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Still/There
by mj thompson
March 2004
Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Companys "Reading, Mercy, and the Artificial Nigger." Photo by Jack Vartoogian.
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Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company
The Phantom Project The 20th Season
If Bill T. Jones has been haunted, in mind, gesture and artistic output since the death of his partner/collaborator Arnie Zane in 1988, it is a specter that has proven contrarily useful. Both in terms of his own production and for the dancescape more broadly, Joness demons remain exhilarating and uncannily in sync with the most urgent cultural debates of our time. This season, in a 20th anniversary celebration that risked slipping, as all such events do, into redundancy or sheer myth-making, Jones asserted instead the lingering relevance of the early work and the luminous power of the new.
I caught two different programs at the Brooklyn Academy of Music (BAM, February), and came away swearing to always see dance in duplicate, to go back for seconds for the sheer thrill of seeing how contingent and, in the end, beyond scripting performance remains. The first night began with Joness gently urging the crowd to vote in the pending elections. But the political quickly became personal, as the curtains opened to reveal Jones in silhouette for the New York premiere of the solo Chaconne (2003). A meditation on what constitutes a life whether his mother Estelles, Arnies, or his ownJones began with a fragmentary recollection: "The last time I saw her, she was so weak.
The last time I saw her, all she wanted to do was sing." He then offers twenty-two shapes, each introduced with a word or two: Melted B-boy, after the money shot, Estelles MRI, Stephen Spielberg, Trisha. Are these words descriptive of the movement or ironic? Do they name gesture or sentiment? Or are they eccentric nicknames, uttered by a choreographer performing his dance with a workmans concentration, in an affect-free way?
If the relationship between movement and spoken word remains opaque, the structure of the work in which cumulative, repeated gestures recall the influence of postmodern choreographers like Trisha Brown on Jones is transparent. Against a white band of light, a scrim that flares from silver to blue, Chaconne beams cinematic images to the crowd. Beautifully lit by Robert Wierzel, the lights soon shimmer up to render Jones in full detail and dimensionality. Fleeting motion-capture images by Paul Kaiser and Shelley Eshkar project Joness dancing body in negative a ghosting that allows for duets and trios with himself.
Reading, Mercy and the Artificial Nigger (2003), based on a short story by Flannery OConnor, jumps fearlessly into the question of race in America, all the while offering a formal challenge: how do you attend carefully to two discrete activities at the same time? With actors reading aloud a condensed version of the story in which a white man betrays his grandson, yet somehow finds redemption via his unified fear of the city and the African-American the company dances along, at times enacting the text, at times challenging us to find the connection between body and word. Struggling to listen carefully and watch the dance at the same time, I wondered instead at the beautiful simplicity of Bjorn Amelans design whereby a large, empty moon becomes a screen onto which he projects colors and shapes evocative of shifts in mood and plot. And I wondered how Jones wanted us to read this story of the wretched and small, written in the 1950s and set in the segregated South, and where, in fact, the "mercy" lay?
But at Reading, Mercys end, Jones makes an excellent move, reminding us that if he has been our most politically engaged choreographer, he is also incredibly adept at the craft of theatre-making. The piece ends and a large, dim spotlight, from which red cards fall in slow continuum, beams down on the stage. The company drops form. Some leave. Some sit down. Others remove shoes. We are backstage. Its an old postmodern trick and it is performed here with a seamless calm that made me a believer all over again. Quite suddenly, Mercy 10 x 8 on a Circle (2003) begins. Here, Jones reworks the earlier Mercy distilled as pure movement. This time out, there are no distractions. There is only the lush dancing of company members like Ayo Janeen Jackson and Leah Cox. As Jones challenges us to question how movement means, and how we see or fail to see it, he remains as resolutely curious about uncodified movement quirky gestures and non-verbal language as he is about ballet, modern and the host of other techniques embedded in his work.
Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Companys "Phantom Project: Still/Here Looking On." Photo by Richard Termine.
