginia.

Then Vanessa German entered and proceed to put her own singular poetic spin on both Bill’s history and Suite Bill. This reigning Pittsburgh wordsmith can elevate any program and mesmerized the audience between the numbers.

She talked about grandmothers after Grandma’s Hands, the opening piece by Greer and James Washington, constructed much in the mold of Alvin Ailey’s fan-waving church-goers in Revelations.

After that, she beautifully connected the other works. Kendra Dennard (Use Me) and Annalee Traylor (Who Is He) mostly played on plenty of attitude and Raymond Ejiofor got the finale, Lovely Day. Everyone had a hand in Lean on Me.

Although the stagings were generally good and the spirit palpable, it was Kaylin Horgan, certainly the veteran dance maker among these 20-somethings, who showed both the joy of a relationship, then the dark side in a sensitively detailed fashion (My Imagination, Ain’t No Sunshine).

Then there was a bonus, which I wasn’t expecting, a tidbit from Camille Brown’s A New Second Line, which will have its formal debut in AWCDE’s upcoming Dynamic Women of Dance in March. And the dancers got to answer questions from an eager audience.

Overall very satisfying…and smart. It’s well-known that the choreographic process has a lot of give and take between choreographers and their dancers. Programs like this will enable those dancers to have something more to bring to the table.

 

 

 

 


On Stage: Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre in the Four B’s

February 8, 2012

Photo by Rich Sofranko

Yes, I know it’s the three B’s — Bach, Beethoven and Brahms — but you have to add ballet in this instance, Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre’s contemporary program, Uncommon. It continues through Sunday at the August Wilson Center (see Listings for more information) and is definitely worth the trip. Read my review in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.

Photo by Rich Sofranko


On Stage: Putting Her Own Footprint on Dance

February 8, 2012

My toes were tapping before it even began. Dance music bubbled through the intimate brick box of the Lester Hamburg Studio Theatre. Dancin’ in the Streets. Guy Lombardo (I think). Some kind of rap — I’m not sure because everyone was talking. Dance to the Music. Michael Jackson, of course.

The sound track seemed to become increasingly fractured in spots. Sometimes it was just fractured phrases.

So what was this dance writer doing at Why I’m Scared of Dance? I had just been to Billy Elliot (The Musical), who lo-o-oved to dance, the night before at the Benedum Center. And the next day I was going to Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre’s Uncommon, a very dancey mix of three ballets.

Jen Childs, the performer in this one-woman show, was about to skewer it all.

Part of the show stemmed from early childhood (don’t most of our adult anxieties?). It came right down to jealousy — of those energetic dancing cousins who stole the spotlight from Jen’s heartfelt flute solo. Of the leggy Juliet Prowse in those pantyhose commercials (we’re going wa-a-ay back).

Some of the humor was obvious. Floor-to-ceiling mirrors in the studio. And yeah, those over-zealous costumes, packed with super sparkles and/or shaky fringe.

As Jen put it, “Those who can, dance. Those who can’t, mock.”

The Philadelphia comedian could be ingratiating. “I could smoke like a dancer,” she said hopefully. Or insightful, as in “humans are the only animals with rhythm.”

Maybe she did a strange leap backwards from college to high school and was politically incorrect in the sketch involving her black boyfriend. But this was a middle-aged woman still trying to find the dance and “beat it into submission,” even if that meant ropes, belts and bungee chords.

Actually, Jen wasn’t as bad as she made out to be. Maybe she wasn’t a by-the-book Swan Queen, but this performer could move (and get through a ton of steps!). She finally did it “My Way,” a heartfelt little number that a lot of us probably have done in the privacy of our own living rooms.

By the end, I could see Billy in her, a little older and wiser, but caught in the same reverie.

Why I’m Scared of Dance runs at the Lester Hamburg Studio Theatre (City Theater complex on the South Side) Thurs. through Sun. at 8 p.m., Sat. and Sun. at 2 p.m. Tickets: $35-40; citytheatercompany.org or 412-431-2489.


Dance Beat: Dutch, Crawl, Emily, Dance Dangereuse

January 25, 2012

Photo by Chris Nash

Going Dutch. There was gouda arancini, smoked mackerel potato salad, red cabbage with smoked sausage and apples and slavinken, all signature dishes of the Netherlands and meticulously prepared by Meat & Potatoes restaurant. Yum Well, if Pittsburgh Cultural Trust’s upcoming Distinctly Dutch Festival is as tasty as the food, we’re all in for a treat that will take us through the spring. I have loved the Trust’s previous festivals (Montreal, Australia, International Festival of Firsts), which gave us the opportunity to explore different cultures without leaving home. Of course we already knew that that the Pittsburgh Dance Council will be presenting Dance Works Rotterdam/Andre Gingras, which will open the festival Feb. 18, and Last Touch First, co-choreographed by Michael Schumacher and Jiri Kylian (a national and international choreographic treasure). But there will be plenty more to sample. For theater buffs, there will be Detroit Dealers, which is oddly set against the American car industry, Diespace, an interactive multimedia performance set against the Internet, and Jean Cocteau’s La voix humaine, featuring one of Holland’s foremost actresses. Halina Reijn. Music lovers can catch The News, a video/opera, or Dutch Women of Jazz. Girls ‘N’ Guns and Global Navigators will enhance the Pittsburgh art scene and Dudes and World of Rhythm will be geared to families. Accompanying it all will be workshops, wine tastings, a tulip display (of course) at the Phipps, film and more, including menu offerings at local restaurants. Hungry?  Intrigued? (I am and will attend as many events as possible.) For more information, click on Distinctly Dutch.

Crawl-ing. The Trust also sponsors the Gallery Crawl four times a year, a great (and free) way to explore the Cultural District. This go ‘round on January 27 will feature Maddy Landi’s kNOTdance transferring your own drawing of a dream into a dance. Also interact with a digital installation, Summer Sky Eternal, and see how your personal movement affects it (604 Liberty Ave.). Or interact with a partner at Arthur Murray Dance Studio, with free lessons and demos (salsa at 7:30 p.m., tango at 8 p.m., swing at 8:30 p.m.) Much, much more, from Norwegian artist HC Gilje at Wood Street to a Cell Phone Disco. A real bonus — Chatham Baroque rocks the Trust Arts Education Center with three performances. From 5:30 – 9 p.m. Click on Gallery Crawl.

Emily Kitka. The Pittsburgh dancer, who joined the corps of New York City Ballet last fall, got her first real review in The New York Times. Congrats, Emily!

Risky Business. Top Dating Sites website has posted 10 Dances You Should Only Attempt if You Are a Pro. Really? How do you actually become one? See for yourself when you click on Dangerous Dance.


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