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The following night, I went back for more. And the program was uneven: ecstatic, rigorous, angry, messy even. Full of twists and surprises, wind and inspiration, improvisations and outbursts, Jones again reminded us that great theatre risks everything. As he suggested in the programs final work, The Phantom Project: Still/Here Looking On, they are simply artists trying things, seeing what works or doesnt. With that degree of experimentation, there was much dance for thought. For instance, a version of Arnie Zanes Continuous Replay (1978) that began the evening is perhaps the best, most ecstatic thing Ive seen in years. It is an accumulation dance that features forty-five hand and arm gestures performed as the dancers move around the perimeter of the stage. Accompanied by DJ Spookys deluge of discordant sound, Continuous Replay begins with Erick Montess extraordinary leap onto the stage.
As briefly as Montes arrives onstage, he leaves and starts the dance again, one gesture at a time. Arms sweep to the left at the hip. A hand forms a beak and nods downward. Fully extended arms reach in opposite directions and shudder as the face looks upward. He lunges with hand to forehead as if in prayer. The movement is as relentlessly engaging as the assortment of dancers who join him, whether formally "accumulating" or else walking, running or joining the crowd and breaking the flow with a stuttered gesture or improvised moment. As some thirty-five naked dancers gather on stage company members and alumni including Heidi Latsky, Sean Curran, Lois Welk and Arthur Aviles, to name a few we see the action, again and again, from multiple angles and on different bodies. The singular, utopic vision drew cheers and a standing ovation.
Also on the program was There Were
(1993/2002), a movement study inflected by European court and African-American social dance, in which Jones matches decorum and rhythm, formal arm extensions alongside rocking torso isolations. The evening ended with the weirdly compelling Phantom Project/Still/Here Looking On, in which Jones offered a time-line of his career so far, radically overshadowed by an abbreviated reconstruction of Still/Here (1994). If the new work retained the fire of the enduring stories of the people who participated in the original survivor workshops, it also unleashed Joness own lingering piss and vinegar at the works critical reception. Will Jones ever be free of the cranky debates engendered by this monumental piece? Will his work ever be read for its formal, aesthetic values? Would he, or his fans, even want it that way? His demons, our luck. Our demons, his luck. By nights end, with the entire company gathered onstage, Jones said good bye as the crowd went wild: Good bye this, good bye that, "Good bye Arnie," and left us looking forward to the next 20 years.
mj thompson is a writer living in Brooklyn.
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The Rail invites you to a reading with Jason
Flores-Williams and Brian Carreira, along with musical
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Thurs., Sept. 22, 8:30 p.m.
Vox Pop--Flatbush, Brooklyn
www.voxpop.net
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OFF THE RAIL FALL 2005 at the Central Branch of the Brooklyn Public Library - Grand Army Plaza
(718) 230-2100 in the 2nd Floor Auditorium
Tuesday, Sept. 13 from 7 till 9
John Ashbery
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Curated and hosted by the Rail's Fiction Editor Donald Breckenridge
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The Independent Press Association-NY recently honored The Brooklyn Rail with the following awards:
1st place: Best article about Immigrant Issues or Racial Justice--Gabriel Thompson, "One Immigrant's Journey" (September 2004).
1st place: Best article about the Arts*--Amy Zimmer, "The Brownsville Rec. Center" (April 04)
2nd place: Best article about the Arts--Brian Carreira, "Harlem Arts: A Faux Renaissance" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
2nd place: Best editorial or commentary--T. Hamm, "The Issue is Free Speech" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
3rd Place: Best Investigative News Story--Marjory Garrison, "Minimum Matter of Survival" (May 04)
Honorable mention: Best Investigative News Story--Williams Cole, "Housing vs. the RNC" (June 04).
Honorable mention: Best Original Feature--Yvette Walton, "My Life in the NYPD" (Dec 03/Jan 04).
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